Political party strength in Minnesota
The following table indicates the party of elected officials in the U.S. state of Minnesota:
The table also indicates the historical party composition in the:
- State Senate
- State House of Representatives
- State delegation to the United States Senate
- State delegation to the United States House of Representatives
For years in which a United States presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.
The parties are as follows: Nonpartisan conservative (C) Democratic (D), Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL), Farmer-Labor (FL), Independence (I), Independent-Republican (IR), Nonpartisan liberal (L), National Union (NU), Populist (Po), Progressive (Pr), Republican (R), and Reform (Ref).
Year | Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress | Electoral College votes | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governor | Lieutenant Governor | Secretary of State | Attorney General | Auditor | Treasurer | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I) | U.S. Senator (Class II) | U.S. House | ||
1849 | Alexander Ramsey (W)[lower-alpha 1] | no such office | Charles K. Smith (W) | Lorenzo A. Babcock (W) | Jonathan E. McKusick (W) | Calvin A. Tuttle (W) | 6D, 2W, 1? | 12D, 4W, 2? | 1D | |||
1850 | ||||||||||||
1851 | Alexander C. Wilkin (W) | 8D, 7?, 3W | ||||||||||
5D, 4?, 2W | ||||||||||||
1852 | Abraham Van Vorhes (W) | 7D, 2W | 10D, 5?, 3W | |||||||||
1853 | Willis Arnold Gorman (D)[lower-alpha 2] | Joseph T. Rosser (D) | LaFayette Emmett (D) | Socrates Nelson (D) | George W. Prescott (D) | 13D, 3W, 2? | ||||||
1854 | Julius Georgii (D) | Charles E. Leonard (D) | 9D | 13D, 5W | ||||||||
1855 | 13D, 4?, 1R | |||||||||||
1856 | 9D, 4?, 2R | 18D, 12R, 9? | ||||||||||
8D, 4?, 2R | 19D, 11R, 9? | |||||||||||
6D, 4?, 2R | ||||||||||||
1857 | Samuel Medary (D)[lower-alpha 3] | Charles L. Chase (D) | George W. Armstrong (D) | 6D, 5R, 4? | 20R, 18D | 2D | ||||||
20R, 19D | ||||||||||||
19R, 19D | ||||||||||||
20R, 19D | ||||||||||||
20D, 17R | 43D, 37R | |||||||||||
1858 | Henry Hastings Sibley (D) | William Holcombe (D) | Francis Baasen (D) | Charles H. Berry (D) | William F. Dunbar (D) | Henry Mower Rice (D) | James Shields (D) | |||||
1859 | 19D, 18R[lower-alpha 4] | 49R, 31D[lower-alpha 4] | Morton S. Wilkinson (R) | 2R | ||||||||
1860 | Alexander Ramsey (R)[lower-alpha 5] | Ignatius L. Donnelly (R)[lower-alpha 6] | James H. Baker (D) | Gordon E. Cole (R) | Charles Scheffer (R) | 23R, 13D, 1I | 58R, 22D | Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin (R) | ||||
1861 | Charles McIlrath (R) | 19R, 2D | 40R, 2D | |||||||||
1862 | David Blakeley (R) | 16R, 5D | 30R, 10D, 2UD | |||||||||
1863 | Henry Adoniram Swift (R)[lower-alpha 7] | 29R, 12D, 1UD | ||||||||||
Henry Adoniram Swift (R)[lower-alpha 7] | vacant | Alexander Ramsey (R) | ||||||||||
1864 | Stephen Miller (R) | Charles D. Sherwood (R) | 17R, 4D | 27R, 11D, 4UD | Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson (NU) | |||||||
1865 | 32R, 10D | Daniel S. Norton (R)[lower-alpha 8] | ||||||||||
1866 | William Rainey Marshall (R) | Thomas H. Armstrong (R) | William J. Colvill (R) | 16R, 5D | 29R, 13D | |||||||
1867 | 17R, 5D | 37R, 9D, 1? | ||||||||||
1868 | Henry C. Rogers (R) | Francis R. E. Cornell (R) | Emil D. Munch (R) | 15R, 7D | 34R, 13D | Ulysses S. Grant and Schuyler Colfax (R) | ||||||
1869 | 16R, 6D | 38R, 9D | 1R, 1D | |||||||||
1870 | Horace Austin (R) | William H. Yale (R) | Hans Mattson (R) | William Windom (R)[lower-alpha 9] | ||||||||
1871 | 14R, 8D | 27R, 20D | Ozora P. Stearns (R) | 2R | ||||||||
William Windom (R)[lower-alpha 10] | ||||||||||||
1872 | Samuel P. Jennison (R) | William Seeger (R)[lower-alpha 11][1] | 29R, 12D | 73R, 33D | Ulysses S. Grant and Henry Wilson (R) | |||||||
1873 | Orlan P. Whitcomb (R) | Edwin W. Dyke (R)[lower-alpha 12] | 31R, 10D | 79R, 27D | 3R | |||||||
1874 | Cushman Davis (R) | Alphonso Barto (R) | George P. Wilson (R) | 28R, 13D | 58R, 48D | |||||||
1875 | 21R, 18D, 2I | 54R, 48D, 4I | Samuel J. R. McMillan (R) | |||||||||
1876 | John S. Pillsbury (R) | James Wakefield (R) | John S. Irgens (R) | William Pfaender (R) | 27R, 14D | 74R, 32D | Rutherford B. Hayes and William Almon Wheeler (R) | |||||
1877 | 26R, 15D | 77R, 29D | ||||||||||
1878 | 29R, 12D | 66R, 40D | ||||||||||
1879 | 23R, 16D, 2G[lower-alpha 13] | 73R, 30D, 3G[lower-alpha 14] | 2R, 1D | |||||||||
1880 | Charles A. Gilman (R) | Frederick Von Baumbach (R) | Charles M. Start (R)[lower-alpha 6] | Charles Kittelson (R) | James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur (R) | |||||||
1881 | William J. Hahn (R)[lower-alpha 12] | 29R, 11D, 1? | 87R, 15D, 1? | Alonzo J. Edgerton (R)[lower-alpha 9] | 3R | |||||||
1882 | Lucius Frederick Hubbard (R) | William W. Braden (R) | William Windom (R) | |||||||||
1883 | 36R, 10D, 1I | 72R, 28D, 2I, 1? | Dwight M. Sabin (R) | 5R | ||||||||
1884 | James G. Blaine and John Alexander Logan (R) | |||||||||||
1885 | 30R, 17D | 70R, 33D | ||||||||||
1886 | ||||||||||||
1887 | Andrew Ryan McGill (R) | Albert E. Rice (R) | Hans Mattson (R) | Moses E. Clapp (R) | Joseph Bobleter (R) | 30R, 16D, 1FA | 66R, 34D, 3FA | Cushman Davis (R)[lower-alpha 8] | 3D, 2R | |||
1888 | Benjamin Harrison and Levi P. Morton (R) | |||||||||||
1889 | William Rush Merriam (R) | 89R, 9D, 3I, 2FA | William D. Washburn (R) | 5R | ||||||||
1890 | ||||||||||||
1891 | Gideon S. Ives (R) | Frederick P. Brown (R) | Adolph Biermann (R) | 25R, 16D, 13P[lower-alpha 15] | 52D, 43R, 19FA[lower-alpha 16] | 3D, 1R, 1P | ||||||
1892 | Benjamin Harrison and Whitelaw Reid (R) | |||||||||||
1893 | Knute Nelson (R)[lower-alpha 5] | David Marston Clough (R) | Henry W. Childs (R) | 71R, 41D, 2P | 4R, 2D, 1P | |||||||
1894 | ||||||||||||
1895 | David Marston Clough (R)[lower-alpha 17] | Frank A. Day (R) | Albert Berg (R) | Robert C. Dunn (R) | August T. Koerner (R) | 46R, 5P, 3D | 95R, 10D, 9P | Knute Nelson (R)[lower-alpha 8] | 7R | |||
1896 | William McKinley and Garret Hobart (R) | |||||||||||
1897 | John L. Gibbs (R) | 90R, 13P, 11D | ||||||||||
1898 | ||||||||||||
1899 | John Lind (D)[lower-alpha 18] | Lyndon A. Smith (R) | Wallace B. Douglas (R)[lower-alpha 19] | 44R, 18D, 1I | 93R, 25D, 1I | |||||||
1900 | William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt (R) | |||||||||||
Charles A. Towne (D)[lower-alpha 9] | ||||||||||||
1901 | Samuel Rinnah Van Sant (R) | Peter E. Hanson (R) | Julius H. Block (R) | 96R, 17D, 6P | Moses E. Clapp (R) | |||||||
1902 | ||||||||||||
1903 | Ray W. Jones (R) | Samuel G. Iverson (R) | 52R, 11D | 104R, 15D | 8R, 1D | |||||||
1904 | William J. Donahower (R)[lower-alpha 9] | Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W. Fairbanks (R) | ||||||||||
1905 | John Albert Johnson (D)[lower-alpha 8] | Edward T. Young (R) | 109R, 10D | 9R | ||||||||
1906 | ||||||||||||
1907 | Adolph Olson Eberhart (R) | Julius A. Schmahl (R) | Clarence C. Dinehart (R)[lower-alpha 8] | 43R, 19D, 1 Peop. | 102R, 14D, 3 Proh. | 8R, 1D | ||||||
1908 | William Howard Taft and James S. Sherman (R) | |||||||||||
1909 | Adolph Olson Eberhart (R)[lower-alpha 17] | Edward Everett Smith[lower-alpha 7] | George T. Simpson (R) | 94R, 22D, 3 Proh. | ||||||||
1910 | Elias S. Pettijohn (R)[lower-alpha 9] | |||||||||||
1911 | Samuel Y. Gordon (R) | Walter J. Smith (R)[lower-alpha 6] | 42R, 19D, 2I | 88R, 26D, 4 Proh., 1IR, 1 Pub. Own. | ||||||||
1912 | Lyndon A. Smith (R)[lower-alpha 8] | Theodore Roosevelt and Hiram Johnson (Pr) | ||||||||||
1913 | Joseph A. A. Burnquist (R) | 98R, 20D, 1 Proh., 1S | ||||||||||
1914 | ||||||||||||
1915 | Winfield Scott Hammond (D)[lower-alpha 8] | J. A. O. Preus (R) | Conservative Majority[lower-alpha 20] | Conservative Majority | 9R, 1D | |||||||
1916 | Joseph A. A. Burnquist (R)[lower-alpha 17] | George H. Sullivan[lower-alpha 7] | Arthur C. Gooding (R)[lower-alpha 9] | Charles Evans Hughes and Charles W. Fairbanks (R) | ||||||||
1917 | Thomas Frankson (R) | Henry Rines (R)[lower-alpha 6] | Frank B. Kellogg (R) | |||||||||
1918 | Clifford L. Hilton (R)[lower-alpha 12][lower-alpha 19] | |||||||||||
1919 | 9R, 1FL | |||||||||||
1920 | Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge (R) | |||||||||||
1921 | J. A. O. Preus (R) | Louis L. Collins (R) | Mike Holm (R)[lower-alpha 8] | Ray P. Chase (R) | 10R | |||||||
1922 | ||||||||||||
1923 | Henrik Shipstead (FL) | Magnus Johnson (FL) | 8R, 2FL | |||||||||
1924 | Calvin Coolidge and Charles G. Dawes (R) | |||||||||||
1925 | Theodore Christianson (R) | William I. Nolan (R)[lower-alpha 6] | Edward W. Stark (R)[lower-alpha 9] | Thomas D. Schall (R)[lower-alpha 8] | 7R, 3FL | |||||||
1926 | ||||||||||||
1927 | Albert F. Pratt (R)[lower-alpha 9][lower-alpha 8] | Julius A. Schmahl (R) | 8R, 2FL | |||||||||
1928 | G. Aaron Youngquist (R)[lower-alpha 12][lower-alpha 6] | Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis (R) | ||||||||||
1929 | Charles Edward Adams[lower-alpha 7] | Henry N. Benson (R)[lower-alpha 12] | 9R, 1FL | |||||||||
1930 | ||||||||||||
1931 | Floyd B. Olson (FL)[lower-alpha 8] | Henry M. Arens (FL) | Stafford King (R)[lower-alpha 6] | |||||||||
1932 | Franklin D. Roosevelt and John Nance Garner (D) | |||||||||||
1933 | Konrad K. Solberg (FL) | Harry H. Peterson (FL)[lower-alpha 19] | Liberal Majority | 5FL, 3R, 1D | ||||||||
1934 | ||||||||||||
1935 | Hjalmar Petersen (FL) | Conservative Majority | Elmer Austin Benson (FL)[lower-alpha 9] | 5R, 3FL, 1D | ||||||||
1936 | Hjalmar Petersen (FL)[lower-alpha 7] | William B. Richardson[lower-alpha 21] | William S. Ervin (FL)[lower-alpha 9] | Guy V. Howard (R) | ||||||||
1937 | Elmer Austin Benson (FL) | Gottfrid T. Lindsten (FL) | C. A. Halverson (FL) | Liberal Majority | Ernest Lundeen (FL)[lower-alpha 8] | 5FL, 3R, 1D | ||||||
1938 | ||||||||||||
1939 | Harold Stassen (R)[lower-alpha 6] | C. Elmer Anderson (R) | Joseph A. A. Burnquist (R) | Julius A. Schmahl (R) | Conservative Majority | 7R, 1D, 1FL | ||||||
1940 | Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry A. Wallace (D) | |||||||||||
1941 | Henrik Shipstead (R) | Joseph H. Ball (R)[lower-alpha 9] | 8R, 1FL | |||||||||
1942 | Arthur E. Nelson (R) | |||||||||||
1943 | Edward John Thye (R) | |||||||||||
Edward John Thye (R)[lower-alpha 17] | Archie H. Miller (R)[lower-alpha 7] | Joseph H. Ball (R) | ||||||||||
1944 | Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman (D) | |||||||||||
1945 | C. Elmer Anderson (R) | 7R, 2DFL | ||||||||||
1946 | ||||||||||||
1947 | Luther Youngdahl (R)[lower-alpha 6] | Edward John Thye (R) | 8R, 1DFL | |||||||||
1948 | Harry S. Truman and Alben W. Barkley (D) | |||||||||||
1949 | Hubert Humphrey (DFL)[lower-alpha 22] | 5R, 4DFL | ||||||||||
1950 | ||||||||||||
1951 | C. Elmer Anderson (R)[lower-alpha 17] | vacant | Kristjan Valdimar Bjornson (R) | 51C, 16L | 87C, 44L | |||||||
1952 | H. H. Chesterman[lower-alpha 9] | Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (R) | ||||||||||
Virginia Paul Holm (R)[lower-alpha 12] | ||||||||||||
1953 | Ancher Nelsen (R)[lower-alpha 23] | 52C, 15L | 85C, 46L | |||||||||
1954 | Donald O. Wright (R)[lower-alpha 7] | |||||||||||
1955 | Orville Freeman (DFL) | Karl Rolvaag (DFL) | Joseph L. Donovan (DFL) | Miles W. Lord (DFL)[lower-alpha 6] | Arthur Hansen (DFL) | 48C, 19L | 66L, 65C | 5DFL, 4R | ||||
1956 | ||||||||||||
1957 | Kristjan Valdimar Bjornson (R) | 70L, 61C | ||||||||||
1958 | ||||||||||||
1959 | 43C, 24L | 72L, 59C | Eugene McCarthy (DFL) | 5R, 4DFL | ||||||||
1960 | Walter Mondale (DFL)[lower-alpha 12][lower-alpha 5] | John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson (D) | ||||||||||
1961 | Elmer L. Andersen (R)[lower-alpha 24] | 6R, 3DFL | ||||||||||
1962 | ||||||||||||
1963 | Karl Rolvaag (DFL)[lower-alpha 24] | Alexander M. Keith (DFL) | 80C, 54L, 1I | 4R, 4DFL | ||||||||
1964 | Lyndon B. Johnson and Hubert Humphrey (D) | |||||||||||
Robert W. Mattson, Sr. (DFL)[lower-alpha 9] | Walter Mondale (DFL)[lower-alpha 12][lower-alpha 22] | |||||||||||
1965 | 44C, 23L | 78C, 56L, 1I | ||||||||||
1966 | ||||||||||||
1967 | Harold LeVander (R) | James B. Goetz (R) | Douglas M. Head (R) | 45C, 22L | 93C, 42L | 5R, 3DFL | ||||||
1968 | Hubert Humphrey and Edmund Muskie (D) | |||||||||||
1969 | William J. O'Brien (R)[lower-alpha 9] | 85C, 50L | ||||||||||
1970 | ||||||||||||
1971 | Wendell Anderson (DFL)[lower-alpha 5] | Rudy Perpich (DFL) | Arlen Erdahl (R) | Warren Spannaus (DFL) | Rolland F. Hatfield (R) | 34C, 33L | 70C, 65L | Hubert Humphrey (DFL)[lower-alpha 8] | 4R, 4DFL | |||
1972 | Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew (R) | |||||||||||
1973 | 37DFL, 30R | 77DFL, 57R | ||||||||||
1974 | 36DFL, 31R[3] | |||||||||||
1975 | Joan Growe (DFL) | Robert W. Mattson, Jr. (DFL) | Jim Lord (DFL) | 38DFL, 28IR, 1I | 104DFL, 30IR | 5DFL, 3R | ||||||
1976 | 103DFL, 31IR[4] | Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale (D) | ||||||||||
Rudy Perpich (DFL)[lower-alpha 7] | Alec G. Olson (DFL)[lower-alpha 7] | Wendell Anderson (DFL)[lower-alpha 9][lower-alpha 6] | ||||||||||
1977 | 49DFL, 18IR | 104DFL, 30IR | 4DFL, 4R | |||||||||
1978 | 48DFL, 19IR[3] | 99DFL, 35IR[lower-alpha 25] | Muriel Humphrey (DFL)[lower-alpha 9] | |||||||||
1979 | Al Quie (IR) | Lou Wangberg (IR) | Arne Carlson (IR) | 47DFL, 20IR | 67DFL, 67IR[lower-alpha 26] | David Durenberger (R) | Rudy Boschwitz (R)[lower-alpha 27] | |||||
1980 | 45DFL, 22IR[3] | 68DFL, 66IR[lower-alpha 28] | Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale (D) | |||||||||
1981 | 70DFL, 64IR | 5R, 3DFL | ||||||||||
1982 | 44DFL, 23IR[3] | |||||||||||
1983 | Rudy Perpich (DFL) | Marlene Johnson (DFL) | Skip Humphrey (DFL) | Robert W. Mattson, Jr. (DFL) | 42DFL, 25IR | 77DFL, 57IR | 5DFL, 3R | |||||
1984 | 76DFL, 58IR[4] | Walter Mondale and Geraldine Ferraro (D) | ||||||||||
1985 | 42DFL, 24IR, 1I[lower-alpha 29] | 69IR, 65DFL | ||||||||||
1986 | 43DFL, 24IR[lower-alpha 30] | |||||||||||
1987 | Michael McGrath (DFL) | 47DFL, 20IR | 83DFL, 51IR | |||||||||
1988 | 46DFL, 21IR[3] | 82DFL, 52IR[4] | Michael Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen (D) | |||||||||
1989 | 44DFL, 23IR[3] | 81DFL, 53IR | ||||||||||
1990 | 80DFL, 54IR[4] | |||||||||||
1991 | Arne Carlson (IR/R) | Joanell Dyrstad (IR) | Mark Dayton (DFL) | 46DFL, 21IR | Paul Wellstone (DFL)[lower-alpha 8] | 6DFL, 2R | ||||||
1992 | 78DFL, 56IR[4] | Bill Clinton and Al Gore (D) | ||||||||||
1993 | 45DFL, 22IR | 87DFL, 47IR | ||||||||||
1994 | 84DFL, 50IR | |||||||||||
1995 | Joanne Benson (IR/R) | Judi Dutcher (R) | 43DFL, 24IR | 71DFL, 63R | Rod Grams (R) | |||||||
1996 | 42DFL, 25R | 69DFL, 65IR[4] | ||||||||||
1997 | 42DFL, 24R, 1I | 70DFL, 64R | ||||||||||
1998 | ||||||||||||
1999 | Jesse Ventura (Ref/I) | Mae Schunk (Ref/I) | Mary Kiffmeyer (R) | Mike Hatch (DFL) | Carol C. Johnson (DFL) | 40DFL, 26R, 1I | 71R, 63DFL | |||||
2000 | Judi Dutcher (DFL)[lower-alpha 31] | 41DFL, 25R, 1I[lower-alpha 32] | 70R, 63DFL, 1I[lower-alpha 33] | Al Gore and Joe Lieberman (D) | ||||||||
2001 | 39DFL, 27R, 1IPM | 69R, 65DFL | Mark Dayton (DFL) | 5DFL, 3R | ||||||||
2002 | 70R, 64DFL[4] | |||||||||||
Dean Barkley (I)[lower-alpha 9] | ||||||||||||
2003 | Tim Pawlenty (R) | Carol Molnau (R) | Patricia Anderson (R) | office abolished | 35DFL, 31R, 1IPM | 81R, 53DFL | Norm Coleman (R) | 4DFL, 4R | ||||
2004 | John Kerry and John Edwards (D) | |||||||||||
2005 | 68R, 66DFL | |||||||||||
2006 | 37DFL, 29R, 1IPM[3] | |||||||||||
2007 | Mark Ritchie (DFL) | Lori Swanson (DFL) | Rebecca Otto (DFL) | 44DFL, 23R | 85DFL, 49R | Amy Klobuchar (DFL) | 5DFL, 3R | |||||
44DFL, 22R[lower-alpha 34] | ||||||||||||
2008 | Barack Obama and Joe Biden (D) | |||||||||||
45DFL, 22R[lower-alpha 35] | 85DFL, 47R, 1IR, 1I[lower-alpha 36] | |||||||||||
2009 | 46DFL, 21R[3] | 87DFL, 47R | Al Franken (DFL)[lower-alpha 6] | |||||||||
2010 | ||||||||||||
2011 | Mark Dayton (DFL) | Yvonne Prettner Solon (DFL) | 37R, 30DFL | 72R, 62DFL | 4DFL, 4R | |||||||
2012 | ||||||||||||
2013 | 39DFL, 28R | 73DFL, 61R | 5DFL, 3R | |||||||||
2014 | ||||||||||||
2015 | Tina Smith (DFL)[lower-alpha 5] | Steve Simon (DFL) | 72R, 62DFL | |||||||||
2016 | 73R, 61DFL[4] | Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine (D) | ||||||||||
2017 | 34R, 33DFL | 77R, 57DFL | ||||||||||
2018 | Michelle Fischbach (R)[lower-alpha 7] | 33R, 33DFL | Tina Smith (DFL)[lower-alpha 12] | |||||||||
2019 | Tim Walz (DFL) | Peggy Flanagan (DFL) | Keith Ellison (DFL) | Julie Blaha (DFL) | 35R, 32DFL[lower-alpha 37] | 75DFL, 55R, 4NR[lower-alpha 38] | ||||||
2020 | Joe Biden and Kamala Harris (D) | |||||||||||
2021 | 34R, 31DFL, 2I[lower-alpha 39] | 70DFL, 64R | 4DFL, 4R | |||||||||
Year | Governor | Lieutenant Governor | Secretary of State | Attorney General | Auditor | Treasurer | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I) | U.S. Senator (Class II) | U.S. House | Electoral College votes |
Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress |
Notes
- Territorial governor appointed by President Zachary Taylor.
- Territorial governor appointed by President Franklin Pierce.
- Territorial governor appointed by President James Buchanan.
- Although legislators were elected, it was determined that an 1858-59 session was unnecessary due to the protracted length of the 1857-58 session; hence, these legislators never convened and were never sworn in.
- Resigned to become U.S. Senator.
- Resigned.
- Succeeded to office following death or resignation of previous officeholder.
- Died in office.
- Appointed by governor to fill vacancy.
- Resigned to become U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.
- Resigned following impeachment but before trial by Minnesota Senate.
- Appointed by governor to fill vacancy. Later elected to office in his or her own right.
- Due to a constitutional amendment, effective with the election of 1878, terms for senators became four years.
- Due to a constitutional amendment, effective with the election of 1878, terms for representatives became two years.
- Elected a Republican President Pro Tempore, John B. Sanborn, and organized the chamber.
- A coalition of Democrats and members of the Farmers' Alliance organized the chamber and elected an Alliance Speaker, Ezra T. Champlin. [2]
- Succeeded to office following death or resignation of previous officeholder. Later elected to office in his or her own right.
- Had also been endorsed by the Populists and Silver Republicans.
- Resigned following appointment to Minnesota Supreme Court.
- After a constitutional amendment in 1912, the Minnesota Legislature was nonpartisan until 1973. It went into effect in 1915 Legislators caucused as "conservatives" and "liberals," roughly equivalent to Republicans and Democrats/Farmer Laborites.
- Served as acting lieutenant governor; never took the oath of office.
- Resigned to become Vice President of the United States.
- Resigned to become administrator of the Rural Electrification Administration.
- A recount and subsequent litigation lasting 139 days delayed Karl Rolvaag's inauguration as governor.
- A series of special elections and party switches led to the composition in the 1978 session.[4]
- With the split chamber, a power-sharing agreement was negotiated. A Republican Speaker, Rod Searle, was elected, but Democrats received control of most committees. The tie was broken when a Republican, Robert Pavlak, was expelled from the chamber on May 19, 1979 on a party-line vote due to a legal and ethical violations. The agreement of shared-power held through the end of the year's session two days later, despite the Democrats' 67-66 majority.[5][6]
- Appointed by governor to fill vacancy, having already been elected to next full term.
- A special election was held for Pavlak's seat in District 67A. A Democrat, Frank J. Rodriguez, Jr., was elected, giving the Democrats a constitutional majority. With that, they reorganized the chamber under their control in the 1980 session.[5][4]
- A party switch from Republican to Independent by Charles Berg led to the composition in the 1985 session.[3]
- A party switch from Independent to DFL by Charles Berg led to the composition in the 1986 session.[3]
- Dutcher switched parties in 2000
- A series of special elections and party switches led to the composition in the 2000 session.[4]
- A party switch from Republican to Independent by Doug Reuter led to the composition in the 2000 session.[4]
- In December 2007, Republican Tom Neuville resigned to accept a District Court appointment.
- In January 2008, Democrat Kevin Dahle was elected in a special election to succeed Republican Tom Neuville.
- In July 2008, Republican incumbent Ron Erhardt became an independent.
- A seat flipped from Democratic to Republican in February through a special election.[7]
- Four Republicans announced on December 8, 2018, they would not join the Republican caucus in the 91st Legislature and would instead form their own caucus, the "New House Republican Caucus."[8]
- Tom Bakk and David Tomassoni were re-elected as Democrats in the 2020 election, but switched to Independent immediately after.
References
- Nordby, Mary Jane Morrison. Foreword by Jack (2002). The Minnesota state constitution : a reference guide. Westport, Conn. [u.a.]: Greenwood Press. p. 10. ISBN 0-313-28411-3.
- "Speakers of the Minnesota House of Representatives, 1849-present"
- "Party Control of the Minnesota Senate - Minnesota Legislative Reference Library". www.leg.mn.gov.
- "Party Control of the Minnesota House of Representatives - Minnesota Legislative Reference Library". www.leg.mn.gov.
- Loepp, Daniel (1999). Sharing the balance of power : an examination of shared power in the Michigan House of Representatives, 1993-94. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. p. 24. ISBN 0472097024. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
- "Journal of the House" (PDF). Minnesota Legislature. Minnesota State Legislature. 14 May 2020. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
- Van Oot, Torey. "Republican Jason Rarick wins Minnesota Senate seat vacated by Democrat". Star Tribune. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
- Bakst, Brian (December 8, 2018). "Renegade House members split from GOP caucus". Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
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