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Minnesota Senate GOP leader says deal near on policing bill

Optimism is not as high on the $1.9 billion bonding bill, and Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka will adjourn the special session at midnight if there's no deal.
Credit: AP
Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, right, confers with Assistant Majority Leader Warren Limmer before the Republican-controlled Minnesota Senate began debate, Tuesday, June 16, 2020, in St. Paul, Minn., on a package of police accountability measures in response to the death of George Floyd. (AP Photo/Jim Mone)

ST PAUL, Minn. — Legislative leaders had a tentative agreement Monday on the outlines of a police accountability bill, the top Republican in the Minnesota Senate said, but chances appeared dimmer for a $1.9 billion public construction projects package that had yet to win the necessary GOP support in the Democratic-controlled House.

Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, of East Gull Lake, said he planned to adjourn the special session by midnight if there was no agreement on the projects bill, also known as a bonding bill. He said a deal was mostly up to the House.

“It's basically today or it's not going to happen,” Gazelka said as lawmakers returned to the Capitol to resume their second special session of the year after several days of behind-the-scenes negotiations.

Gazelka said he and Democratic House Speaker Melissa Hortman, of Brooklyn Park, had a "tentative agreement" on the policing bill, “but we are still working through the language — that's always the tricky part.” He said discussions would continue. The bill is a response to the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police on Memorial Day, and the leader made it clear that it omits some of the more controversial ideas proposed by Democrats.

He declined to give many details but said the tentative deal included bans on chokeholds and “warrior training" for officers, as well as a new advisory council under the state board that licenses law enforcement officers, and changes in arbitration rules. He said it does not include anything that would dismantle or defund police departments, expand voting rights for convicted felons or give the attorney general responsibility for prosecuting officer-involved shootings.

Democratic House Majority Leader Ryan Winkler of Golden Valley, told lawmakers that a House vote was planned for later Monday.

Bonding bills require a three-fifths majority to pass both chambers and must pass the House first. So some Republican votes are necessary for the bill to clear the House. But GOP House Minority Leader Kurt Daudt, of Crown, told reporters that no Republicans would vote for the bonding bill as it stood Monday. Daudt said his caucus was shut out of the negotiations with House Democrats, Senate Republicans and Democratic Gov. Tim Walz.

The bonding bill includes a business tax break on equipment purchases sought by Republicans that would benefit farmers as well as small businesses damaged in the unrest that followed Floyd's death.

Walz had to call the special session to give lawmakers a chance to rescind the emergency powers he’s been using to respond to the coronavirus pandemic. House Democrats blocked a GOP effort to void those powers. 

The session also gave legislators another chance to pass the bonding bill and policing measures, which they were unable to agree on during last month’s special session. If the governor decides in the coming weeks to extend his emergency powers again, he'd have to call another special session.

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