At 2 p.m., Gov. Tim Pawlenty will hold a press conference on his “future plans” — which now reportedly do not include a third term as Minnesota’s governor. Read his prepared remarks and watch the event live via The UpTake, after the jump.
Governor Tim Pawlenty
June 2, 2009
Governor’s Reception Room
State Capitol
Saint Paul, Minnesota***Remarks as prepared for delivery.
Good afternoon. Thanks for coming to the announcement that, in light of
the Brett Favre situation and its unsettling impact on the people of
Minnesota, I am signing an executive order requiring Saint Paul native Joe
Mauer, in addition to catching for the Twins, to also play quarterback for the Vikings.These are tough times, Joe, and everybody has to dig deep.
Of course, I actually have a different announcement for you. Today, I’m
announcing I will not seek a third term as Governor.At these types of announcements, the speaker often says something like “last but not least, I would like to thank the following people.”
Instead, I would like to express my gratitude not last, but right up front –
starting with acknowledging and thanking God for the great State of
Minnesota, its kind and generous people and for the opportunity to serve this special, jaw-droppingly amazing state.I would also like to thank the love of my life, the mother of our two
daughters and the person who has carried more of the load than you could ever imagine, the fabulous First Lady of Minnesota, Mary Pawlenty.My daughters Anna and Mara have grown-up with all the challenges that
come with your Dad being Governor. They have been very patient and
exhibited great grace through it all. I love them so much, and I am very
proud of both of them.My other family members, incredibly loyal and fantastic staff and cabinet
members, steadfast supporters, Lieutenant Governor Molnau, friends and so many others who have carried so much of the load – deserve and have my utmost respect and appreciation.I also want to thank legislators and public servants all across Minnesota.
While sometimes we may have had our differences, I have great respect and appreciation for good people who are willing to enter the difficult arena of public service. I am thankful for all of them.But the real secret to Minnesota’s success is its people, and I am so very
grateful for them. As Governor, I’ve been constantly inspired by the
courage and ingenuity of Minnesotans. It has been – and it will continue to be –- a great joy and opportunity to make the most of their amazing spirit, even in these tough times.I’ve seen so many examples of the goodness of Minnesotans all over this
great state. But one of my most memorable is witnessing packed high
school gymnasiums in Greater Minnesota every time our soldiers head out or come home. Young and old, rich and poor, family member or not, the
people of the town show up, and they stand up for things that matter. They value service, courage, honor and country.Serving this incredible state has been the great honor of my life. I’m
profoundly grateful for the opportunity to serve the wonderful people of
Minnesota.My administration has made a major, positive difference for Minnesota. We developed and deployed the best support programs for members of the military, their families and veterans in the country. We led the nation in developing a cleaner, more secure and more Americanized energy future.
We led the nation in education reform and results, have been nation-leading in redesigning and improving health care and much more.And importantly, we kept Minnesota competitive by imposing some much- needed discipline on government by keeping a lid on taxes and spending. We even succeeded in achieving the long-standing goal of moving Minnesota out of the top ten mostly highly-taxed states.
I still have lots of energy and ideas. But, being Governor should not be a
permanent position for someone.When it comes to how long someone should stay in an elected position, a
little less is better than too much.It’s a lesson I learned spending time in places like the Croatian Hall in South Saint Paul, where there is inevitably less joy and more trouble in too much pizza or too much beer.
We don’t have term limits in Minnesota, but we do have good judgment and common sense. We are a government of laws and ideas, not personalities.
Time marches on, and now it’s time to give someone else a chance.
I’m announcing my decision now so candidates interested in running for this office will have ample time to make their plans and make their case to the people of Minnesota.
Be assured, though, that I will make the most of the 19 months I have left in the office Minnesotans have entrusted to me. I will continue to spend every day doing what’s right for them. Minnesota will get my very best until I’m done. There is much important and difficult work remaining, and I will tackle it aggressively and finish strong.
The Scriptures say “there is a time for every purpose”. For me, the purpose of the next 19 months will be to do the very best I can for Minnesota.
Thank you and God bless you all.
Pawlenty also released a summary of accomplishments (pdf).













3 Comments »
Comment posted June 2, 2009 @ 3:38 pm
TPaw still has “lots of energy and ideas.” Too bad he never had any ideas for moving Minnesota ahead – at least none that he was willing to work for.
Comment posted June 2, 2009 @ 3:45 pm
As Pawlenty heads for the lifeboats, Presidential aspirations in hand. The State of Minnesota sinks slowly like the Titanic. But, I leave criticism to the experts.
“There will be fees, delayed payments in promised aid to schools, back-loaded funding “tails” on various programs, and myriad other accounting sleights of hand. One-time aid from the federal government will be gratefully accepted even as the state whacks local government aid to cities and counties and promotes other policies that are sure to result in higher local property taxes. Pots of money specifically earmarked for non-general-fund purposes will be raided. And on the expenditure side of the ledger, the governor will pretend that inflation doesn’t exist.
Unlike Houdini, Pawlenty is playing a role that can’t end painlessly. People will lose their health insurance, their childcare subsidies, their affordable nursing homes. Be it taxes, fees, or the withdrawing of government support, the bang for your buck in state tax dollars is almost certain to diminish significantly”. –Britt Robson
Could it be that TPaw took Minnesotan’s advice on how to fix Minnesota’s revenue problem and left?
Comment posted June 3, 2009 @ 6:54 am
Pawlenty will go down in Minnesota history for his phony posturing. The governor who rushed to pose for the cameras when the 35W bridge collapsed (after state Republicans crippled the MnDOT budget sufficiently to make bridge inspections completely ineffectual). The sanctimonious religious fanatic who curried favor with fringe groups like the Minnesota “Family Council”. And his outrageous portrayal as the poster child for fiscal responsibility, who decided to unilaterally craft the state budget recently, rather than negotiate with DFL members of the State Legislature.
Pawlenty has always been a classic example of Republican “form over substance”. He has spent his entire term quietly reducing the quality of life in Minnesota. He has crippled schools and hospitals, and has shifted state income from income taxes to regressive (and excessive) property taxes. His image of the future quality of Minnesota education resembles something more on the order of Louisiana or Mississippi or Alabama.
Good riddance to a thoroughly incompetent and malicious governor.
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