Asked what the biggest threat facing Minnesota now is, gubernatorial candidate and state Rep. Tom Rukavina, DFL-Virginia, is quick with an answer: Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s unallotments. In a video by Craig Stellmacher, Rukavina says the legislature “should’ve come out swinging” immediately after Pawlenty decided unilaterally to cut $2.7 billion from the state budget. He believes Pawlenty’s actions were unconstitutional and says he approached party leadership in early June about pursuing a suit.
“It’s usurping the power of the legislature… Right now he’s actually writing laws,” he said. “I don’t know where’s he getting this authority, and nobody’s really taking him on.”
“Right now any governor — whether the governor is Tom Rukavina or Tim Pawlenty — can basically sign every spending bill and then decide to unallot,” he said.
Rukavina agrees that Pawlenty’s motives in unallotment have been more about his national political ambitions than in looking after Minnesota’s future.
“I think he’s being very insincere in his claim that he loves this state and loves the people of this state,” he said. “Because what he’s doing to them isn’t, from where I come from, any sign of love.”
On Monday, the House Rules Committee voted to file a brief in support of a suit against the governor’s unallotment of some $2.7 million from the state budget.
Watch it:
See answers by DFL gubernatorial candidates R.T. Rybak and Paul Thissen to Stellmacher’s ongoing candidate series on the biggest threats to Minnesota.













4 Comments »
Comment posted November 18, 2009 @ 8:38 am
Headline typo on constitutional
Comment posted November 18, 2009 @ 8:40 am
Thanks, Tim. Fixed.
Pingback posted November 18, 2009 @ 3:05 pm
[...] MnIndy summarizes: “It’s usurping the power of the legislature… Right now he’s actually writing laws,” he said. “I don’t know where’s he getting this authority, and nobody’s really taking him on.” [...]
Pingback posted November 19, 2009 @ 3:09 am
[...] This unallotment issue is not going away. And, unlike most legal challenges of shady political maneouvers, this may not turn out spurious. [...]
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