At issue before the court is whether the current 67 Republican members constitute a quorum needed for the Minnesota House to do business.
The Minnesota Supreme Court is considering how deeply it should intervene in a power struggle between Democrats and Republicans over control of the state House.
Minnesota’s Supreme Court heard arguments Thursday afternoon on whether the state House of Representatives can continue to operate with only 67 Republican members present as Democratic-Farmer-Labor ...
What does having a quorum mean for the Minnesota House of Representatives? This question will likely be decided by the state's Supreme Court after state Democrats sued state Republicans for electing a ...
The Supreme Court justices listened to oral arguments for more than an hour and are expected to issue a ruling quickly.
At the root of the cases before the justices is a question of whether 67 lawmakers is enough for a quorum when there's a ...
The disarray in the non-functioning Minnesota House of Representatives comes down to five words in the state Constitution: “A majority in each house,” state Solicitor General Liz Kramer told the ...
Minnesota’s highest court heard oral arguments Thursday around a pair of cases challenging the legitimacy of legislative sessions involving only House Republicans, who have taken chamber control as De ...
Without an agreement between House GOP leader Lisa Demuth -- speaker of the House in the eyes of the GOP members -- and former DFL House Speaker Melissa Hortman, the boycott likely will not end, ...
The Minnesota Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Thursday to get to the bottom of one question: How many Minnesota House members need to be physically present at the Capitol to legally conduct ...
The state Supreme Court will hear oral arguments today (Thurs 1:30pm) in the lawsuits over what constitutes a quorum in the ...