Differences Between Republicans
and Liberal Democrats on
Role of Government
Republicans reject the attempts of many Democrats to use the power of the legislature to force citizens to behave according to lawmakers' personal preferences.
Wrong: ALLOWING NON-CITIZENS TO VOTE: Rep. Phyllis Kahn (D-Minneapolis) wants to amend the Minnesota Constitution to allow local governments to allow non-citizens to vote in local elections if they have lived in the community for 30 days. (House File 1899)
ALLOW 16-YEAR-OLDS TO VOTE: Rep. Phyllis Kahn (D-Minneapolis) first wanted 16-year-olds to vote in school board elections. (House File 428) but then decided to expand her earlier efforts and amend the constitution to allow 16-year-olds to vote in all state and local elections. (House File 630). (1)
Right: Republicans, unlike many Democrats, believe that public policy and laws should derive from individuals who have an important stake and membership in the community, that is, citizens. Non-citizens do not bear the full responsibilities that citizens do and have no formal commitment to the community of citizens and therefore should not be eligible to determine the rules of the community. It is ironic that Rep. Kahn would imbue the constitution with the idea that children are competent to make sophisticated voting decisions when state law is replete with statutes based on the judgment that children are not fully responsible for their conduct. If 16, why not 14, and so on?
Wrong: Rep. Joe Mullery (D-Minneapolis) wants to give workers’ comp cash to anybody who claims that work stress somehow hurt their feelings or gave them a “mental injury,” even if there is no physical evidence of such an injury. (House File 2047) (1)
Right: A "mental injury" basis for a workers' comp claim is so vague and so easily abused by fraudulent claimants that the law would do much more damage to the legal system than any benefit it would provide to a rare legitimate individual, unless you include trial lawyers.
Wrong: Called the “Freedom To Poop Act” by many critics, Rep. Erin Murphy (D-St. Paul) wants to fine firms and employees $100 if they do not let a customer use the firms’ non-public restroom if the customer has any “medical condition that requires immediate access to a toilet facility.” This could apply to your residential bathroom if you are having a yard sale or running a daycare center, because the bill is so vague. (House File 1015) (1)
Right: When proposing such vague and intrusive statutes as this one, Democrats like Rep. Murphy show no consideration for the impact they would have on safety and rights of individual property owners.
Wrong: Rep. Bill Hilty (D-Finlayson) wants to change business laws to create “socially responsible corporations,” into which the Attorney General may intervene for failure to meet social goals. (House File 404) (1)
Right: Yet another example of how elected Democrats employ the power of the state to coerce individuals and businesses into conforming with Democratic ideology. This kind of interference in business operations harms the ability of companies to produce products and services and provide jobs.
Wrong: Rep. Joe Mullery (D-Minneapolis) wants judges to decide what is an “unconscionable” price for any good or service during an “abnormal market disruption” and impose fines of up to $35,000 for each sale at whatever might later be found to be an “unconscionable” price. (House File 740) (1)
Right: Democrats believe that politicians and judges who have no knowledge of nor stake in the market place know better what products should be offered at what prices than do freely operating buyers and sellers.
Wrong: Rep. Patti Fritz (D-Faribault) would require every hospital, clinic, nursing home and medical facility to ban employees from lifting or assisting patients to their feet. Instead they would have to purchase hoists, “engineering controls, lifting and transfer aids, or mechanical assistive devices.” Employees could lift patients in an emergency.” (House File 712) (1)
Right: Some Democrats cannot seem to recognize the obvious harm produced by their attempts to create the perfect workplace. Republicans believe that forcing care providers to limit their assistance to patients to only those mechanical methods approved by the law deprives patients of the benefit of being lifted by a personal attendant.
Wrong: Rep. Scott Kranz (D-Blaine) wants landowners to buy their tenants mobile homes when trailer parks close. If a resident “chooses not to relocate the home to another manufactured home park,” then the resident “is entitled to compensation to be paid by the park owner in an amount equal to the estimated market value of the manufactured home.” (House File 1205) (1)
Right: This Democrat believes that the legislature should be in the business of changing agreements between landowners and tenants in order to conform with his view of what those agreements should have been. If this is a good idea, why should the legislature limit itself to rewriting only agreements involving trailer parks?
Wrong: Rep. Phyllis Kahn (D-Minneapolis) wants to raise the cost of being accused of smoking in a no-smoking hotel room. A person accused of smoking in such a room would face a $100 fine, $500 in attorney fees, a $30 service fee, and the full cost of “restoring the damaged room to its previolation condition.” Further interest on the cost begins to run, even if the accused does not receive notice of the violation. (House File 1825)
Right: It is stunning to see over and over again the effortlessness with which liberal Democrats are willing to apply the heavy hand of penalties to enforce their pet social mores.
Sources:
1.   MN House Republicans, Marty Seifert's office, 2007.
Senate District 60 GOP  •  P.O. Box 8271  •  Minneapolis, MN 55408
Phone:  612.824.6218  •  info@sd60gop.org

Prepared and paid for by the Senate District 60 Republican Committee
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate committee.