Dem sweep in Minn. SOS, AG, auditor races

Lori Swanson
Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson speaks to the crowd at the DFL victory party in Minneapolis, Tuesday, Nov. 2, 2010.
MPR Photo/Nate Ryan

Mark Ritchie won a second term as secretary of state on Tuesday less than two years after steering Minnesota through its most contentious recount ever, while Democrats extended their 40-year grip on the attorney general's office with Lori Swanson's victory.

A third first-term Democrat, Auditor Rebecca Otto, beat her predecessor, Republican Pat Anderson, in a rematch of the 2006 race. The sweep set Democrats up for a possible monopoly on Minnesota's executive offices pending the outcome of the governor's race.

Ritchie oversaw the biggest election recount in Minnesota history in the protracted 2008 U.S. Senate race, when Democrat Al Franken eventually edged Republican incumbent Norm Coleman by 312 votes out of nearly 2.9 million cast.

Ritchie, who was generally praised for nonpartisanship during the recount, also had a hand in refining the state's absentee ballot laws afterward.

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Republican Dan Severson raised questions about Ritchie's handling of some elements of the recount, but his major issue was making photo ID mandatory for voters. Severson, a four-term state representative from Sauk Rapids, argued that it was necessary to prevent fraud.

The auditor's race was a rematch of the race four years ago in which Otto knocked Anderson out of office. The auditor oversees more than $20 billion spent annually by local governments ranging from counties and cities down to port authorities and soil and water conservation districts.

After Otto beat Anderson, a former Eagan mayor and city council member, Gov. Tim Pawlenty appointed her commissioner of employee relations, tasked with eliminating her agency and folding it into the finance department. She was briefly a candidate for governor before switching to the auditor's race in January.

Anderson and Otto, a former state representative and former Forest Lake school board member, clashed over who would be the most vigilant financial watchdog. While Otto preferred to work mostly behind the scenes as auditor, Anderson vowed to be a high-profile bulldog.

Like her predecessors, Swanson focused on consumer protection issues. Her first term got off to a rough start four years ago. She took criticism for giving her predecessor and mentor, Mike Hatch, a spot on her staff after he lost his race for governor, and she was accused of ethical lapses as she tried to block a unionization drive among her staff.

Swanson's opponent, Republican Chris Barden, an Edina attorney and psychologist, had pledged to join a court challenge to the Obama administration's health care plan. He had hoped to become the state's first Republican attorney general since Douglas Head's single term ended in 1971.

(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)