The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) is a political party in the U.S. state of Minnesota affiliated with the national Democratic Party. The party was formed by a merger between the Minnesota Democratic Party and the Minnesota Farmer–Labor Party in 1944. The DFL is one of two state Democratic Party affiliates with a different name from that of the national party, the other being the neighboring North Dakota Democratic–Nonpartisan League Party.

The DFL controls four of Minnesota's eight United States House of Representatives seats, both of its United States Senate seats, the Minnesota Senate, and all other statewide offices, including the Governor of Minnesota, making it the dominant party in the state. In the Minnesota House of Representatives, it has a power-sharing agreement with its main political rival, the Republican Party of Minnesota, following a tie in the 2024 Minnesota House of Representatives election.

History

Background

The progressive movement in Minnesota following the American Civil War was initially contained within the Minnesota Republican Party. However, by the 1880s, the Republican party became less receptive to progressive reform. The Farmer's Alliance and Knights of Labor, rising in political power, initially attempted to bring progressivism to the Minnesota Democratic party, during the 1886 gubernatorial campaign of A. A. Ames. After his defeat, the Farmer's Alliance and Knights of Labor failed to regain influence within either the Republican or Democratic parties. In 1890, the Farmer's Alliance organized the campaign of Sidney M. Owen as a third-party candidate. Despite Owen's electoral failure, the Farmer's Alliance secured enough of a voting base that in 1892, they joined with the Populists, who would be able to outperform the Democrats. In 1896, a fusion ticket with the Democrats would be created, headed by John Lind. On his second gubernatorial run in 1898, the fusion ticket would be successful. However, Lind would only serve one term. In 1902, the fusion was broken, and the poor performance of the Populists would be the end of the party. Progressives continued to dominate the Democratic party for the rest of the decade, before slowly losing influence.

The Nonpartisan League (NPL), founded in North Dakota in 1915 was an agrarian party focused on farmer grievances against corporate monopolies. It expanded to Minnesota in 1917 and in 1918 it merged with the Duluth Union Labor Party to create the Farmer–Labor Party (FLP).

During the 1930s, the FLP gained support for radical platforms aimed at addressing economic and social inequalities. The party won the 1930 gubernatorial election under Floyd B. Olson. During this decade, Democrats had minimal success in the state, as the FLP effectively captured the left-wing vote and drew support away from urban workers, rural farmers, and immigrants. The party often won only single digits in statewide races as the FLP aligned informally with Roosevelt's New Deal coalition.

Following Olson's death in 1936, Hjalmar Petersen became governor until the inauguration of Elmer Benson. Olson was the unifying figure in the party, and both Benson and Petersen claimed to be his successor. In 1938, Petersen and Benson ran against each other in the primary. Benson led the radical wing, while Petersen led the more moderate leftist wing. Benson would win the primary, but lose the general election. Following Benson's defeat, Petersen's faction dominated the FLP. The party suffered further setbacks in 1940 and 1942, losing congressional seats. Petersen failed twice to recapture the Governor's office.

Establishment

On April 15, 1944, the Farmer–Labor Party merged with the Minnesota Democratic Party, forming the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL). Leading the merger effort were Elmer Kelm, the head of the Minnesota Democratic Party and the founding chairman of the DFL, and Elmer Benson, who had re-taken control of the FLP from Hjalmar Petersen following his Petersen's electoral defeats in 1940 and 1942. Rising star Hubert H. Humphrey chaired the Fusion Committee that accomplished the union and then went on to chair its first state convention.

Early years

The early DFL confronted various social issues, including antisemitism, the beginnings of the Civil rights movement, and economic justice, influenced significantly by Minnesota's small but politically active African American communities. In early 1946, as a Fair Employment Practice (FEPC) bill was moving through Congress, there was a surge of civil rights activism in the Twin Cities.

Factional battles were intensified by differing views on how to address the left-wing influence within the party, with significant conflicts between proponents of Henry A. Wallace's progressive policies and the more moderate wing led by figures like Hubert Humphrey. By the party's second convention in 1946, tensions had re-emerged between members of the two former parties. While the majority of delegates supported left-wing policies, Humphrey managed to install a more conservative, anti-communist ally, Orville Freeman, as party secretary. Some disaffected Farmer–Labor leaders such as Benson moved to the Progressive Party.

Recent history

Freeman was elected the state's first DFL governor in 1954. Important members of the party have included Humphrey and Walter Mondale, who each went on to be United States senators, vice presidents, and unsuccessful Democratic nominees for president; Eugene McCarthy, a U.S. senator who ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1968 as an anti-Vietnam War candidate; Paul Wellstone, a U.S. senator from 1991 to 2002 who became an icon of populist progressivism; Amy Klobuchar, a U.S. senator who ran for the Democratic nomination for president in 2020; Dean Phillips, a U.S. representative who ran for the Democratic nomination for president in 2024; and Tim Walz, two-term incumbent governor chosen as Kamala Harris' running mate in the 2024 presidential election. The DFL has had varied success beginning in the late 1970s and through the late 2010s, in part due to the growth of single-issue splinter groups after reforms brought by the national party.

Following the 2022 Minnesota elections, the DFL became the dominant party in the state, retaining every executive office, winning majorities in the state House and Senate, and re-electing all incumbent congressional representatives. With their newly elected trifecta, the DFL pursued a progressive agenda in their first legislative session. Governor Tim Walz described the session as "the most successful legislative session, certainly in many of our lifetimes and maybe in Minnesota history." The newly elected government passed large expansions in welfare programs and spending. Notable policies passed include the expansion of abortion rights, new programs to provide reproductive healthcare, protection of gender affirming care, the legalization of recreational cannabis, indexing education spending to inflation, investments in public transit, and paid sick leave for Minnesota workers. Former president Barack Obama praised the state government's actions, saying that "Minnesota has made progress on a whole host of issues – from protecting abortion rights and new gun safety measures to expanding access to the ballot and reducing child poverty. These laws will make a real difference in the lives of Minnesotans." The trifecta was broken with a split legislature following the 2024 Minnesota elections.

Party organization

DFL chair Richard Carlbom in 2026

The DFL is governed by a state central committee, which is composed of representatives from each of the state's congressional districts. The state central committee is responsible for setting the party's platform, electing party officers, and conducting other party business. The DFL also has a constitution and bylaws that govern its operations.

Community caucuses

The party operates several community caucuses that organize and represent different communities within Minnesota; they are not defined geographically. These include the:

Voter base

The DFL's base of support is diverse, and it includes urban and suburban voters, working class voters, labor unions, environmentalists, and other progressive groups. The party has a strong presence in the Twin Cities metropolitan area. The DFL has lost support in traditional DFL strongholds such as the Iron Range since 2016.

Current elected officials

Members of Congress

U.S. Senate

U.S. House of Representatives

Out of the eight seats Minnesota is apportioned in the U.S. House of Representatives, four are held by members of the DFL.

Statewide

State legislative leaders

Mayors

Leadership

DFL booth at the 2024 Minnesota State Fair

Current

  • Chair: Richard Carlbom (since 2025)
  • Vice chair: Marge Hoffa (since 2011)
  • Second vice chair: Shivanthi Sathanandan (since 2021)
  • Treasurer: Lindy Sowmick (since 2025)
  • Secretary: Ceri Everett (since 2021)
  • Outreach officer: Quentin Wathum-Ocama (since 2025)

Historical party chairs

Through 1975, the party's constitution called for the election of a separate chairman and chairwoman to head state party activities. Only the chairman received compensation. In the mid-1970s, the party voted to change the titles of the chief party offices to chair and associate chair, specifying that they must both be salaried and must be of the opposite sex.

State chairmen Elmer Kelm (1944–1946) Harold H. Barker (1946–1948) Orville Freeman (1948–1950) Karl Rolvaag (1950–1954) Ray Hemenway (1954–1960) Adrian Winkel (1960–1961) George Farr (1961–1967) Warren Spannaus (1967–1969) Richard Moe (1969–1972) Hank Fischer (1972–1975)State chairwomen Ione Hunt (1948–1950) Dorothy Houston Jacobson (1950–1956) Anne Vetter (1956–1958) Geri M. Joseph (1958–1960) Evelyn Malone (1960–1962) Pat St. Angelo (1962–1963) Betty Kane (1963–1968) Koryne Horbal (1968–1972)

State chairs

Electoral history

Federal

U.S. Senate

Class 1
YearCandidateVotes%Won
Class 1 Year Candidate Votes % Won 1946 Theodore Jorgenson 349,520 39.8 No 1952 William E. Carlson 590,011 42.5 No 1958 Eugene McCarthy 608,847 53.0 Yes 1964 931,363 60.3 Yes 1970 Hubert Humphrey 788,256 57.8 Yes 1976 1,290,736 67.5 Yes 1978 (sp) Bob Short 538,675 34.6 No 1982 Mark Dayton 840,401 46.6 No 1988 Skip Humphrey 856,694 40.9 No 1994 Ann Wynia 781,860 44.1 No 2000 Mark Dayton 1,181,553 48.8 Yes 2006 Amy Klobuchar 1,278,849 58.1 Yes 2012 1,854,595 65.2 Yes 2018 1,566,174 60.3 Yes 2024 1,792,441 56.2 YesClass 2 Year Candidate Votes % Won 1948 Hubert Humphrey 729,494 59.8 Yes 1954 642,193 56.4 Yes 1960 884,168 57.5 Yes 1966 Walter Mondale 685,840 53.9 Yes 1972 981,320 56.7 Yes 1978 Wendell R. Anderson 638,375 40.4 No 1984 Joan Growe 852,844 41.3 No 1990 Paul Wellstone 911,999 50.5 Yes 1996 1,098,430 50.3 Yes 2002 Walter Mondale 1,067,246 47.3 No 2008 Al Franken 1,212,629 42.0 Yes 2014 1,053,205 53.2 Yes 2018 (sp) Tina Smith 1,370,540 53.0 Yes 2020 1,566,522 48.7 Yes
1946Theodore Jorgenson349,52039.8No
1952William E. Carlson590,01142.5No
1958Eugene McCarthy608,84753.0Yes
1964931,36360.3Yes
1970Hubert Humphrey788,25657.8Yes
19761,290,73667.5Yes
1978 (sp)Bob Short538,67534.6No
1982Mark Dayton840,40146.6No
1988Skip Humphrey856,69440.9No
1994Ann Wynia781,86044.1No
2000Mark Dayton1,181,55348.8Yes
2006Amy Klobuchar1,278,84958.1Yes
20121,854,59565.2Yes
20181,566,17460.3Yes
20241,792,44156.2Yes
YearCandidateVotes%Won
1948Hubert Humphrey729,49459.8Yes
1954642,19356.4Yes
1960884,16857.5Yes
1966Walter Mondale685,84053.9Yes
1972981,32056.7Yes
1978Wendell R. Anderson638,37540.4No
1984Joan Growe852,84441.3No
1990Paul Wellstone911,99950.5Yes
19961,098,43050.3Yes
2002Walter Mondale1,067,24647.3No
2008Al Franken1,212,62942.0Yes
20141,053,20553.2Yes
2018 (sp)Tina Smith1,370,54053.0Yes
20201,566,52248.7Yes

U.S. House

ElectionVotes%Seats (MN)±%
20001,234,20452.25 / 8162.5
20021,097,91149.94 / 8150.0
20041,399,62451.44 / 8050.0
20061,152,62152.95 / 8162.5
20081,612,48057.55 / 8062.5
20101,002,02647.94 / 8150.0
2012985,76055.55 / 8162.5
2014985,76050.25 / 8062.5
20161,434,59050.25 / 8062.5
20181,420,74855.15 / 8062.5
20201,554,37348.74 / 8150.0
20221,250,47950.14 / 8050.0
20241,579,74250.24 / 8050.0

State

Governor

YearCandidateVotes%Won
1944Byron G. Allen430,13237.8No
1946Harold H. Barker349,56539.7No
1948Charles Halsted545,76645.1No
1950Harry H. Peterson400,63738.3No
1952Orville Freeman624,48044.0No
1954607,09952.7Yes
1956731,18051.4Yes
1958658,32656.8Yes
1960760,93449.1No
1962Karl Rolvaag619,84249.7Yes
1966607,94346.9No
1970Wendell Anderson737,92154.0Yes
1974786,78762.8Yes
1978Rudy Perpich718,24445.3No
1982718,24458.8Yes
1986790,13856.1Yes
1990836,21846.8No
1994John Marty589,34434.1No
1998Skip Humphrey587,52828.1No
2002Roger Moe821,26836.5No
2006Mike Hatch1,007,46045.7No
2010Mark Dayton919,23243.6Yes
2014989,11350.1Yes
2018Tim Walz1,393,09653.8Yes
20221,312,34952.3Yes

Minnesota Senate

ElectionVotes%Seats±%Majority
19761,024,62451.949 / 67N/A73.1Yes
19801,024,62449.346 / 67368.7Yes
1982951,28751.842 / 67462.7Yes
1986765,58452.647 / 67570.2Yes
1990990,51353.746 / 67168.7Yes
19921,247,59453.045 / 67167.2Yes
19961,129,09551.142 / 67362.7Yes
20001,219,49749.639 / 67358.2Yes
20021,080,97549.735 / 67452.2Yes
20061,183,31955.344 / 67665.7Yes
20101,005,13248.930 / 671644.7No
20121,532,06555.839 / 67958.2Yes
20161,409,77550.133 / 67649.3No
20201,577,52349.833 / 67049.3No
20221,239,68250.734 / 67150.7Yes

Minnesota House

ElectionVotes%Seats±%Majority
20021,034,04647.852 / 1341138.8No
20041,381,41251.266 / 1341349.3No
20061,169,29854.985 / 1341963.4Yes
20081,516,63354.987 / 134264.9Yes
2010995,85348.562 / 1342546.3No
20121,468,36453.773 / 1341154.5Yes
2014944,96149.362 / 1341146.3No
20161,366,37549.157 / 134442.5No
20181,388,93854.475 / 1341855.9Yes
20201,601,35751.170 / 134552.2Yes
20221,237,52050.970 / 134052.2Yes
20241,545,21349.967 / 134350.0No

See also

Further reading

  • Delton, Jennifer A. (2002). Making Minnesota Liberal: Civil Rights and the Transformation of the Democratic Party. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816639221. JSTOR . LCCN .
  • Haynes, John Earl (Fall 1983). "Farm Coops and the Election of Hubert Humphrey to the Senate". Agricultural History. 57 (2).
  • Haynes, John Earl (1984). Dubious Alliance: The Making of Minnesota's DFL Party. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Henrickson, Gary P. (1981). Minnesota in the "McCarthy" Period: 1946–1954 (PhD thesis). University of Minnesota.
  • Lebedoff, David (1969). The 21st Ballot: A Political Party Struggle in Minnesota. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Lebedoff, David (1972). Ward Number Six. New York: Scribner. – Discusses the entry of radicals into the DFL party in 1968.
  • Mitau, G. Theodore (Spring 1955). (PDF). Minnesota History. 34 (5): 187–194. JSTOR .

External links