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Secretary of State’s Note In accordance with the enabling act of
February 26, 1857, an election was held on June 1, 1857, at which
Republican and Democratic delegates were elected to the
constitutional convention. When these delegates assembled in St.
Paul on July 13, 1857, to draft the Minnesota constitution, bitterness
between the two parties was so intense that Republican delegates and
Democratic delegates refused to meet in the same convention. As a result
each party held separate sessions in different rooms of the first capitol
building. The Democratic “convention” was
presided over by Henry H. Sibley, later elected first governor of
Minnesota. The Republican “convention” was presided over first by John
W. North, and later by St. Andrew D. Balcombe. The political cleavage was so great that
the two bodies never acted in joint meeting during the entire
constitutional convention: July 13 to Aug. 29. The final work was done
through a conference committee composed of five conferees from each of the
conventions. The conferees, by reporting to and receiving advice from
their respective conventions, were able to draft a constitution that would
be acceptable to both bodies. On August 28, 1857, in spite of numerous
protests by delegates, the report of the conference committee was adopted
without amendment by both the Republican and Democratic conventions. However, when it came time to sign the
constitution, the bitter feeling was still so intense that Democrats would
not sign an instrument which bore Republican signatures, and the
Republicans objected to signing an instrument that bore the signatures of
Democrats. The solution to this impasse: two constitutions. One
constitution was written on white paper and signed only by Republicans.
The other constitution was written on blue-tinted paper and signed only by
Democrats. Thus, on the 29th day of August, after
seven weeks of political dispute and disagreement, the two conventions
adjourned when as many members as could bring themselves to do so signed
the copy of the constitution enrolled for their particular convention.
The schedule to the constitution provided
for an election to be held on October 13, 1857. At this election the
voters were to accept or reject the constitution. The ballots used for
this purpose were printed to provide only for affirmative votes. A voter
who wished to reject the constitution had to alter his ballot and write in
a negative vote. The result: 30,055 for acceptance and 571 for rejection. The procedure for acquiring statehood not
only requires a constitution to be approved by the voters of the proposed
state, the constitution must also be approved by Congress. In December of
1857 the Minnesota constitution was submitted to the United States Senate
for ratification. A certified copy of the Democratic
constitution was transmitted to the senate by the territorial secretary: a
Democrat. This copy was attached to the bill for the admission of
Minnesota into the union. However, when the bill was reported back from
the senate, historians report that the Republican constitution was
attached. In any event, there is substantial authority that both
constitutions were before Congress when Minnesota was admitted to the
union on May 11, 1858. In reality, the constitution ratified by
Congress was not the original constitution. At the election of October 13,
1857, in addition to voting on the constitution, the voters elected
executive, legislative and judicial officers. The state officers were
content to wait for the act of Congress before assuming office. But the
legislature took a contrary view. It convened on December 3, 1857, on the
theory that under the enabling act the statehood of Minnesota began when
the voters approved the constitution. Even though this theory was
incorrect, the legislature proceeded to enact laws, the effects of which
have remained undisturbed by the courts. The first two acts passed by the
legislature were proposed amendments to the constitution. One amendment
authorized a loan to railroads of $5 million and the other related to the
term of office of the first state officers. These amendments were ratified
by the voters at a special election held April 15, 1858. It would appear
that the constitution that Congress approved on May 11, 1858, was an
amended constitution, not the original adopted by the constitutional
convention and approved by the voters in 1857. The legislature in 1971 established a constitutional study
commission to review the constitution and make recommendations to maintain
its utility. After two years’ study, the commission recommended that an
amendment restructuring the constitution for easy reference and rewriting
it in modern language be prepared. The amendment was introduced and passed in both houses, signed by the governor, and approved by the voters on November 5, 1974. The previous wording of the constitution is printed, with all the amendments approved by voters since its adoption in 1857, in the Minnesota Legislative Manual 1973–74, pages 445–484. The amendment approved in 1974 did not alter the meaning of the constitution. In cases of constitutional law, the original document remains the final authority.
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