Opinion editor’s note: Strib Voices publishes a mix of commentary online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.
•••
I would have been eager to speak with former Lt. Gov. Marlene Johnson last week even if she wasn’t touting the release of her new book.
That book is “Rise to the Challenge: A Memoir of Politics, Leadership, and Love,” out this month at University of Minnesota Press. More about that in the endnote.
For now, here’s a refresher on Marlene Johnson: She was Minnesota’s first female lieutenant governor, elected in 1982 alongside DFL Gov. Rudy Perpich, who himself had been lieutenant governor a decade earlier.
If you detect a parallel to Kamala Harris, the nation’s first female vice president who served a president who himself had been vice president — well, so do I.
The parallel breaks in 1990. Unlike President Joe Biden this year, Perpich did not decide in 1990 to abandon his re-election bid (though he should have). Perpich did not position Johnson to succeed him (though he had once indicated to her that he would do just that). Perpich treated Johnson as a close adviser and governor-in-training during their first term together, but he pulled away from her during their second — to his detriment, I’d say.
After an unsuccessful bid for the St. Paul mayor’s office in 1993, Johnson left Minnesota politics and moved to Washington, D.C., becoming CEO of NAFSA: Association of International Educators. She held that post for nearly 20 years, retiring in 2017.