Freiberg was a legislative aide to U.S. Representative Jim Oberstar from 1999 to 2001. From 2005 to 2006, he was a committee administrator for the Minnesota Senate. He was elected to the Golden Valley City Council in 2007 and served until his election to the state legislature.[1]
Freiberg was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2012, and has been reelected every two years since. He first ran for an open seat created by legislative redistricting.[1]
Freiberg chairs the Elections Finance and Policy Committee and sits on the Commerce Finance and Policy, State and Local Government Finance and Policy, and Ways and Means Committees. He was an assistant minority leader from 2017 to 2018. From 2019 to 2020 Freiberg chaired the Government Operations Committee, and from 2021 to 2022 he chaired the Preventative Health Division of the Health Finance and Policy Committee.[1]
Election policy
Freiberg sponsored legislation for Minnesota to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, under which it would award its electoral votes to whichever presidential candidate wins the most popular votes nationwide; the compact goes into effect only when states that together have a majority of electoral votes have joined it.[9] He has argued that the Electoral College has "become less and less representative".[10] Freiberg authored legislation to close campaign finance disclosure loopholes, including increasing campaign finance reporting requirements for local and municipal elections.[11][12]
Freiberg supports legislation that would raise the threshold for major-party status in Minnesota, saying the current system is "susceptible for mischief".[13] The bill faced opposition from third parties as well as former Governor Jesse Ventura, who ran under the Reform Party in 1998.[13]
Health care policy
In 2015, Freiberg wrote a bill requiring parents to talk to a doctor before parents opt their children out of vaccinations for diseases such as measles and chickenpox.[14][15] The bill was supported by doctors from the Mayo Clinic, but failed to move forward during Republican control of the House.[16][17] He also authored legislation that would support outreach programs to teach communities about the value of vaccinations and combat misinformation.[18] Freiberg has authored "right to die" legislation that allows Minnesotans facing terminal illnesses to have medical aid in dying.[19][20] The bill was modeled on an Oregon state law that has been in place for over 20 years.[21]
Cannabis legalization
In 2019, Freiberg was the lead House author of legislation that would legalize cannabis by 2022, introduced as House File 420.[22][23] The bill would legalize the drug for those over 21 and direct the Department of Health to regulate it and mitigate negative consequences, including researching and addressing physical and mental health issues related to the drug.[24][25] The proposal was supported by Governor Tim Walz, but faced opposition in the Republican-controlled State Senate, where it was carried by fellow DFLer Melisa Franzen.[22][26]
Other political positions
Freiberg wrote legislation in 2019 to lock Minnesota on daylight saving time.[27][28] In 2022, he authored legislation to put Minnesota on permanent standard time, saying, "I just want to get rid of the clock change. I don't care which one we go on." The U.S. government has banned states from adopting permanent daylight saving time.[29] Freiberg supported legislation to crack down on the use of "deep-fake" technology in pornography and campaign materials.[30]
Freiberg supported legislation that studied a redesign of Minnesota's state flag, which had been criticized for its design and depiction of Native Americans.[31][32][33][34] He also wrote legislation that would create a "companion animal board" aimed at curbing cruelty to animals and neglect.[35][36]
Freiberg has been married to his wife, Lauren, since 2006. They have two children and reside in Golden Valley, Minnesota.[1] Freiberg plays keyboard and has done so in the Minnesota State Band, the last state band in the nation.[43]
Freiberg is agnostic,[44] and co-founded Minnesota's "Secular Government Caucus".
References
^ abcdef"Freiberg, Mike". Legislators Past & Present. Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved April 5, 2013.
^Mike, Freiberg (August 17, 2017). "Minnesota Lawmakers Joint Statement on Charlottesville". Minnesota Legislature. Minnesota House of Representatives. Retrieved September 6, 2024. They are joined by their colleagues with Jewish ancestry: Reps. Jon Applebaum (44B), Mike Freiberg (45B), Frank Hornstein (61A), and Paul Rosenthal (49B), Sens. Steve Cwodzindski (48), Ron Latz (46), Richard Cohen (64), and Sandy Pappas (65).