Flanagan grew up in Saint Louis Park, Minnesota, an inner-ring suburb of Minneapolis. She got her start as a community organizer organizing the urban indigenous community, including for U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone’s 2002 reelection campaign. She was elected to and served on the Minneapolis Public Schools Board from 2005 to 2009. In 2015, Flanagan was elected to fill a vacancy in the Minnesota House, representing a section of Minneapolis's western inner-ring suburbs.
Flanagan was elected lieutenant governor in 2018 and reelected in 2022, both times as Tim Walz's running mate, becoming the first woman of color elected to statewide office in Minnesota, and the highest-ranking Native American woman in elected office in the nation.[1]
While in college, Flanagan worked on U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone's campaign, eventually becoming an organizer for the urban Native American community.[2] After college, she worked for the Minnesota Council of Churches, performing outreach work between Native American families and the Minneapolis public school system.[2]
In her first run for elective office, Flanagan won a seat on the board of Minneapolis Public Schools in 2004.[6] In a six-candidate field that featured two incumbents, the political newcomer Flanagan garnered the most votes.[7] She was elected along with Lydia Lee and incumbent Sharon Henry-Blythe and served one term on the board, from 2005 to 2009.[3] In 2008, she challenged incumbent Minnesota Representative Joe Mullery in the Democratic primary, but dropped out of the race due to her mother's health problems.[2] After working a handful of other jobs, Flanagan joined Wellstone Action as a trainer of activists, organizers, and candidates.[2] She was then appointed to briefly serve on the school board again from 2010 until 2011.[8] As executive director of Children's Defense Fund-Minnesota, she also advocated for the successful 2014 effort to raise Minnesota's minimum wage.[2] In 2016, she began training for The Management Center, helping social justice leaders build and run effective, equitable, and sustainable organizations.[9]
Minnesota House of Representatives
Flanagan was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives unopposed in a special election on November 3, 2015, and sworn in on November 9.[10] Susan Allen (Rosebud) and Republican Steve Green (White Earth Ojibwe) were the only other Natives in the Minnesota State House at that time.
In 2017, Flanagan, Allen, Kunesh-Podein and Beck-Finn formed the Minnesota House Native American Caucus to represent issues of both urban and rural Native Americans and their other constituents.[11]
Flanagan in 2023
2016 Democratic National Convention
Flanagan was invited to address the 2016 Democratic National Convention on July 28, 2016. She was the second Native American woman to address the DNC after Denise Juneau did so in 2012.[12][11]
Flanagan supports transgender rights and providing gender-affirming care to youth who identify as transgender. She supported Walz's executive order protecting access to gender-affirming care for adults and youth.[16]
Personal life
Flanagan has a daughter with her former husband, Tim Hellendrung.[17] The marriage ended in 2017. She resides in St. Louis Park, Minnesota.[18]
On January 12, 2018, Flanagan announced on her personal Facebook page that she was in a relationship with the Minnesota Public Radio News host Tom Weber; MPR News announced that day that it was reassigning Weber to no longer cover "the governor’s race, the Legislature, potential legislation, public policy involving the executive or legislative branches or any topic related to the November 2018 election."[19] Flanagan married Weber in September 2019.[20]
Awards
In February 2020, the National Congress of American Indians gave Flanagan the Native American Leadership Award for her work raising awareness of Native issues and improving lives of Indigenous people.
In July 2020, Flanagan received the Dr. B. Robert Lewis Award from the Minnesota Public Health Association for her work on addressing inequities in public health.[22]
Italics indicate next-in-line of succession for states and territories without a directly elected lieutenant governor or whose lieutenant governor office is vacant: