Karin Housley’s long-shot bid to turn Minnesota red is the end of a winding career transformation. The belated political awakening for Karin Housley arrived in the tea party heyday of Tax Day 2010. She’d already transformed from TV news producer (“back when it was real news,” she’s quick to clarify) to nomadic pro hockey wife — her husband, Hockey Hall of Famer and current Buffalo Sabres head coach Phil Housley, played for eight NHL teams during a 21-year career — to full-time proprietor of Karin Housley Homes, a high-end real estate agency in the Twin Cities’ northeast suburbs. “It was frustrating to see the direction our government was going, to see where my tax dollars were going,” Housley says. No stranger to moving, she seriously considered leaving her beloved home state for somewhere with lower taxes and lighter regulation. In a cozy seating area along the far wall of the open-plan office suite for her campaign for U.S. Senate, she recounts how her kids talked her out of it — and set her on a life-changing course with a simple message: “Mom, you always told us when you’re mad about something, you do something about it. So, what are you going to do about it?” Her answer: Change things from the inside. Housley lost a close race for state Senate that year, then won two years later in a more favorably drawn district. In 2016, she won re-election by 23 percentage points. |