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Kobey Layne speaking with supporters at the state convention

My First 100 Days

Lower costs. Clean government. Land, water, freedom. Here's the same plan laid out on a calendar — what I sign on Day One, what starts the first week, the first month, the first budget, and the bills I deliver for the first session. Every promise still rolls up to one of three fights.

One-Line Policy Reference

Every promise on this page, boiled down to one sentence — grouped by when I can first act on it, tagged with the fight it serves and the power it uses.

Download the one-line reference (PDF)

First 100 Days

This is the by-the-clock version of my plan. Same promises as the three-fights page — just sorted by when you can hold me to them. Each item shows which power I use, which fight it serves, and ends in a box you check when it's done.

How to read this.

Most politicians keep their timing vague, because a promise with no date can never be late. I do the opposite — every item below sits under the moment I can first act on it: Day One, the first week, the first month, the first budget, the first session. When a box runs late, you get the reason in public, at community office hours and on the accountability dashboard. The little colored chip on each item tells you which of the three fights it belongs to.

The work is bigger than me.

This checklist isn't meant just for me — I invite every candidate and elected official to publish their own accountability the same way. I want a clean government for the people and by the people, and I've built it hoping it outlasts me and that others adopt the method. A government that is checkable, open, and communication-oriented is the fundamental building block for rebuilding trust — especially across the political divide of our time. That's also why this page is honest about the limits of the office. Many of the priorities below — the legislative bills especially — a governor cannot do alone, and I say so plainly. I'll push fiercely for every item here, but checks and balances mean Minnesotans elect officials who represent them, and we work together to make a Minnesota for working people. My job is to be a negotiator, a delegator, and an administrator who brings everyone to the same table. I look forward to working with everyday Minnesotans of all backgrounds and their elected officials to pass as many of these priorities as we can — while keeping a balanced budget. And where a goal can't be reached on the timeline below, I'll stand up a task force to research how to get it done effectively and efficiently in Minnesota.

The clock at a glance

Day One

The pen and the wall — executive orders signed, the veto up.

The First Week

Convene, pause, and open the talks.

The First Month

Seat the boards, start enforcing, open the books.

The First Budget

The dollars — every one scored by Minnesota Management & Budget.

The First Session

The bills I deliver with the math, and you help pass.

Four kinds of power, in plain words

PROTECT

The veto. Defending a law Minnesota already has — the wall goes up Day One and stands for four years.

DO NOW

Mine alone, no waiting. Enforce the law, seat regulators, spend money the budget already set aside.

SIGN

An executive order, Day One. No permission needed.

PASS

A bill the House and Senate must pass. This is a priority I fight for, not something the governor controls — the Legislature holds the pen here. These carry two boxes: the first is mine when I deliver the bill with the math shown; the second only when the Legislature passes it and it's signed into law. That second box is yours too — send me the members who'll vote for it.

Every box rolls up to one of three fights

1

Lower what you pay

Rent, child care, medical, utilities, school costs, taxes.

2

Make this office answer to you

Open books, no insider deals, a watchdog pointed up at the powerful, not down at families.

3

Protect your land, water, and freedom

No one outside your household gets to override the people inside it.

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