Agbaje serves as vice chair of the Housing Finance and Policy Committee, and sits on the Elections Finance and Policy, Taxes, and Ways and Means Committees. She has served as an assistant majority leader since 2023.[1] Agbaje co-chairs the House People of Color & Indigenous (POCI) Caucus and is vice chair of the Black Maternal Health Caucus.[8][9]
Political positions
Housing and tenants' rights
Agbaje has called for greater investment in housing, calling housing a human right, and authored a bill that would provide $45 million in funding to Minneapolis to repair affordable housing units.[10][11]
As vice chair of the Housing Committee, Agbaje authored many tenant protection provisions contained in the final housing budget, saying expungement of eviction filings was her top concern due to its impact on people's ability to find housing.[12] She sponsored legislation that gave more rights and protections to those who use self-storage units, especially those who have recently been evicted.[13]
The CROWN Act
Agbaje authored the Creating a Respectful and Open World for Natural Hair (CROWN) Act.[14] The legislation adds a definition of race that includes natural hairstyles and protects Minnesotans from discrimination based on hairstyle. Agbaje testified about her experience straightening her hair for fear of losing a job or not being perceived as professional.[15] The legislation passed the House in February 2022 but was not acted on by the Republican-controlled Minnesota Senate.[16] In 2023 the bill passed both houses of the legislature and was signed by Governor Tim Walz.[17]
Public safety and criminal justice reform
Agbaje signed on to a letter by U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar asking the Department of Justice to expand its investigation into the Minneapolis Police Department following the murder of George Floyd.[18] Agbaje lives in the building where Minneapolis police shot and killed Amir Locke and has been a longtime supporter of police reform, including banning no-knock warrants.[19][20]
In 2023 she authored legislation to eliminate fees that state inmates pay for phone calls, saying it will help inmates stay connected with their families and reenter society after incarceration.[21][22] She also wrote a law lowering the threshold for pardons and commutations from unanimous support of the state Board of Pardons to a two-thirds majority.[23]
During the 2021 Minneapolis mayoral election, Agbaje did not endorse incumbent Jacob Frey, and signed on to a letter that advocated for a "new mayor" who would do more to end racial disparities and increase public safety.[24] She supported voting "yes" on City Question 2, which would have renamed the Minneapolis Police Department the Minneapolis Department of Public Safety, removed minimum staffing levels for sworn officers, and shifted oversight of the new agency from the mayor's office to the city council.[25][26]
Other political positions
Agbaje is pro-choice, and in 2023 authored a bill that offered legal protections to patients who travel to Minnesota for an abortion and the providers who treat them.[27][28] She sponsored a bill that would allow undocumented immigrants to access MinnesotaCare, the state's health insurance for low-income families.[29]
In 2023, Agbaje advocated against fully eliminating the state tax on Social Security income, saying it should be targeted to low- and middle-income seniors.[30] She joined environmental advocates in pushing for the closing of a metal shredder in North Minneapolis after a stockpile caught fire.[31]
Electoral history
2020 DFL Primary for Minnesota State House - District 59B[32]