MN Rep. Kaohly Her, DFL-St. Paul, says she's an illegal in the US, her parents were illegals. She claimed that her family didn't qualified to migrate to the US base on refugee status. She goes on to say that her family didn’t qualify for refugee status but a family friend (uncle — in the Hmong familial sense of the word) — worked for USAID. When her father, who was working for a US Consulate at the time, processed the refugee paperwork, he claimed familial connection to the friend that worked for USAID, which wasn’t accurate.
She said she was trying to inspire empathy in her Republican colleagues, who were about to vote to take away state-funded health care for adults in Minnesota without permanent legal status by revealing her history.

So, it boils down to giving illegals healthcare benefits at the cost of MN tax payers. However, many many legal status Minnesotans still don't have access healthcare.