Election 2023: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 3

There are two people running in Ward 3:

Michael Rainville (incumbent, DFL-endorsed)
Marcus Mills (Green endorsed)

Michael Rainville

I do not like Michael Rainville. I didn’t like him as a candidate, and he has pretty much completely fulfilled my expectations. Rainville is a Frey lackey, always ready to defend cops whether it makes any damn sense or not (if you say “mission accomplished” regarding Cedric Alexander, I am curious what you think the mission was?) In July of 2022, he scapegoated Somali youths for recent violence, doubled down, then kinda sorta apologized only to say later the same day that he had to be careful about what he said in front of who.

In the “Progress” section of his website, something went wrong with the display and the “Homelessness” section looked like this when I pulled it up:

The word Homelessness in large, bold type. Underneath that, in smaller type: "We must treat unhoused people with dignity and compassion. Criminalization of their" and there was clearly supposed to be more text there but it stops showing, there's just some bits that were the tops of letters.

This struck me as humorously ironic, since what it suggests is, “I want to make a vague statement of goodwill towards homeless people, while demonstrably not really giving much of a shit.” (Which, you know … maybe that’s not irony. Maybe that’s just accurate?) To be fair, though, I use Firefox, and it might look OK in Chrome, so I pulled it up in Chrome for another look….

The word "Homelessness" appears in large bold type, followed by the following text: "We must treat unhoused people with dignity and compassion. Criminalization of their condition is not the correct approach. But neither is neglecting the serious public and individual health risks that homeless encampments pose. The unsheltered homeless population in Hennepin County reached a multi-year low in 2022. This progress is a result of greater collaboration between the City, state, and Hennepin County - the entity that has" and then it breaks off abruptly.

FYI, when I selected the text in Chrome, the rest of it came along, so that sentence is supposed to finish, “typically been responsible for addressing homelessness. If we are going to continue this progress, we need to work together toward solutions in good faith.” Even with all the text there, this is a real nothing of a statement, and when you say that homeless encampments pose “serious public and individual health risks” without acknowledging that the biggest health risk homelessness poses is to the people who are living in Minneapolis without homes, you’re being pretty goddamn shameless about the extent to which you think you serve the wealthy people who view homeless people as the central problem, rather than a lack of housing.

Also, under public safety, there’s this: “Public safety reform should be guided by the lived experience of officers and citizens, not just ideology. That’s why I make frequent visits to the First Precinct and listen to officers discuss their experiences on the job. We must reckon with the fact that we are down over 300 officers from pre-2019 levels, and that recruiting more officers cannot be fixed immediately, even with additional funding. Rebuilding the force will help restore community policing, reduce response times, and improve police-community relations. But there is so much more that we must do.” When you say, “Public safety reform should be guided by the lived experience of officers and citizens” and then talk at length and in detail about how much time you’ve spent listening to officers and have zero examples of listening to the people who are policed by those officers and all the rest of your rhetoric is about how hard things are for police officers and there’s not even any lip service about stuff like accountability: you have made your position and priorities really, really clear! This is why I do not like or trust you, Michael Rainville.

Marcus Mills

Marcus Mills is endorsed by the Green party, former City Council representatives Cam Gordon and Jeremy Schroeder, and former Mayoral candidate Sheila Nezhad. He has reasonably substantial local policy experience (an energy advisory committee, a community engagement commission, chair of the neighborhood association land use and development committee). On his issues page he talks about wanting participatory budgeting, solar panels on schools, and tenant protections (among other things — basically, his goals suggest that he’d be more aligned with the progressive wing of the City Council than Michael Rainville is.)

He also mentions playing D&D in his bio. I feel like there’s a whole set of jokes to be made here about the ways in which D&D does and doesn’t prepare you for serving on a City Council (on one hand: you’ve proved you’re capable of paying attention through long meetings. On the other hand: at a City Council meeting you don’t ever get to solve problems by casting Chain Lightning.)

His Facebook page has no new posts since June; his Events page turns up no events. So I am not sure how actively he’s campaigning. But he’ll be on the ballot, and I would absolutely vote for him.


I have a book coming out this fall, in November! Liberty’s Daughter is near-future SF about a teenage girl on a libertarian seastead. A lot of it was originally published as short fiction in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. You can pre-order it in either book or ebook format from whatever you like.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi, so if you’d like make a donation to encourage my work, check out this first-year art teacher at Lucy Laney who is raising money to provide easels, drying racks, and art materials for her students. (Previously: a new Art teacher at Jenny Lind elementary who needs to stock her classroom with supplies — funded!)

Election 2023: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 2

Running in Ward 2: incumbent Robin Wonsley.

Robin Wonsley (DSA)

She is unopposed. If you live in Ward 2, Robin Wonsley is going to continue to be your City Council representative. You still have an election, but the only person who will appear on your ballot is Robin. (I like her fine and would vote for her.)

(“Why are you even posting this, Naomi?” “Because when I don’t include the districts with only one candidate, people e-mail me and ask when I’m going to write about that district. Also, this took me five minutes and gave me a nice sense that I’m making fast progress on getting these up.”)

Election 2023: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 1

Here’s who’s running:

Elliott Payne (DFL)
Edwin B. Fruit (Socialist Worker Party)

This is one of the very straightforward ones to write up, because Elliott Payne, the incumbent, has been a solid progressive on the City Council, and I like him a lot. He is endorsed by the DFL (and by lots of progressive groups, various local unions, etc.)

Edwin Fruit is running with the Socialist Worker party, and like all their candidates, he links to “The Militant” as his website, which means you can go there and read about their take on the Argentine elections but not about Edwin’s priorities for Minneapolis. Edwin has also run for office in Iowa (for US House in 2002) and in Seattle (for City Council in 2013, as a write-in). He was party to a lawsuit in Maryland in 1989 challenging filing fees for ballot access. I would not vote for him for anything he’s run for, but that’s fine, because Elliott is great.


I have a book coming out this fall, in November! Liberty’s Daughter is near-future SF about a teenage girl on a libertarian seastead. A lot of it was originally published as short fiction in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. You can pre-order it in either book or ebook format from whatever you like.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi, so if you’d like make a donation to encourage my work, check out this first-year art teacher at Lucy Laney who is raising money to provide easels, drying racks, and art materials for her students. (Previously: a new Art teacher at Jenny Lind elementary who needs to stock her classroom with supplies — funded!)

Minneapolis and Saint Paul City Council Elections, 2023

Welcome to election season, and, as always, apologies to the people who followed me for my science fiction rather than my election blog (I feel less bad about inflicting science fiction on the people who follow me for election blogging).

Minneapolis and Saint Paul both have City Council races. Saint Paul also has a School Board At-Large race with four open seats.

In Minneapolis, there’s a race in every ward except Ward 2 — Robin Wonsley is running unopposed. There are open seats in Ward 7 and Ward 12. (Which is to say, the current incumbent is not running again.)

In St. Paul, there’s a race in every single ward and wards 1, 3, 5, and 7 are open seats.

Does it feel like we just did this? If you live in Minneapolis, you had a city election just two years ago. But we had a census in 2020, followed by redistricting, and Minneapolis has the “Kahn rule” saying that the city needs to hold new elections once redistricting is completed. Back in 2020, Minneapolis had a City Question that proposed a second two-year term for City Council reps, if necessary, to keep the Mayoral and City Council races synchronized. It passed by a wide margin. So the Minneapolis races are all for a two-year term.

If you live in St. Paul and it feels like we just did this, well, we last had City Council races in 2019, you’re just suffering from the “what even is time?” problem where March of 2020 lasted for 847 days. Or else you’re remembering that we had a mayoral race in 2021. Our City Council and mayoral races have been out of sync either forever or for a good long time. The St. Paul candidates are all running for a four-year term.

Saint Paul also has a City Question regarding the implementation of a 1% sales tax to fund repairs to streets and parks. I don’t think Minneapolis has any City Questions this year.

I have a book coming out this fall, in November! Liberty’s Daughter is near-future SF about a teenage girl on a libertarian seastead. A lot of it was originally published as short fiction in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. You can pre-order it in either book or ebook format from whatever you like.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi, so if you’d like make a donation to encourage my work, I’m going to start by pointing my readers at this new Art teacher at Jenny Lind elementary who needs to stock her classroom with supplies.