Election 2025: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 4

On the ballot:

LaTrisha Vetaw (DFL-endorsed, incumbent)
Leslie Davis (“Tell The Truth” — which I put in scare-quotes for a reason)
Marvina Haynes (DFL)

Leslie Davis

Leslie Davis is an anti-vax anti-mask COVID-denying weirdo. For his “political party or principle” he put “Tell the Truth” which is ironic given that he’s repeating a lot of absolute bullshit. Don’t vote for him.

LaTrisha Vetaw

I got asked a while back if I regret any of my endorsements and LaTrisha probably tops the list — when she ran for Park Board At Large in 2017 as a Green who had served as Board Chair for Our Streets, I thought she sounded pretty cool. She’s turned into one of the most conservative City Council reps in Minneapolis. Like Michael Rainville in Ward 3, she not only voted to uphold Mayor Frey’s veto of the Labor Standards Board, she voted against creating it in the first place. She both voted to uphold Mayor Frey’s veto of the Affordable Housing right of first refusal ordinance and voted against it in the first place. She voted to uphold Mayor Frey’s veto of a minimum wage for rideshare drivers and also voted against it in the first place.

She’s also, in my opinion, kind of an asshole. There was a Public Health & Safety Committee meeting in January of 2024 where she fully melted down. The whole altercation starts here, if you want the full context. At the point I linked to (2 hours 14 minutes into the meeting), LaTrisha starts speaking and spends five minutes making a speech (important note: she’s not actually on this committee.) At 2:19 Jason Chavez breaks in to ask if she has a question for the city staff, and to ask her not to assign motives to other City Council members, and this sets her off, she yells at Jason, insults him, and shouts him down repeatedly. You can also read Daniel Suitor’s transcript of this, but I recommend watching the video.

The official City of Minneapolis video stops when the meeting is adjourned. Post-meeting, LaTrisha got into an argument with an activist (Nicole Mason, who at one point LaTrisha actually put her hands on.) She yelled at the meeting at large that she didn’t want any of the white people there to talk to her, yelled some more at the activist, and when that activist left the room, she walked around the room picking out other activists to yell at individually. You can see the video of all that here, or if Instagram links don’t work for you some of it’s here. I would strongly encourage people to watch the video because there’s a visceral difference between reading “she went and yelled at people” and watching her roaming around the room picking out activists to berate.

Also, the context of her speech and meltdown was that she was trying to disrupt questioning of Toddrick Barnette and Margaret Anderson Kelliher by Council Members after they admitted that the city gave zero notice before clearing an encampment, and then lied about shelter availability to the press after. When LaTrisha is in the midst of her “you poor beleaguered city staff, working so hard with so little appreciation” bit, you should know that she was speaking to two high ranking, well paid, mayorally appointed people who had disregarded city policies.

Also, I spent some time looking through Josh Martin’s Divided Vote Tracker, a spreadsheet that tells you how each Council Member voted on the non-unanimous votes taken, with links to the thing that was passed and to the video record of the debate in the City Council meeting. Among the things LaTrisha voted against was an interim use permit for a recuperative care facility for homeless people recovering from illnesses or medical procedures. (I watched the debate on that and she didn’t speak against it — Linnea Palmisano did — just voted against it at the end.)

At a different City Council meeting, she used the phrase “say their names” while making an emotional speech about a group of police horses when funding for the mounted patrol was cut. (Link is, again, to the whole speech about the horses.) (There are arguments in favor of mounted cops but St. Paul got rid of theirs in 2019 and most cities have concluded it’s not actually worth the money and hassle of keeping horses in 2025.) And of course there was her whole “I’m going to be your Council Rep” schtick to a bunch of landlords back in 2021.

Marvina Haynes

Marvina Haynes is running a significantly more serious campaign this time than she did in 2023. She has endorsements and she’s door-knocking with Omar Fateh. She runs a nonprofit working to exonerate the falsely convicted, and succeeded in having her brother Marvin freed in late 2023. (Marvin spent almost 20 years in prison for a crime he absolutely did not commit.) Also, and importantly, she isn’t LaTrisha Vetaw OR an anti-vax crank.

I would vote for Marvina Haynes if I lived in Ward 4.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps! This is a lot of work.)

Election 2025: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 3

It’s a rematch of the same people as 2023:

Marcus Mills (Progressive Unity Independent)
Michael Rainville (DFL, Incumbent)

You can read what I said about these two people two years ago, if you want. In the last two years, Michael Rainville not only voted to uphold Mayor Frey’s veto of the Labor Standards Board, he voted against creating it in the first place. He not only voted to uphold Mayor Frey’s veto of the Affordable Housing right of first refusal ordinance, he voted against it in the first place. He voted to uphold Mayor Frey’s veto of a minimum wage for rideshare drivers and also voted against it in the first place.

Rainville is one of the most reliable conservatives on the City Council and I don’t like him at all.

Marcus Mills is a renter and small business owner (I am genuinely unclear on what his business does: his LinkedIn references both massage therapy and communications consulting under the “At Your Fingertips” business name). His civic and policy experience includes several local boards (membership on the Minneapolis Neighborhood and Community Engagement Commission and the Minneapolis Clean Energy Partnership’s Energy Vision Advisory Committee; he was also Chair of the Marcy-Holmes Neighborhood Association Land Use and Development Committee and Chair of the Senate District 60 DFL.) He’s endorsed by former City Council rep Cam Gordon and former mayor candidate Sheila Nezhad. I would totally vote for Marcus Mills in Ward 3.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps! This is a lot of work.)

Election 2025: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 2

One of the problems I have been running into is an increasing sense of perfectionism towards my posts, where I feel like I need to do a deep dive not only into the candidates but into every accomplishment they list. I’m going to just go ahead and write this up and post it despite the fact that I feel like I have slightly incomplete information. I got a Moderna COVID shot today and tomorrow the odds that I will feel like working on a blog post are 50% at best.

Here’s who’s on the ballot:

Michael Baskins (DFL)
Shelley Madore (DFL)
Max Theroux (DFL)
Robin Wonsley (DSA, incumbent)

So before I get into this race I’m going to talk briefly about all the PACs because they have similar names and it’s frankly pretty confusing.

  • There was We Love Minneapolis. Presumably called that because so many of them love Minneapolis, but don’t live there. (Obligatory note: neither do I, but at least I live in St. Paul and not, say, Wayzata.) Taylor Dahlin wrote about We Love Minneapolis in June. She noted that it’s chaired by (GOP donor) Andrea Corbin, and run by Joe Radinovich and Nico Woods. (Two of the most conservative people in the Minnesota DFL.) The money overwhelmingly came from landlords with large holdings; progressive PAC Minneapolis for the Many noted that 68% of their money came from landlords responsible for hundreds of property violations.
  • There is Thrive Minneapolis. In July, We Love Minneapolis shut down and Thrive Minneapolis seems to be the replacement. Taylor wrote about this group in July. She noted that it’s chaired by Martha Holton Dimick (the very conservative prosecutor who ran against Mary Moriarty in 2022), and again heavily funded by landlords and developers, many of whom do not live in Minneapolis.
  • There is All of Mpls, which is doing endorsements. Legally I am sure they are not actually the Frey campaign wearing a funny hat but if you click on the website you might be forgiven for thinking they basically look like the Frey campaign wearing a funny hat, especially since they have a link to “Thank Mayor Frey” (with a canned, adulatory e-mail). They have endorsed Becka Thompson in Ward 12, which is frankly inexcusable, and if I were Shelley Madore, I’d be pretty annoyed about that. I described them two years ago as “a group aligned with the law-and-order faction of the city government: they love cops, they love landlords, and they love parking spots.” In retrospect I’m not sure that’s harsh enough. What they want is for Mayor Frey, who is frankly incompetent even if you like his politics, to have a rubber-stamp City Council.
  • On the other side there is the progressive PAC Minneapolis for the Many. I like Minneapolis for the Many! They also do endorsements.

One final note about some of the people involved in Love/Thrive/All Of Mpls. On September 9th there was a Zoom meeting of the DFL Feminist Caucus where the people in charge and their friends engaged in some really gross treatment of trans Democrats who showed up and ran for offices. (There’s an open letter about what happened at that meeting here.) Joe Radinovich was there and voting with the hostile majority. Martha Holton Dimick nominated Latonya Reeves, who was one of the people huffing and eye-rolling over the concept of respecting someone’s pronouns. These people are out of step with things I consider to be core DFL values. If someone has sought and accepted these endorsements, I do not trust them. (Also, the reason the old guard of the DFL Feminist Caucus closed ranks was to defend the right of their friend to continue to hold party office despite her involvement in a fatal crash that has been charged as vehicular homicide. I’ve seen this sort of “how dare you show up in our clubhouse and make trouble” gatekeeping in other contexts and it’s toxic and awful.)

So! Now that you know all that, let’s move on.

Michael Baskins

Michael Baskins was funded by We Love Minneapolis but then not endorsed by All Of Mpls. I wondered why this was and did a little digging. I’m not sure but possibly it’s because he’s being taken to campaign finance court for spending $1758 on designer suits and clothing? Also his website was not proofread, to the point that his “Endorsements” page has a stock photo and what I think is stock text (“Personal data is only stored when voluntarily given by you for a determined purpose e.g. in context of a registration, a survey, a contest, or in performance of a contract….”) I would absolutely not vote for him.

Shelley Madore

Shelley Madore was a suburban state legislator for one term, and moved to Minneapolis in 2018. Her website tries hard to put a progressive spin on her beliefs but she also answered the All of Mpls screening questionnaire and you can see her responses here. One response that caught my eye was about the Labor Standards Board that Mayor Frey vetoed: she wants the 50/50 composition (half workers, half business owners) that Frey and Vetaw advocated for (the version that passed the council was a 3-way split with community stakeholders also included). (Mayoral Candidate DeWayne Davis had a good comment on what that board would have meant: he said that business owners already have the ear of the mayor. A Labor Standards Board should exist to give workers the opportunity to be heard.)

Madore’s answers to that questionnaire are overwhelmingly in line with what the landlords and downtown council and so on would want from her. She centers their problems, opposes any form of rent control, treats “Public Safety” as a thing that is provided entirely by cops, and is pro-shotspotter.

Also she’s backed by All of Mpls and We Love/Thrive Minneapolis and for all the reasons given above, that’s reason enough not to vote for her.

Max Theroux

Max Theroux’s website didn’t show up on Google but after I initially posted that he didn’t have a website, his campaign manager contacted me with the link. He is a U of M student and his major issues are affordable housing, policing (he wants lots, lots more of it) and street repairs. He has experience as a legislative intern and thinks that a district that’s half students should have a student representing them at City Hall. I would not rank him.

Robin Wonsley

Robin Wonsley was first elected in 2021 (defeating Cam Gordon) and I am happy with a lot of the stuff Robin has done. She spearheaded a sidewalk plowing pilot. (I love the idea of public sidewalk plowing and would happily pay for that. Of course, here in St. Paul we’d probably want to start with public alley plowing.) She was one of the authors of a new policy to charge a fee that goes to the city when someone wants to hire an off-duty police officer. (This entirely makes sense to me: off-duty cops use city property in off-duty work; and it makes them significantly less available for overtime work for the city while also wearing them out. The police officer who shot and killed Justine Ruszczyk had worked a seven-hour security gig immediately before starting his ten-hour policing shift.) Robin also championed a new city policy to charge our largest carbon emitters a fee, which Frey vetoed but the Council overrode. (Here’s the thing I hit a wall on researching: this apparently was supposed to start being charged in July. Was it? Someone on Bluesky said yes but I couldn’t find any news articles about it, possibly because Google wanted to surface all the stories about the veto and the veto override. But you know what, it’s fine, I do not need to actually know this, I can give Robin the credit for pushing it through and just put the post up, it’s fine.)

And needless to say, not only is she NOT endorsed by All of Mpls or We Heart/Thrive Minneapolis, Thrive Minneapolis treats her as PUBLIC ENEMY NUMBER ONE in the slide show someone leaked.

I would totally vote for Robin Wonsley, and not rank anyone else in Ward 2.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps! This is a lot of work.)

Election 2025: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 1

I’m happy to bring you another pretty quick one. The tl;dr is to vote for incumbent Elliott Payne, but you can read the whole thing and it won’t take long.

Elliott Payne (DFL-endorsed, incumbent)
Brian Strahan
Edwin B. Fruit

Brian Strahan

Earlier in his campaign, Brian Strahan was backed by the (landlord-funded Frey superpac) “We Love Minneapolis,” which spent around $10K ahead of the caucuses/convention. He went on to lose endorsement on the first ballot by a landslide, 82%-17% or 178-36 in terms of actual votes, which means he spent $279 per supporter at the convention.

Which is even funnier given that he doesn’t live in the ward. Brian wrote in to say that he does in fact live in the ward; he moved on August 1st. (He also wanted to note that he lived very close to the ward boundary and only had to move three blocks.) He voted in Ward 3 in the SD 60 special election in January 2025, and he was a Ward 3 delegate in 2023 and 2017.

I got asked last weekend (I was doing a “politics hour” at a local SF convention) about the problem of politicians getting doxxed. I said that I don’t know how to solve this problem; on one hand, in the wake of a political assassination, I have a lot of sympathy for candidates and politicians who do not want their home address to be easy-to-find public information. But on the other hand, we have a real problem with people running for office in districts and wards where they don’t live, especially if they’re wealthy enough to just rent another apartment and pretend they live in it (or if they’re landlords who can pretend to live in one of their vacant properties). Anyway, Brian Strahan either doesn’t live in Ward 1, or committed voter fraud by voting in Ward 3 earlier this year (ETA: as noted above, he moved August 1st) and possibly this is why “All of Mpls,” the other landlord-and-developer-funded conservative superPAC that backs Frey and is trying to get him a more conservative City Council withdrew their endorsement in the Ward 1 race. (ETA: they now list him as an endorsed candidate.)

Edwin B. Fruit

Edwin B. Fruit is the Socialist Workers Party candidate, which means that instead of having his own website, he links to “The Militant,” where you can go over and read their claim that the Gaza genocide is a “slander” promoted by the “liberal bourgeois media.” Other than that: Edwin ran for this seat in 2021, and has 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.

Elliott Payne

Elliott is endorsed by the DFL and by basically every progressive group in the city. He’s been a major advocate for transit and for police reform, and has passed a number of tenant protections, like extending the pre-eviction notice period from 14 days to 30. He also holds regular “community office hours,” where constituents can come chat with him in person. I think Elliott Payne is pretty great and I would absolutely vote for him.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps! This is a lot of work.)

Elections 2025: Minneapolis Board of Estimate and Taxation (BET)

Do not skip this one! You need to vote, and you need to tell your friends to vote, and you need to tell them how to vote. The tl;dr is that you should vote 1. Eric Harris Bernstein; 2. Steve Brandt. Read on for more information.

This is a two-seat race with three people running. MPR has a helpful video explaining how instant-runoff voting works in a multi-seat race. (If I tried to explain it, it would be very confusing; the video actually makes it genuinely more clear.)

Here’s who’s on the ballot:

Steve Brandt (incumbent, DFL-endorsed)
Eric Harris Bernstein
Bob Fine (DFL-endorsed)

The BET sets the property tax levy for Minneapolis — this means that they determine the amount of money that the city can raise through property taxes, which is then split up based on the value of property people own. (You can play around with the property tax estimator if you’re curious what other people’s bills look like.) How that money then gets spent is determined by the city budget, made by the City Council and the Mayor. The BET can also decide to sell city bonds.

There are six people on the BET: in addition to the two people elected directly, there’s the mayor; the Council President; the Council Member who chairs the Council committee whose charge includes the budget; and one Park Board Commissioner. You can see the current makeup of the board here.

This is a low-profile elected job where you very much need people who are nerdy about budgets and finance, detail-oriented, and ethical. It’s paid, but not very much — $400/month (or $0 if you’re also on City Council or the Mayor.) If you’ve ever tried to recruit someone to be treasurer for a small volunteer-run organization, you have probably noticed that detail-oriented ethical budget and finance nerds are in short supply.

Good news, though, we’ve got two running!

Steve Brandt

Steve Brandt was elected four years ago and has done a fine job. Among other things, he supported colleague Samantha Pree-Stinson’s proposal to livestream their monthly meetings and make the video available. (Samantha is not running for re-election.) It appears that 132 people have watched the August meeting.

Steve is a retired journalist, and has brought his interest in follow-up questions to working on the board; he recently supported a property tax increase but on the condition that the mayor and City Council do a study on other ways to raise revenue. (From Steve’s website: “One proposal I support is to extend downtown’s liquor and restaurant taxing zone to include all of the North Loop’s bars and restaurants. That means that the owners of these businesses will have a level playing field instead of some having to bill for the tax and others not.”)

His list of supporters includes lots of people I don’t like, but in this case I think that’s fine. What I think we’re all in agreement on is that we appreciate Steve’s solid competence.

Eric Harris Bernstein

Eric Harris Bernstein joined the race too late to ask for DFL endorsement, which is unfortunate. (Samantha Pree-Stinson was originally planning to run for re-election, and withdrew from the race in early August due to health issues.) It’s unfortunate he didn’t have the opportunity to get endorsed, because he’s a terrific candidate. Eric is a progressive policy analyst who started out in policy and discovered “a passion for taxes.” He has worked since 2020 for We Make Minnesota, a coalition of labor and progressive groups organizing specifically around taxes and a more equitable tax code.

He is bringing both progressive values and a ton of actual expertise on taxation to the table. That’s actually genuinely rare in a new candidate for BET and I am really excited by the prospect of adding him to the board! I also listened to the WedgeLive interview with him and highly recommend it if you’d like to know more about his approach, or for that matter, more about what the BET does. (I linked to the WedgeLive YouTube channel but you can also listen to it as a podcast.)

Bob Fine

The Minneapolis DFL Convention got a lot of news coverage but one thing that got kind of skipped over in the coverage is that the convention skipped over debate and Q&A and everything else and endorsed Steve Brandt and Bob Fine for BET, I think basically because they were the two people showing up to ask for endorsement (Samantha Pree-Stinson was not seeking DFL endorsement) and because people wanted to get to the mayoral endorsement vote before they ran out of time. Which was valid, but unfortunate because in my opinion, Bob Fine really should not have been endorsed.

First of all, I think it’s worth noting, he sent out zero communications ahead of the convention (unlike Steve, who sent out a set of e-mail messages to the delegates talking about his values and accomplishments) and (ETA: as of September 9th, when I posted this) he has no website, no campaign Facebook, nothing on any social media that I could find, no information about why he wants this office or what he plans to do if he’s elected. He ran for Mayor of Minneapolis in 2013, and his LinkedIn still references that race, and there’s nothing else that I could find! (ETA: here’s the website he put up in mid-September.)

Back in 2013, he gave an interview to MPR where he pledged to cut the city levy by 5% while refusing to specify what cuts he’d make to achieve that goal. (“All you have to do is audit city departments.”) This article also mentions that he’s a Faribault slumlord: “Among his holdings is a 20-unit apartment building in downtown Faribault. City records show building inspectors complained to its manager ‘numerous times’ about a malfunctioning elevator in the 143-year-old building. In 2011, they threatened to close part of the building if the problems weren’t addressed. Other records show recent problems with cockroaches, illegally installed air conditioners and a broken dumpster.” (Fine’s defense was that he was just the owner, not the manager. I don’t know if he still owns the building.)

All of that is actually problematic enough. But there’s more. Fine spent a number of years on the Park Board; in 2003, he forced through the hiring of an old buddy as superintendent of the Parks system. This was covered in a 2010 City Pages article that vanished with the City Pages archive but which you can still access through Archive.org. He ran for Park Board again in 2017 (I wrote about it here) and again in 2021 (I wrote about it here).

In his 2021 race for the Park Board, he was endorsed by the crowd that wanted to keep an 18-hole golf course at Hiawatha. Also from that race, he said at a LWV forum that homelessness was “far and away something that is not the mission of the Minneapolis Park Board. Neither is it a mission of the School Board, or the library system.” My comment at the time was that both the Minneapolis Public Schools and the library system deal with homelessness every day and do, in fact, treat it as part of their mission; his ignorance here should have embarrassed him.

Anyway. The fact that he showed up, got endorsed, and then completely dropped out of sight and has no website (ETA: did not get a website up until mid-September) or anything is frankly not a great sign! But his history with Gurban is all by itself a legitimate reason to not elect him again.

Vote (1) Eric Harris Bernstein, (2) Steve Brandt. And tell your friends! Because again, this is a race a lot of people don’t pay much attention to, and there are absolutely people who will show up on November 4th and vote for the DFL-endorsed candidates.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps! This is a lot of work.)

Elections 2025: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 12

The tl;dr here is to vote for Aurin Chowdhury; I door-knocked for her in 2023 and I have had no regrets about my support.

On the ballot:

Aurin Chowdhury
Becka Thompson
Edward Bear Stops

Edward Bear Stops

Edward Bear Stops is a 24-year-old whose website looks progressive and inoffensive but who gets weirder the more you look. His campaign Twitter bio describes him as the “President and Founder of SoulFull.” SoulFull is a nonprofit where the first page shows you that they have an official certificate of nonprofit incorporation and the Team page has a picture of Edward looking very devout. They do seem to do something useful, unlike a lot of nonprofits founded by fringe candidates: they hand out free sandwiches on alternate Saturdays. SoulFull’s Instagram has a lot of photos of the sandwiches.

He also has a YouTube channel. I don’t have the patience to sit through long videos of people talking about God when I’m trying to suss out their political beliefs but I got pretty strong “my career goal is Cult Leader” vibes, and also somewhere in my deep dive I found his Facebook, which has campaign stuff recently but religious stuff in the recent past and the further down you scroll, the clearer it is that he believes himself to be a prophet and on an entirely literal mission from God.

I wish him luck with his nonprofit, I would encourage him to NOT start a cult, and I don’t think anyone should vote for him.

Becka Thompson

Becka Thompson is currently serving on the Park Board and is in my opinion the single worst person currently holding public office in Minneapolis.

I’m going to start by talking about her racism. In March, ahead of the DFL endorsing convention, she objected to the idea that “MAGA has no place in Minneapolis.” In May, she wrote in a campaign e-mail that she might not have “the desired amount of melanin” and then backed down and apologized. Then in July, she referred to Ward 10 City Council rep Aisha Chughtai as “a nice, young, you know — ethnic woman” in a campaign video and then had to apologize again.

And honestly, this isn’t new! Back when she was running for Park Board in 2021, I was really appalled by what I found, which included her complaining that the police officers who aided and abetted Derek Chauvin’s murder of George Floyd were “overcharged.” Elsewhere on her blog she described the murder of George Floyd as follows: “What transpired later was that the man in the car ended up dead and four police officers ended up in jail.”

Moving on to other things I do not like! She also sued John Edwards (of WedgeLive) and Taylor Dahlin (a WedgeLive associate) over a website they had nothing to do with that was also very very clearly satire. (You can see an archive of it if you want. But also, it says she’s running to represent Ward 14. There isn’t a Ward 14. It’s clearly a joke.) When this got tossed she filed multiple other lawsuits, all similarly frivolous. This was an abuse of the legal system to suppress criticism, and the sort of bullshit I expect from Trump and his cultists, not a supposed Democrat in the city of Minneapolis. It is legal to make fun of politicians! And to criticize them!

Next issue. She doesn’t actually live in Ward 12. She currently holds a Park Board seat in North Minneapolis. That’s legal, so long as she moves by early October. She posted in late July saying that she was about to “start the process of moving in” with her uncle, a resident of Ward 12. (Hopefully by early October she will also resign from the Park Board.) While on the Park Board she’s used data requests and an alias to dig up information on colleagues, according to one of those colleagues.

In terms of policies she says she wants, she’s basically toeing the Minneapolis conservative line: she wants more cops, lower taxes, and to get rid of the 2040 plan. She’s opposed to living wages for workers.

But you know what, even if you’re conservative, you should consider that Becka, if elected, will make your side look really really really really really really bad. She will say racist stuff that will make people say “oh. is that YOUR City Councillor? I’m sorry!” She will post weird videos and spread conspiracy theories. Even if you like her politics better than Aurin’s, don’t vote for Becka!

Aurin Chowdhury

Aurin has only been on the City Council for about a year and a half. I think she’s done good work so far. Her accomplishment list shows her as someone who has both centered her work on progressive values and sought pragmatic solutions to problems. Her more centrist colleague Emily Koski has endorsed her, describing her as a “bridge-builder.”

I would, without a moment of hesitation, vote for Aurin Chowdhury for Minneapolis City Council. I would not rank either of the other candidates.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps. This is a ton of work and 2025 is a dumpster fire.)

Elections 2025: Minneapolis City Council, Ward 13

Starting with this one because there is just not a whole lot to say. Here’s who’s running:

Linea Palmisano (incumbent, DFL-endorsed)
Bob “Again” Carney, Jr. (“Climate Revolution Elephant”)

Linea Palmisano is one of the centrists on the Minneapolis City Council, and a staunch ally of Jacob Frey; I am not a fan.

Bob “Again” Carney is a perennial candidate whose hobby is running for stuff. He’s run for governor, mayor, US Senate, US House (though maybe not Ilhan’s seat, I think he ran in a special in some other district), I can’t even remember how many times. When he ran in 2023 for this same City Council seat, he had a website. I commented at the time, “All you really need to know about BobAgain is that his website still says he’s running for governor, and when he participated in the Ward 13 LWV forum he said that if he won the election, he would refuse to take office, thus (according to his theories) allowing Linea to stay in office.” He no longer even has a website that I could find (presumably he let the “votebobagain” registration expire).

I don’t want either of these people and Linea is in absolutely no danger of losing to Bob Again. I would abstain from this race in the hopes that seeing unenthusiastic turnout for Linea would inspire someone decent to run four years from now.


I have a new book coming out next June! This one is not YA; it’s a near-future thriller about an obstetrician who gets kidnapped by a cult because they want someone on site to deliver babies. You can pre-order it right now if you want.

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. (An early donor to the fundraiser added a comment: “YouthLink was incredible instrumental in my assistance of a friend to escape a bad family situation in Florida with little more than a computer and a state ID. Thanks to YouthLink and their knowledge of resources my friend was able to get a mailing address (which was essential in getting a debit card and formal identification documents), healthcare, hot meals, an internship at a local company, and even furniture for their new apartment.” — That is exactly the sort of thing I’m talking about!)

I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because seeing the money raised helps motivate me. (Having external motivation helps. This is a ton of work and 2025 is a dumpster fire.)

Election 2025: Minneapolis & St. Paul municipal elections

Welcome to the 2025 Election Season! I am planning to write about the Minneapolis City Council race, the Minneapolis Park Board race (both at-large and the districts), the Minneapolis BET (Board of Estimation and Taxation) race, and of course the Minneapolis mayoral race. St. Paul just has a mayoral race; I will write about that, too. If I missed anything, like a special school board race please remind me in the comments. (Unless it’s in Roseville. I only write about races that appear on the ballot in Minneapolis or St. Paul.)

I am planning to write about the Minneapolis mayoral race as early as I possibly get a post finished. In fact I want to get everything done early this year, because my October is going to be extremely busy. But where the mayoral race is concerned, I want all the people who “wait to hear what Naomi has to say about [candidate]” to see what I have to say so they can make up their mind and send money to their favorite of Jacob Frey’s opponents and maybe even go out and doorknock, while there’s still time for that to matter. This means that if there’s late breaking news I may have to update my post, but c’est la vie.

First, though, I’m going to warm up with some of the easy ones, where it’s “excellent incumbent vs. weirdo” or for that matter “incumbent I can’t stand but no one reasonable filed to run against her so it’s incumbent I don’t like vs. weirdo” (that would be Ward 13, where it’s Linea Palmisano vs. Bob Again.)

I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people who want to reward all my hard work to donate to fundraisers. This year I’m fundraising for YouthLink. YouthLink is a Minneapolis nonprofit that helps youth (ages 16-24) who are homeless or at risk of homelessness. (Here’s their website.) I have seen some of the work they do and been really impressed. I set up a fundraiser with a specific goal mainly because “number go up!” is very motivational for me (and having external motivation helps. This is a ton of work and 2025 is a dumpster fire.)

Special Elections 2025: Saint Paul City Council, Ward 4

The former Ward 4 rep, Mitra Jalali, was originally elected in a special election in 2018, re-elected in 2019 and 2023, and resigned in January of this year. There are four people running in the special election to fill her seat. Election day is Tuesday, August 12th. If you’re not sure whether you live in Ward 4 or not, check the Secretary of State site. On the ballot:

Molly Coleman
Cole Hanson
Chauntyll Allen
Carolyn Will

The next normal St. Paul City Council election is in 2027 (although we have a mayoral election this year; unlike Minneapolis, we don’t try to keep them in sync.)

The SD 64 DFL has put together a great page of resources that includes questionnaire responses and a link to video of the League of Women Voter’s candidate forum. John Edwards of WedgeLIVE did interviews with all four candidates, which he’s posted on his YouTube channel or you can listen to as podcasts. There was also a climate-issues-focused forum and a housing-focused forum.

I also sent all the candidates a question by email. I’ll talk about that in a bit.

Chauntyll Allen

Chauntyll Allen is a school board rep and I have liked her reasonably well on the school board. However, there were a couple of things I hit during my research that gave me significant pause. First, during the LWV forum when the Summit Avenue bike trail project was brought up, she really sounded like this was the first she’d heard about the controversy, which suggests a weird amount of disconnection for someone running for City Council. (I mean, I’m sure that there are plenty of people in St. Paul who don’t care about the project one way or the other, but there are yard signs up about it, you know?) Second, also during that forum, she responded to a question about climate change by saying environmental work was not her jam and then saying she’d heard people talk about getting rid of gas stoves. There are a lot of decisions that effect the environment and are made by local government; I would like the people on the city council to be plugged into this issue.

But my biggest issue with her: during her WedgeLive interview, she went on a very weird tangent while talking about affordable housing. She started out talking about how a lot of the new buildings claimed to be affordable but really were not, charging $1100/month for a one bedroom apartment. (Fair complaint.) But then she went on to say, “Often, those are not the residents of the city that live in there, those are people who are from outside of the city, that are from rural parts of Minnesota or even from out of the country (…) but going to school at the University of Minnesota. (…) Who are we really building this housing for? (…) Are we building housing for people to come in and live for 5 to 7 years, find the love of their life, and then go buy property in Woodbury?”

So. OK. When she said “those are not residents of the city that live in there,” I initially thought she was going to say they were being used for Airbnbs (this is a major problem in some cities — less in St. Paul, I think?) because it would be valid to say that Airbnb rentals are being used for people other than the folks who live here. But then she went on to complain about people who have moved here. (I was so floored by this — I was working on dinner prep while listening to the podcast, and I put down the kitchen knife and grabbed a pen to transcribe.)

Students who live in St. Paul are residents of St. Paul. People who live here for five to seven years are residents of St. Paul for those five to seven years. If they go on to move to Woodbury, they stop being residents at that point but that doesn’t make them fake residents while they’re living here! Even if someone moves here with the explicit intention of moving somewhere else in the future, they’re still a resident while they’re living here. This is so basic.

I do not like this attitude. I would not rank Chauntyll for the City Council seat.

Carolyn Will

A major part of Carolyn Will’s political backstory is that she spent the last few years doing the communications strategy for “Save Our Street,” the group advocating against the Summit Regional Trail.

Honestly that was already disqualifying to me because this group’s communications have been so goddamn deceptive. So I didn’t spend a ton of time on Carolyn. However I will note that she brags in multiple locations about how she “forged a collaborative partnership with the Ohio State Retired Teachers Fund to display the 30th anniversary timeline of Circus Juventas costumes in their empty storefront windows (formerly Pottery Barn) on Grand Avenue.” “Yeah, I called up those people that have bought up a ton of property in our city and are now letting it sit empty and asked very nicely and they let us temporarily put some decorations in their windows” is just not a win that impresses me.

Here’s her WedgeLive interview, if you’d like to see her ride her bike on Summit herself. (Unlike some of the bike trail skeptics, she’s an actual biker, and one point I will concede to her is that we need a good north-south trail more urgently than an improved east-west trail. We have a number of east-west streets that are sufficiently low volume that I can ride on them without thinking I am going to die. This is not a very high bar so the fact that our north-south options don’t manage it is pretty bad.) Anyway, I would not rank Carolyn.

A Tangent About the Summit Regional Trail

This is once again one of the issues in the race, so let me just go down a couple of points.

  • The most non-negotiable part of this project is the road rebuild and the utility line replacements. There are a bunch of water and sewer lines under Summit that are over 100 years old and are in immediate danger of collapsing. The subsurface of the road is also crumbling. It is in everyone’s interest to replace these lines before they collapse; that really seems obvious. The risk to the Summit Ave boulevard trees is primarily (overwhelmingly!) from the work that has to be done on the utilities.
  • Carolyn Will, during the LWV forum, said that they should be using “horizontal directional drilling.” This is not actually something that would work in this case, according to Sean Kershaw, the City Engineer (sorry, misremembered that) Director of Public Works, who apparently gets openly boo’ed at “Save Our Street” meetings when he shows up to answer questions but is also someone with actual professional expertise on this stuff, unlike the people running SOS. Also, the road itself needs to be rebuilt. Doing mill-and-overlay over a crumbling roadbed is like painting a house covered in rotting siding without replacing the siding.
  • The city is taking advantage of the disruption and the rebuild to add the Summit Regional Trail. St. Paul doesn’t have nearly as good of a bike infrastructure as Minneapolis. Chauntyll, in her WedgeLive interview, said that we shouldn’t be putting a bike lane on Summit at all (she thinks bikers should use lower-volume side streets like Portland), which is just ridiculous. Summit is a gorgeous boulevard and we should absolutely be slowing the traffic, deprioritizing parking, and improving the infrastructure for bikers and walkers.
  • The city has not done a good job of communicating with the community about what they’re doing and why. SOS has repeated their claim about 900+ trees over and over and over. If you go to the Summit Avenue Regional Trail FAQ (provided by the city about the project), first of all it’s a PDF (I hate it when the information I’m looking for is available solely as a PDF), one of the questions is “How Many Trees Will Be Impacted?” and the answer is, “Greenspace and trees have been and continue to be a priority for the Regional Trail plan and a pillar of design concepts. The trees and green spaces on Summit are significant to the parkway, trail design concepts would look to support that existing recreational condition. The Regional Trail plan will make recommendations on best practices for future construction projects to avoid and minimize impacts to greenspace.” That’s not an answer to the question! The actual answer is on page 121 of a different 277-page-long PDF about the project. (If you have 277 pages of information I’m fine with PDFs. But this is part of why your FAQ should be just a web page, because I spent a very long time scrolling before I found what I was looking for.) There are 1,561 trees along the whole corridor. If they do the roadbed and utility stuff and do not add a bike trail, 132 trees are highly vulnerable. If they do add the bike trail, it’s 221 trees. It’s not actually clear to me that “highly vulnerable” means these trees will all be taken down, but if they do, we’d lose 89 trees to build the bike trail. Also worth noting: the boulevard has lost about 34 trees per year, on average, from 2009 through 2022.
  • The “950” figure from SOS came (sort of) from a study they commissioned from an arborist in 2022. “Giblin looked at 199 trees and speculated what would happen to them if a full street reconstruction were to be completed […] and concluded that, of the roughly 200 trees inspected, 48 would likely experience ‘significant’ impacts that could be mitigated with care after construction, and 83 would experience ‘severe’ impacts.” SOS added these two numbers together and then extrapolated to the whole boulevard. Even though (a) this number included trees that would be expected to recover just fine, and (b) the sections of Summit are really variable and you can’t just take a single section and extrapolate and get a useful number. (That streets.mn article has some really good information. Maybe the city could commission the authors to write a new FAQ?)

ANYWAY. Back to the actual race at hand. The two candidates who have significant money, endorsements, and backing are Cole Hanson and Molly Coleman.

Molly Coleman

Molly Coleman is the daughter of former St. Paul mayor Chris Coleman. I mention this right off because there are people who think she’s the daughter of former St. Paul mayor Norm Coleman, and that is emphatically not the case. I have loathed Norm for 30 years. Chris was fine. I think Molly stands on her own in any case, but I wanted to clear that up. She works for a national legal advocacy organization.

Molly has a ton of endorsements from people I respect, including Bill Lindeke, Dan Marshall (who owns Misfit Toys) and Wes Burdine (who owns the Black Hart), and organizations I like, such as Sustain St. Paul. All of them describe her as smart, committed, consistent, and a person with a ton of expertise, who sees the connections between stuff. And you can see this in her interview with WedgeLive, which is great.

The major concern I’ve seen raised about her is that her donors include people who range from “ugh” to “holy shit, that guy?”: the Kaplans (rich centrists who support the Jacob Frey wing of the Minneapolis DFL), a whole lot of very well-heeled developers, and Brian Rice, who has worked as a lobbyist for the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis and the Minneapolis Police Fraternal Association. (Her comment on the Rice donation, in the Pioneer Press article: “That is not somebody that I’ve ever had a meeting with, that I’ve ever had a conversation with. I’m committed to police accountability, I’m committed to true public safety, and using pro-active steps, not using police as our first step toward public safety.”

The thing about developer and lobbyist money is that it’s (hopefully/usually) not anything as straightforward as a quid pro quo. In some cases they know from your public stances that your principles and their interests align, or maybe that your opponent’s principles and their interests conflict; in other cases it’s an investment in having your ear to make their case somewhere down the road. Some of Molly’s stances are very developer-friendly but this doesn’t make them bad: she wants a simplified zoning code that makes it easier to build housing. In the WedgeLive interview she talks about wanting to use administrative citations to arm-twist CVS into selling that empty building at University and Snelling; giving the empty-building-hoarders a compelling reason to sell at the price currently on offer is probably a plan a lot of developers favor (and so do I).

Here’s my personal concern about Molly. I have a close friend who lives in Ward 4, very close to University Ave (and not far from that CVS), and her biggest frustration with Mitra was that Mitra did not respond to her e-mail messages. These days, I tend to have good luck getting prompt responses from candidates because they mostly know who I am. I was curious how everyone would do at responding to a constituent, so I worked with the friend, and she sent e-mail messages to everyone (with what I thought would be a relatively softball question) and I sent e-mail messages to everyone a little after she did. She heard back immediately from Cole, promptly from Carolyn and Chauntyll, and never heard from Molly.

I thought this might be a fluke so I recruited someone else to send her a question. That person also never got an answer.

Honestly that’s not great! I was hoping I could do a wholehearted, unhesitating endorsement of Molly and also, I’ll be honest, I was hoping she would win over my friend, since she disliked Mitra and low-key blamed me for Mitra. No such luck.

Cole Hanson

Cole Hanson works in public health at the U of M. He’s endorsed by the DSA. I have been struggling to write this because people have several unrelated issues with him, and organizing all this into a nice coherent summary has been a challenge.

First: he is the former Board President of the Hamline Midway Coalition, and launched his campaign before resigning. It got messy in a couple of different ways. I think the biggest point of concern is that he may have downloaded internal data (donor information, event sign-in sheets, and community contact lists) to use on his campaign. Honestly, I read the articles about this and was left completely uncertain how much of the dust-up over this was seriously problematic and how much was basically nonprofit drama. It does seem like Cole didn’t know where the rules around being a nonprofit (and nonpartisan) neighborhood board chair, and being a political candidate, intersected. That’s not ideal. It’s a good idea to figure that out before you declare your candidacy.

Second: while Molly Coleman was straightforwardly in favor of the Summit Bike Trail, and Carolyn Will is straightforwardly against it, Cole gave a lot of vague responses, both at the LWV forum and when he was interviewed by WedgeLive. I think he’s overall for it, but he repeats a lot of SOS talking points (like the “over 900 trees” thing which as I noted above, is not an accurate assessment of the risk to the trees). (This is part of why Bill Lindeke described him as a “random policy generator and maddeningly inconsistent.”) Cole has been inconsistent on enough issues that there’s a whole Reddit subthread debating what his position on rent control is.

He’s a big fan of a municipal grocery store (that sets him apart — I don’t think anyone else thinks that’s workable) and PILOT (Payments In Lieu of Taxes from nonprofits.) (Molly Coleman also likes PILOT. (I do too. It’s not clear to me if there’s a way to actually get nonprofits to pay this money. My idea, holding all their zoning variances hostage, is probably not actually legal.)

Anyway, I have gone back and forth on Cole multiple times. Fundamentally, I don’t think he’s ready to do this job, and here’s what brought this into focus for me. In his interview with WedgeLive, John brought up zoning reform. Here’s that conversation, transcribed:

John: Are you a zoning reform guy?
Cole: To what extent? We already just did a whole bunch of it. […] The question for me is, what more reform? Because we’ve already re-adjusted our whole zoning code a few years ago.
John: So you think we’re in a good place?
Cole: I think we’re in a good place. I think there’s some spots to touch and adjust, but I don’t think we’re in a revolutionary, change-everything phase.
John: And you think the changes that were made, were good ones?
Cole: Broadly speaking. The thing I’m a fan of is the Traditional Zoning category. I like that it’s framed as Traditional, meaning this is how things used to be, which is — you would have corner stores. You have corner grocery.

So, St. Paul’s zoning situation is a complicated and kind of terrible in a “things people thought were a good idea in the 1970s” kind of way. There is a terrific three-part series (1, 2, 3) talking about this, how there are a bunch of extremely retrograde rules that make corner stores illegal, sometimes even in a commercial building that’s right next to a commercial corridor. Cole, in the WedgeLive interview, talks about being a fan of “Traditional Neighborhood Zoning,” which is a zoning category that allows mixed use. (It’s explained in some detail in the third part of that series.) But in fact there are a ton of sections of St. Paul that are still zoned for housing only.

I e-mailed Cole to get some clarification on his thoughts on zoning. He replied quickly, and talked about his support for upzoning to allow higher-density housing, and his support for social housing. Then he said: “At the end of the day, when I talk to my Ward 4 neighbors, they’re most concerned about rising rents and property taxes, the loss of Cub Foods on University and how we can support our unhoused neighbors forced to live in tents because they can’t afford a place to stay. Zoning hasn’t been a priority in any conversation I’ve had with Ward 4 residents and until we’re meeting everyone’s basic needs, I doubt it will be.”

So here is the thing. I absolutely believe that people are saying “my property taxes are horrifying and I’m worried I will lose my house” and not “Cole, we need to fix the zoning code.” But these two things are related. The St. Paul zoning code as it exists makes it harder to open a business, harder to repurpose an empty building or parcel of land. (And harder to open a corner grocery store!) Development is part of how we lower property taxes. We want businesses that can shoulder part of the burden of keeping the streets plowed and the libraries open. The empty office buildings and empty store fronts are part of why our property taxes are going up.

It’s really important for City Council reps to listen to constituents. But it’s also really important for them to see and understand the connections between problems, to recognize that people are unlikely to call you up and say “we need massive zoning reform!” but that zoning reform is connected to a lot of the issues they are calling you about. (And this applies to a bunch of issues, to be clear! Not just zoning!) I saw Molly making these connections in her conversation with John; she talked about how people had repeatedly brought up the problems around Kimball Court and that it was critical to recognize that some of what people are blaming on the residents of Kimball Court is being attracted and fostered by the presence of that empty CVS building a block away.

I don’t think Cole is seeing those connections — at least, not yet. And in the end this matters enough to me that while I have concerns about Molly, I would rank her first. Cities are complicated, and I want the people on the City Council to have a deep and nuanced understanding of the way problems are connected. I would rank Cole second.

(I am pretty sure my friend in the ward will be ranking Cole first and Molly not at all, though, and I don’t blame her. What she wants the most is someone who gets back to her, period. She lives in a neighborhood within Ward 4 that takes the brunt of many citywide problems, and the way her neighborhood is treated vs. the way the wealthier neighborhoods are treated shows some stark differences. Her desire to have a city council rep who responds to her problems is not unreasonable.)


I do not have a Patreon or Ko-Fi but instead encourage people to donate to fundraisers I can then see fund. If this post was useful to you, consider donating to this teacher’s fundraiser to buy books for her students (young adults who are past the usual high school graduation age, but have unmet special needs and are still receiving education and services from Saint Paul Public Schools.) — OK, that funded already, here’s another one, also St. Paul. Help a Kindergarten teacher turn her students’ writing into simple bound books.

(Also, you know who does have a Patreon? WedgeLive! And damn those interviews were REALLY USEFUL.)

Special Election 2025: Senate District 60

If you live in Minnesota Senate District 60, there is a Special Election happening this month. There is a PRIMARY ELECTION on January 14th, and a general election on January 28th. This is a deeply blue district; the real election is the primary.

There’s also a special election happening in 40B on January 28th. That’s outside the area I write about, so I’ll just say, I sure hope the person running lives in the district this time, and please go vote for the DFLer on January 28th. This post is about SD 60, which is open because Senator Kari Dziedzic died really tragically of cancer at the end of December.

There are seven DFLers running in the primary (and a bonus person who remains on the ballot because it was too late to pull him off, more on that in a minute). Two people are running as Republicans. Residents of the district can vote in either primary, but only one of them.

Democrats running:
Doron Clark
Peter Wagenius
Iris Grace Altamirano
Monica Meyer
Joshua Preston
Amal Karim
Emilio César Rodríguez
* and still on the ballot but votes for him will not be counted: Mohamed Jama

Republicans:
Abigail Wolters
Christopher Robin Zimmerman

So I’ll tackle the Republican race first because it’s much more straightforward. Last fall, I e-mailed every Republican running in a Minneapolis or St. Paul district to ask who they thought had won the Presidential election of 2020. Abigail Wolters, who was running in 60B, didn’t respond. I e-mailed her again this time, and once again, she did not respond. CRZ, by contrast, promptly replied to my question on his Facebook to say that Biden won in 2020. It’s a low bar but it’s amazing how many Republicans don’t clear it! (I’m not sure CRZ even qualifies as a RINO — he’s a Republican only for the purpose of running — but he’d definitely be my pick for the Republican candidate in this race.)

On to the DFL. There are eight people on the ballot, seven in the race, and three who I think are genuinely viable candidates with enough support and momentum to potentially win. The three people I think are legitimately viable candidates are Doron, Peter, and Monica, if you want to skip straight to them (I’m going to talk about the others first, because I have less to say.)

The DFL Central Committee for SD60 sent out a questionnaire to all the DFLers who filed, and five of them returned it. You can find links to their questionnaires on the SD60 website. Doron, Peter, Monica, Amal, and Emilio filled it out; Iris, Joshua, and Mohamed did not. The League of Women Voters invited everyone to send in a three-minute video and posted the videos up on their website; Iris, Doron, Joshua, and Peter sent in videos. (Also CRZ and Abigail.) Finally, WedgeLive interviewed Doron, Monica, and Peter, and you can watch those interviews on YouTube (which I linked to) or download them as podcasts.

What’s Up With that Guy On the Ballot Who Isn’t Running

Mohamed Jama

I started this whole post last week and here’s what I noted about Mohamed Jama at the time: he’s a cofounder of the Cedar Riverside Youth Council and is a board member of various neighborhood organizations. He’s been involved in DFL politics for long enough to have been one of the people involved in a brawl at a caucus in 2014. That plus a lack of endorsements and an unimpressive website was a pretty big strike against him, but then former 60A candidate Sonia Neculescu turned up the fact that Mohamed had voted in another district on election day in November, thus attesting to being a resident of an entirely different district and thus ineligible to run in this one. To remind anyone who’s confused: according to Minnesota state law, you need to be a resident of a district for six months before you run to represent it. “Where do I live, really” can be a legitimately fuzzy question, but if you voted at a particular address you are legally attesting to the fact that you live at that address on that election day (which was less than six months ago). Anyway, he opted not to contest the residency challenge. Since it’s too late to reprint all the ballots, votes for Jama will not be counted. Do not vote for him.

Running But Unlikely to Win

Joshua Preston

Joshua Preston has a website, which I linked to, but it’s his personal website and makes no reference to his campaign. He also has a website of giraffe pictures drawn by people who probably shouldn’t be drawing giraffes (most of them public figures) which is very amusing.

He attended the SD 60 Central Committee meeting where they endorsed Doron Clark, where he gave a speech that talked about his reason for running. He thinks it’s problematic that with a single day for people to file, and a two-week campaign, the district is going to pick a State Senator who could hold that seat for decades, so he’s running on the promise that he will serve out the remainder of Kari’s term and not run for re-election in two years, and his focus will be on housing and homelessness (and in particular Native homelessness.) You can watch his speech on Twitter and also an exchange he had with Doron Clark where he made the rousing declaration, “the sidewalk doesn’t close! Third space exists wherever we are!” (I liked him.)

Emilio César Rodríguez

Emilio is running for Ward 3 City Council, and their website still says they are running for Ward 3 City Council. They filed a complaint asking to delay the State Senate election because the U of M students living in the district won’t be back yet when the primary happens; their social media commented that the complaint “hasn’t progressed.” They did fill out the SD60 questionnaire.

I will be really interested in reading about their campaign for Ward 3 City Council in a few months.

Iris Grace Altamirano

Iris ran for Minneapolis School Board in 2014 and was one of the DFL-endorsed candidates but opted to campaign with Don Samuels rather than the other DFL-endorsed candidate, Rebecca Gagnon. This created a huge stink at the time (I maintain it’s pretty weird that the DFL threw an absolute shit fit about her doing this and has now completely stopped caring about it, but whatever.) She has no endorsements and the main chitchat about her I’ve found on social media is someone retelling the saga of that school board race. She did not fill out the SD 60 questionnaire, but she did do a video for the LWV. Her website and her video focus overwhelmingly on her bio, pretty much nothing about policies or priorities.

Amal Karim

Amal has one endorsement (Rep. Samantha Sencer-Mura, 63A). If it seems like I’m putting a lot of emphasis on endorsements, it’s because they make a very straightforward proxy for so many other things that make you a contender in a (very, very short) race like this: allies, organizing capacity, fundraising capacity (most of the people in SD 60 do not know an election is happening and the ability to send people mailers saying “GUESS WHAT: YOU NEED TO GO TO THE POLLS AGAIN” is kind of irreplaceable).

Amal has served on the Hennepin County Library Board. Her most interesting biographical detail is that she’s been a Jeopardy! contestant.

When everyone initially filed and lots of people didn’t have any website up yet, I pulled up her LinkedIn. She worked for five years for the Constellation Fund, which provides philanthropic grants to a bunch of mostly very worthwhile community organizations. Prior to that, she worked for Educators for Excellence (an organization I feel deep suspicion towards) and she now works for the ECMC Foundation. Given her history with EfE I’d have questions about what she’d bring to education policy if I were considering voting for her (but I also don’t think she’s a real contender — my friends in Northeast have gotten mailers from Doron, Peter, and Monica, not from Amal.) She did fill out the SD60 Questionnaire.

The Three I Think Are Real Contenders

There are three people I think could actually win this seat: Doron Clark, Peter Wagenius, and Monica Meyer. They’ve all got a bunch of substantial big-name endorsements, and enough donations to print and send out mailers telling people in SD60 that an election is happening. (None of this is to say that you shouldn’t vote for one of the candidates I don’t think is likely to win. The only candidate you really shouldn’t vote for is Mohamed Jama, because he doesn’t live in the district and your vote won’t be counted.)

The good news is that I think all three of these people are genuinely pretty cool! What you’re choosing here is the person whose style and emphasis best aligns with what you want for your representative.

A note about the DFL endorsement: in a normal race, this is done at the Senate District Convention, and to some degree, what it’s measuring is the candidate’s ability to organize early enough to get supporters out to the caucuses, and to win over undecided convention delegates between the caucuses and the convention. Obviously there was not time to do this, this year, so instead the DFL Central Committee for Senate District (32 people, instead of a couple hundred) considered the candidates and endorsed one of them. Peter Wagenius unsuccessfully pushed for the committee to hold off on endorsement until the 15th (at which point they would presumably endorse the person who won the primary).

I have massive reservations about this endorsement process and I think anyone who hears “DFL endorsed” in this race should mentally append a little asterisk because 32 people is not what we normally mean by endorsement.

Doron Clark

Doron Clark is the former Senate District Chair for the SD 60 DFL. If you’re curious what the Senate District Chair does, the DFL actually has a nifty little manual that talks about it. Fundamentally what this says to me is that Doron is willing to do a time-consuming, unglamorous volunteer job that keeps the grassroots-level Democratic party work in Minnesota humming along.

Since he was endorsed by the SD 60 Central Committee (overwhelmingly, FYI — 23 out of 32 votes) I think it’s worth noting that all of these people saw him up close and saw how he worked. There are kind of two ways to spin this. You could say, “oh, of course they endorsed him; they’re his buddies.” Or you could say, “the people who have worked with him in a political context overwhelmingly think he’d be great at this.”

He has a lot of endorsements, including City Council reps Elliot Payne, Jason Chavez, Emily Koski, and Jamal Osman. (Looking at the Minneapolis Ward Map vs. the map of SD 60, I think SD 60 overlaps with parts of Ward 1 (Elliot Payne), Ward 3 (Michael Rainville), Ward 6 (Jamal Osman), and Ward 2 (Robin Wonsley). Elliot Payne was one of his very first endorsements, and one of the things that was striking early was how much enthusiastic and immediate support he got from within the district.

You can read his questionnaire here, watch his LWV video here, and watch his WedgeLive interview here. I sent him a question asking what he would want to try to make progress on this session, when the DFL does not have a trifecta. He replied to say that in general, he rejects a scarcity mindset (“and yet I know that the government is divided and that things will be difficult this year.”) He said he would start by pushing to eliminate or simplify the paperwork requirement for schools to get reimbursement for free lunches, which would bring a bunch of money to Minneapolis schools. He also noted that there were no Minneapolis Senators on the Education Finance or Policy committees; he wants to serve on Education Finance if he’s elected.

What strikes me about Doron: he’s ambitious (in the sense of wanting to pursue big sweeping changes), hard working, and well-liked by the people who work with him. The people endorsing him tend to highlight his connections to the district and the fact that he shows up; “he shows up” is a line that appears over and over in a range of contexts. He shows up to volunteer; he shows up to organize; he shows up to be supportive.

The two issues he hammers on the most are education and housing. One other note — he is still doing meet-and-greets (you can find the schedule here, interspersed with events where you can volunteer.)

Peter Wagenius

I have known Peter since college, and I reconnected with him the first time that Ed and I went to a Senate District Convention, in 2000, when our State Senator retired and there was a fairly intense endorsement fight. Peter was working for Julie Sabo’s campaign and talked me into supporting her, and then talked me into sticking around until after ten that night (we straight up do not do Senate District conventions like this any more) (thank GOD).

So honestly, if I lived in this district, I would absolutely vote for Peter, because he’s a long-time friend and one of the people who got me into local politics to begin with. I’ve also personally experienced his energy, organization, and ability to talk people into stuff (did I mention that when he talked me into staying at this convention until 10 p.m., I was pregnant?) all of which are great traits in politicians.

Peter currently works for the Sierra Club, but has done policy stuff for the legislature and the city in the past. He worked for Betsy Hodges, and before her, he worked for RT Rybak. He has a ton of noteworthy accomplishments in transit and environmental policy.

He is endorsed by Keith Ellison, Rep. Katie Jones, and (Ward 7) Council Rep Katie Cashman, among others. (I will note, he’s endorsed by a bunch of elected people I like, but I’m not sure any of them are from SD 60; I think Doron and Monica split the council reps who overlap the district, unless I’m reading the maps wrong, which is a possibility. The 60A rep endorsed Monica, and I think the 60B rep hasn’t endorsed anyone.) The people endorsing Peter tend to talk about his work, accomplishments (especially around transit), and effectiveness. The two issues he hammers on the most are education and the environment.

You can read his questionnaire here, watch his LWV video here, and watch his WedgeLive interview here.

I sent him a question asking what he would want to try to make progress on this session, when the DFL does not have a trifecta. He listed two things. First, the bonding bill: he would like to use it for solar on schools, electric school buses, and energy efficiency upgrades. “The second highest expense for our schools after teacher salaries is utility bills. The state can play a role in making sure we are sending less money to utilities and more money into the classroom.” Second is building more housing. He noted that this is one of three elements needed for affordable housing (the others being renter protections and government investments in affordable housing); he’s been working on land use reform with the Sierra Club, notes that this has been bipartisan in other states, and points to progress last year “including with the bill that I personally championed to protect cities from misinformed anti-housing litigation.”

The thing that really struck me about his style is that he is willing to be very blunt when talking about Republicans. In his WedgeLive interview he commented that when you’re on the Senate floor, there are decorum rules against questioning people’s motives, and that’s all very well and good when you’re actually on the Senate floor but Democrats should not feel remotely bound to pretend they think Republicans have good intentions when they’re anywhere else. A lot of policies that Republicans push, it’s straight up because they hate Minneapolis and want to do harm to Minneapolis residents, and it’s true and we should say it and not pretend they just have a lot of true and sincere concerns about whatever bullshit they’re pretending to be concerned about that day.

Monica Meyer

Monica Meyer was indirectly the person who first got me to become the sort of campaign volunteer that talked to voters: she was one of the two people who started Minnesotans United for All Families, in 2012, to fight against the Republican-sponsored ballot amendment that would have enshrined discrimination against same-sex marriage in our state constitution. I had dropped lit in prior years but I’d never doorknocked or phone banked prior to that campaign.

Monica’s background is in work for LGBTQ+ rights: she was the director of OutFront for decades, and more recently has worked for Gender Justice.

She is endorsed by Ilhan Omar, Rep. Sydney Jordan (60A), and Council Reps Robin Wonsley (Ward 2), Jeremiah Ellison (Ward 5), and Michael Rainville (Ward 3), among others. The Kari Dziedzic campaign did not explicitly endorse, but rolled over their campaign fund to Monica.

There was a fair amount of discussion on social media of the fact that she’s also endorsed by Jacob Frey. (A joint endorsement from Jacob Frey and Ilhan Omar, no less.) Does this make her the All of Mpls candidate, or does this indicate that she’s really good at building coalitions? (All of Mpls, to be clear, is the centrist “we love cops and parking” wing of the local DFL; I’m not a fan.) Having looked at what she’s said, who else she’s endorsed by (Take Action MN, for example), and a thread on Bluesky from a local politically-engaged person I follow, I think it is primarily that she’s someone who has, in her decades of public life, made a lot of connections from all over the DFL. There may also be a least a little bit of, she has less of a long-standing anti-car-culture track record than Peter or Doran. (It’s not that she has a pro-car-culture track record, either; she’s been working on other stuff.)

She’s also gotten some big donations from people I’m not wild about. (You can look at the large donations here — not just to her but to several other people running.) There was some speculation that some of this money is anti-Wagenius money from someone who hates Peter for bad reasons and thinks she’s a better bet than Doron. It is still a legitimate point of concern; there’s always pressure to dance with them what brung ya, as the saying goes.

You can read her responses to the SD60 DFL questionnaire here, and watch her WedgeLive interview here.

The people endorsing her talk about her compassion, her voice, and her vision. She’s someone who builds really big coalitions. (This article from 2012 about how Minnesotans United defeated the anti-marriage amendment goes into a ton of detail about the people that Monica brought in to that fight.)

In response to my question about what she’d work on this coming session (where a lot of bold progressive ambitions are just going to get stymied by the Republicans) she said, “I want to work on data privacy issues this session, which often have bipartisan support,” and went on to talk about how we needed to be sure that people’s information (especially people receiving gender-affirming care or getting abortions, as well as immigrant communities who had data collected for our Driver’s Licenses for All program) was not weaponized by the Trump administration.

So.

So yeah, honestly, I think all three of these people are great, and they’re great in different ways: style, experience, and focus. I would personally vote for Peter! but the reason that’s an easy call for me is because he’s a long-time friend. If I were coming into this cold, not knowing any of the candidates personally, I’d be torn. I like Peter’s track record of accomplishments and his effectiveness on transit and the environment; I also appreciate how confrontational he is about Republican bullshit. I like Doron for being the person that is almost universally described as someone who “shows up,” and I am struck by how much quick, enthusiastic support he got from people who’d worked with him in local politics. I like Monica for being someone who knows how to build big coalitions and who doesn’t write off anyone who might be willing to work with you on something you care about, and I am struck by the fact that she demonstrated that by getting a joint endorsement letter from Ilhan Omar and Jacob Frey.

They’re all progressive Democrats who agree on most issues of substance, but I think that Doron would bring more focus to education issues; I think Peter would bring more focus to transit and the environment; and I think Monica would bring more focus to LGBTQ+ civil rights and reproductive rights issues, including stuff that might slip by other representatives because it’s not something they’ve dealt with. (And to be clear, I think they would all vote the same way on any bills on any of these issues but I think they have different areas where they’d be showing leadership, authoring bills, and pushing for things to happen.)

Anyway. The primary is on Tuesday the 14th and you can find your polling place here. I know it’s frustrating when there isn’t an obvious choice, but “all these people are good in different ways” is a really good problem to have.

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