November 04, 2025
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Minneapolis election to decide council control

Minneapolis voters are deciding whether the City Council’s seven-member progressive bloc will retain its veto-proof edge over Mayor Jacob Frey, with three open seats and three competitive incumbent races — including Ward 2 (Shelley Madore raised $129,000 to Robin Wonsley’s $72,000) and a costly Ward 7 contest in which incumbent Katie Cashman lost the DFL endorsement to Elizabeth Shaffer — poised to determine control. Only first-choice ranked-choice totals will be reported Tuesday night and reallocations resume Wednesday, and the council outcome is tied to the broader mayoral showdown between Frey and democratic-socialist Omar Fateh, who is running as part of a coordinated “slate for change.”

Elections Local Government

📌 Key Facts

  • Minneapolis will report only first-choice totals on Election Night; ranked-choice reallocations resume Wednesday morning, so winners may not be known Tuesday if no candidate wins a first-choice majority.
  • The mayoral contest centers on incumbent Jacob Frey and democratic socialist State Sen. Omar Fateh; Fateh's platform includes a $20 minimum wage by 2028, rent control and just-cause eviction protections.
  • Fateh is running as part of a coordinated 'slate for change' with Rev. DeWayne Davis and Jazz Hampton; a Fateh victory would mark Minneapolis's first Muslim, first Somali American and first democratic socialist mayor.
  • Frey's campaign emphasizes public-safety reforms, rebuilding Minneapolis Police Department ranks, downtown economic recovery and affordable housing.
  • The City Council's progressive bloc currently numbers seven members; losing a single seat would end its veto-proof majority against Mayor Frey.
  • The council has enacted or pushed notable measures (including rideshare minimum pay, an Israel–Hamas ceasefire resolution and a carbon-emissions fee) and has seen failed override attempts on proposals such as creating a labor standards board and denying raises for roughly 160 high-paid city employees.
  • There are three open council seats and three incumbents in particularly competitive races.
  • Ward-level dynamics: Ward 2 — Shelley Madore (aligned with Frey-backed moderates) has raised $129,000 vs. Robin Wonsley's $72,000; Ward 7 — incumbent Katie Cashman lost the DFL endorsement to Elizabeth Shaffer in what has become one of the year's most expensive council races with six-figure fundraising.

📰 Sources (3)

Tilt of power at stake in Minneapolis City Council elections
Matt McKinney November 04, 2025
New information:
  • City will not tabulate ranked-choice votes beyond first-choice totals on Election Night; RCV reallocations resume Wednesday morning.
  • Progressive bloc currently numbers seven members; losing one seat would end its veto-proof coalition against Mayor Frey.
  • Specific past veto overrides cited: rideshare minimum pay, Israel–Hamas ceasefire resolution, and a carbon-emissions fee; failed overrides included a labor standards board and denial of raises for ~160 high-paid city employees.
  • Ward 2 fundraising totals: Shelley Madore $129,000 vs Robin Wonsley $72,000; Madore aligned with Frey-backed moderates.
  • Ward 7 update: incumbent Katie Cashman lost the DFL endorsement to challenger Elizabeth Shaffer; race described as the year's most expensive with six-figure fundraising.
  • There are three open council seats and three incumbents in particularly competitive races.
It’s Election Day in Minneapolis. Who will be the next mayor?
Deena Winter November 04, 2025
New information:
  • Article centers the Minneapolis mayoral race and frames stakes between incumbent Jacob Frey and democratic socialist Sen. Omar Fateh.
  • Notes a coordinated 'slate for change' among Fateh, Rev. DeWayne Davis, and Jazz Hampton.
  • States there are 15 mayoral candidates and explains that a winner may not be known Tuesday night due to ranked-choice tabulation continuing Wednesday if no first-choice majority.
  • Details Fateh’s platform (e.g., $20 minimum wage by 2028, rent control, just-cause eviction) and the historic firsts if he wins (first Muslim, first Somali American, first democratic socialist mayor).
  • Restates polling hours (7 a.m.–8 p.m.) and highlights Frey’s campaign themes (public safety reforms, rebuilding MPD ranks, downtown recovery, affordable housing).