2021 Minneapolis municipal election explained

Election Name:2021 Minneapolis municipal election
Type:presidential
Ongoing:yes
Country:Minneapolis
Vote Type:popular
Previous Election:2017 Minneapolis municipal election
Previous Year:2017
Next Election:2023 Minneapolis City Council election
Next Year:2023

A general election was held in Minneapolis on November 2, 2021. Minneapolis's mayor was up for election as well as all the seats on the City Council, the two elected seats on the Board of Estimate and Taxation, and all the seats on the Park and Recreation Board. Voters were able to rank up to three candidates for each office in order of preference. Additionally, there were three ballot measures on the ballot related to government structure, public safety, and rent control.[1]

Mayor

See main article: 2021 Minneapolis mayoral election.

Incumbent Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) Mayor Jacob Frey sought re-election to a second term among a field of 16 candidates. He won with 56% of the vote in the second round of the rank-choice ballot.

City Council

See main article: 2021 Minneapolis City Council election.

All 13 seats on the Minneapolis City Council were up for election. Each resident of Minneapolis could elect one city councilor in a single-member district. Because of re-districting, members were only elected for a two-year term instead of the usual four-year term. The DFL retained their supermajority, winning 12 of the 13 wards and over 85% of total votes cast. Cam Gordon, the council's sole Green Party member, lost to newcomer Robin Wonsley Worlobah. She became the DSA's first representative elected to the Minneapolis City Council.

Park and Recreation Board

AffiliationCandidateFPV (%)Votes per roundStatus
1234567
Non-partisanMeg Forney29.6431,61231,629colspan=6 style="text-align:right;"
Non-partisanTom Olsen19.4120,70220,71021,09421,93523,456colspan=3 style="text-align:right;"
Non-partisanAlicia D. Smith12.0012,799 12,80613,51715,13817,31719,298colspan=2 style="text-align:right;"
Non-partisanMary McKelvey11.3212,07412,07913,44114,93616,86918,29818,458
Non-partisanLondel French11.1211,90611,91612,13412,50513,394colspan=3 style="text-align:right;"
Non-partisanCharles Rucker9.119,7119,72010,12810,761colspan=4 style="text-align:right;"
Non-partisanKatherine Kelly6.827,2707,2727,575colspan=5 style="text-align:right;"
Write-ins0.54578colspan=7 style="text-align:right;"
Exhausted ballots5182,0994,7128,98214,61615,208
Undervotes38,687
Total votes106,650
Source: Minneapolis Elections & Voter Services[2]

Board of Estimate and Taxation

The two elected seats on the Board of Estimate and Taxation were up for election. Steve Brandt and Samantha Pree-Stinson were elected from one citywide, at-large district via the single transferable vote.

Results

PartyCandidate% 1st
Choice
Round 1Round 2Round 3% Final
Non-partisanSteve Brandt 44.62%42,67244,34031,87633.33%
Green PartySamantha Pree-Stinson26.77%25,59726,19429,49330.84%
Non-partisanPine Salica21.74%20,78621,52124,13725.84%
Non-partisanKevin Nikiforakis6.08%5,815
Write-inN/A0.09%755
Exhausted ballots2,97310,11610.58%
Valid votes95,625
Threshold31,876
Undervotes49,712
Source: Minneapolis Elections & Voter Services[3]

Ballot measures

Question 1

Question 1 would change the form of government of Minneapolis to an Executive Mayor-Legislative Council. It passed with 52% of the vote.

Question 2

See main article: 2021 Minneapolis Question 2.

Question 2 results

On November 2, 2021, voters in Minneapolis rejected the ballot measure with 80,506 or 56.2 percent of votes cast for "no" versus 62,813 or 43.8% of votes for "yes".[4]

Question 3

Question 3 permitted the Minneapolis City Council to enact rent control on private residential property. It passed with 53% of the vote.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What's on the ballot. City of. Minneapolis. vote.minneapolismn.gov.
  2. Web site: Minneapolis . City of . 2021 Parks & Recreation Commissioner At Large results . City of Minneapolis . 2021-11-02 . 2024-02-16.
  3. Web site: Minneapolis . City of . 2021 Board of Estimate and Taxation (BET) results . City of Minneapolis . 2021-11-02 . 2022-08-29.
  4. News: 2021-11-02. Minneapolis voters reject plan to overhaul city policing. Minnesota Public Radio. 2021-11-02.