Up to 1,400 delegates will pour into the Minneapolis Convention Center on Saturday to throw their support behind a candidate for mayor.
While the Minneapolis DFL hasn't been able to endorse a candidate in a closely contested mayoral election since 1979, the gathering will offer the first clear gauge of candidate strength and help bring a crowded field into focus.
"It's one of the few times that we would have any sort of data about that," said Dan McConnell, chairman of the Minneapolis DFL.
Mayor Betsy Hodges faces endorsement challenges from seven candidates, including state Rep. Ray Dehn, City Council Member Jacob Frey, former Hennepin Theatre Trust leader Tom Hoch, filmmaker Aswar Rahman, community activist Al Flowers, Captain Jack Sparrow and Jeffrey Sterling Olson. The election is Nov. 7.
Nekima Levy-Pounds, a lawyer and civil rights activist also running for mayor, is not seeking the DFL endorsement.
The Dehn, Frey, Hoch and Hodges campaigns say they intend to abide by the party's endorsement — if there is one — and drop out of the race if they don't get it.
But all four say they are hoping to win it. To get the endorsement, one candidate must win 60 percent of the convention's delegates.
Incumbents, including those who've endured rocky first terms, have fared well in recent decades in Minneapolis mayoral elections, even without winning the endorsement.