In a rebuke to Mayor Jacob Frey, the Minneapolis City Council took a major step Friday toward a charter change that could give it shared authority over the police.
After a contentious debate, the council voted 10-2 to consider a potential amendment to the city's charter that would, for the first time in more than a century, change the police power structure to split governance between the mayor and 13 members of the council.
Though the question is several steps from making it onto the ballot this November, the vote marks the first major showdown in the new makeup of the council. It's also a setback for Frey, who came out strongly against the proposal this week, alongside Police Chief Medaria Arradondo and several council members.
The proposal will go to an Aug. 1 joint meeting of the council's Intergovernmental Relations Committee and Public Safety and Emergency Management Committee for further discussion on what the council's role would be if the charter amendment were to succeed.
For the question to come before voters in November, the council would need to pass a final version by Aug. 24. Frey could then veto, and the council would need at least nine votes to override. Though the measure passed with 10 votes Friday, the discussion signaled that many council members are skeptical.
Council Member Cam Gordon introduced the idea for the amendment late last month following protests over two officers' shooting of Thurman Blevins, a black man in north Minneapolis, and concerns from the public about police oversight. In the weeks since, council members have publicly taken sides on whether the conversation should continue. Several members stood with Frey this week at a news conference criticizing the proposal as bad government that would weaken public safety.
Immediately following the vote Friday, Frey and Arradondo released a joint statement condemning it.
"We both want to collaborate with this Council and are disappointed the opportunity to do that has so far been bypassed," they stated. "Let us be clear: passing this amendment will make both of our jobs more difficult to effectively perform."