Cam Winton has brought a no-nonsense style to the Minneapolis mayoral race.
At debates, he needles the other candidates, often calling them out for changing their stance in front of different audiences. "This is not a Minnesota Nice debate," the moderator declared after he zinged a rival recently.
At his news conferences, he uses catchy props to get his ideas across and doesn't hesitate to criticize city policies. He has stood in a pothole, ridden in a rented garbage truck and even used a tortoise and a pair of hares to make a point about city zoning and development regulation.
Winton's strategy is to set himself apart in the crowded field as a fresh face who hasn't held public office. He says his remarks are meant to cut through what he describes as a fluff of self-congratulation in the city to focus attention on where it falls short.
"I have found it necessary to speak very plainly," said Winton, 34, an attorney whose Fulton area household includes his wife, also a lawyer, two toddlers and a rambunctious Goldendoodle.
Born and raised in a suburb of Philadelphia, he comes to the race as a Democrat-turned-Republican who's running as an independent, fiscally restrained but socially moderate on such issues as marriage equality and global warming.
"In this race, I'm the outsider," he said in an interview. "I wasn't born here but I got here as soon as I could. I love this city."
His platform keys on three priorities: growing jobs by easing red tape at City Hall to make doing business easier, pushing for better school results, and focusing on doing basic city services better. He said he'd make getting part of his salary dependent on making progress on those priorities.