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I love Minneapolis. My wife and I are raising our two young daughters here, and I recently moved my parents here. This city is my home — and at this dark hour in our national politics, it can be a beacon of hope.
Every American city is having an overdue conversation about who they are and who they aspire to be. Cities are examining their values and how their actions align with those values.
We must resist the lurch toward authoritarianism at every opportunity, from the courts to the ballot box. Minneapolis is doing its part, with multiple active lawsuits against the Trump administration. But our city’s future is about more than resistance alone. It is about looking in the mirror and defining how our actions at the local level will deliver outcomes consistent with our values.
My opponent state Sen. Omar Fateh would argue the way to beat Trumpism is to mimic it: to govern through theater, swap ideology for evidence and steer public power toward favored interests. But the opposite of MAGA extremism is not the opposite extreme. It is effective, thoughtful governance driven by results, data and loving your city more than your ideology.
Our local government has a responsibility to make life better for our neighbors. Under my leadership, we’re doing exactly that — and we’re poised to take the work further.
While rents rose 31% nationally between 2017 and 2023, they rose just 1% in Minneapolis. We achieved that by legalizing more homes in more places and by building 8.5 times more deeply affordable housing than before I took office. And while unsheltered homelessness has risen in most large cities since 2020, in Minneapolis, it is down nearly 33% because we focused on housing and rehabilitation.