The main entrance to the Karmel Square Mall, the crown jewel of Basim Sabri's south Minneapolis real estate empire, is plastered with campaign signs for City Council candidate Mohamud Noor.
An electronic ticker above the gate displayed a message on repeat Wednesday morning: "Remember to vote on November 7th," followed by a list of candidates endorsed by the Sabri Business Association: Betsy Hodges for mayor, AK Hassan for Park Board, City Council candidates David Schorn for the 10th Ward and Noor for the Sixth Ward.
The mall isn't in the Sixth Ward, but it's a hub for the Somali-American community and a prime spot to get a political message across to Somali voters tuned into the heated campaign between Noor and incumbent Abdi Warsame. Fadumo Yusuf is also running in the Sixth Ward.
For months, Warsame has sought to cast the campaign as a battle between him and Sabri, noting the landlord's support for Noor. And Sabri has done little to disabuse anyone of that notion.
"We need new blood downtown," Sabri said Wednesday. "We need a person that unites and brings the community together."
How the Sabri-Warsame dispute plays with voters will be a determining factor in the city elections. Voters are casting early ballots at double the pace set four years ago, and three in five early votes — about 2,900 so far — is from the Sixth Ward.
Mayoral candidates have also lined up behind the Sixth Ward candidates, with Council Member Jacob Frey trading endorsements with Warsame, and Hodges and Noor endorsing each other.
Warsame and Sabri have feuded openly since January, when Warsame accused the Palestinian landlord of holding Somali-American businesspeople "hostage" in substandard properties with high rents, and pledged to help build a new, independent mall.