Donning sneakers and toting clipboards, mayoral candidates and their staffs are hitting the pavement across Minneapolis, making fervent pitches to voters ahead of Tuesday's election.
With few other races attracting voters to the polls, turnout in the city's first open mayoral race in a generation could be heavily dependent on each campaign's get-out-the-vote operation. It's also the city's biggest test of ranked-choice voting, in which voters select three candidates in order of preference.
Anecdotally, reports indicate that many voters remain undecided, still parsing a muddled field of 35 candidates. Only eight candidates have structured campaigns, however.
"At least 50 percent of the people we talk to are undecided," Jackie Cherryhomes said while knocking on doors at a north Minneapolis high-rise this week.
Juggling events as they try to make contact with as many voters as possible in these final days, the candidates are meeting with students, parents and voters who live in single-family homes and others who live in public high-rises.
Following is a look at how some of them have been spending time leading up to Election Day:
Mission, menu and motion
By noon on Saturday, Mark Andrew had fired up campaign volunteers at a labor rally in northeast Minneapolis, waded through a bustling coffee shop in Bryn Mawr to meet new voters and posed for a photo at a craft shop holding a leaf-shaped dish with streaks of green in homage to his environmental platform.
"I'm a leading candidate for mayor of Minneapolis and just want to say hi. … I want more bikeways and green space. … I'm campaigning to make this the greenest city in America," he said above the din of coffee machines at Cuppa Java, moving from table to table.