Piled onto a stage at the MacPhail Center on Thursday night, six Minneapolis mayoral candidates went down the line answering questions about how they would support the arts.
The event had so many contenders, with so much to say, that it ran over the allotted two hours — and the atmosphere was more of a public policy round table than of a typical political debate.
Candidates are attending a slew of forums to get their message out. But while primaries in New York City and elsewhere are whittling down crowded races to just a few candidates, ranked-choice voting has left Minneapolis with a wide-open field of 35 with no clear favorite.
With only five to eight of the most active candidates on stage, there's less of the back and forth of a traditional debate or a chance to take candidates beyond their talking points. That's little help to voters trying to pick their candidate as Nov. 5 approaches.
"The stage is so filled with candidates that it's hard to put them in a dentist chair and drill down," said University of Minnesota political science professor Larry Jacobs, who has moderated several mayoral forums. "I think 35 candidates both is a blessing of democracy but also a curse of democracy — and even if you winnow it down to eight or four it's still pretty daunting to have an in-depth conversation that reveals the flaws of the candidates and their relative strengths."
As the pace of forums picks up as Election Day approaches, some candidates are frustrated at not even making the list of those invited.
Several education groups have invited the "leading" candidates to discuss racial education and opportunity gaps Monday night, prompting candidate Doug Mann to send out an e-mail saying he wasn't invited. Instead, he used an already established e-mail forum to share his views.
Sticking to the script
Even the candidates who are included in the forums acknowledge their imperfections.