Nelsie Yang's 3-year-old niece was at her side when she learned that she'd been elected to the St. Paul City Council, after eight hours of ballot counting and 18 months of campaigning.
"I'm just so happy she's here," Yang said after her victory in the Sixth Ward race was called Friday. "When I was 3 years old, I never would have imagined myself being here."
Two years out of college, Yang doesn't have to imagine it anymore. At 24, she has already demonstrated a keen sense for building political power — and will make history when she is sworn in as the youngest St. Paul council member and the first Hmong woman to hold a seat on the seven-member body. She won the seat, which former Council Member Dan Bostrom held for more than two decades, with nearly 60% of ranked-choice votes.
Yang was the first candidate to enter the Sixth Ward race in July 2018 — when she was 23 — months before Bostrom announced he was retiring a year before the end of his term. In the time since, her ability to raise funds and build a supporter network has been more on par with incumbents than with other challengers.
Yang led fundraising in the Sixth Ward race, bringing in about $96,000 over the course of her campaign. Part of the reason for that, she said, was she needed enough money to pay her campaign staffers at least $15 an hour.
"I just saw her, and see her, as someone who is going to bring just a whole new lifetime of engagement to a ward that has been often so disengaged by their council member," said Council Member Mitra Jalali Nelson, who had just taken office in the Fourth Ward when Yang called to tell her she was running for the Sixth Ward seat. "It's just a new day for our city."
Nelson and Yang will be the only women of color on the council, and the only renters. Both have backgrounds in community organizing and have already known each other for a few years, Nelson said.
Yang is on staff at TakeAction Minnesota, where she works on criminal justice reform and renters' rights at both the state and local levels. She already got a taste of constituent service in February, when she helped get the heat fixed at a St. Paul public housing building after a resident who had seen her campaign flier called her for help.