Some fellow DFL politicians are urging Minneapolis officials to hold City Council Member Michael Rainville accountable for "harmful" and "racist" remarks he made last week, while some in the Somali community are encouraging forgiveness and calling for the convening of a meeting.
Members of the Minneapolis delegation in the Minnesota Legislature this week urged city officials to "take formal action to hold Council Member Rainville accountable for his behavior," after he last week blamed primarily Somali American youth for a wave of violence over the July 4th weekend. An ethics investigation could place the matter before the City Council, and some members have said they're exploring whether censure, a public reprimand, might be an option.
Thirteen state lawmakers, in a joint statement, said Rainville's remarks "are representative of a politics which leverages fear and perpetuates systems of inequity and discrimination."
"This does nothing to make our city safer," they said. "The suggestion that Somali youth and our Muslim neighbors are disproportionately responsible for recent crime in Minneapolis is as racist as it is inaccurate."
Meanwhile, the state's leading Muslim civil rights group is calling on Rainville to hold an urgent meeting with the community, hoping it would help him better understand how his words impacted a group of people already experiencing an increase in anti-Muslim sentiments.
"Attaching public safety issues to a racist and Islamophobic trope and scapegoating the Somali Muslim community is unacceptable," said Mohamed Ibrahim, deputy executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MN). "And it is very dangerous, especially when we have such an alarming and a growing rate of hate crimes happening across the city."
Rainville did not respond to calls and e-mails Tuesday. His remarks exacerbated tensions in a city still struggling to combat both racism and crime two years after George Floyd's murder prompted a global conversation on policing and public safety.
Concerns about crime
Rainville, 69, who represents downtown and nearby neighborhoods, was elected to office for the first time last fall after running a campaign that focused heavily on public safety. He opposed a proposal to replace the city's Police Department and has publicly blamed the rhetoric of past elected officials for its current state.