Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey vowed to make his re-election a turning point after a bitterly divisive campaign, pledging Wednesday to focus his attention on public safety, economic inclusion and affordable housing.
The first-term mayor, who led the city during episodes of protest and rioting after the police killing of George Floyd last year, called for unity in working toward police reform during a victory speech outside his campaign headquarters. The direction from voters was clear, he said, after they rejected a proposal to replace the Minneapolis Police Department with a new public safety agency.
"All of the work around safety and accountability is complex. None of it you can fix with a hashtag or a slogan or a simplistic answer," Frey said. "I'm hopeful that we will be able to dig in … in a united fashion."
Frey said he assembled a broad coalition of support and in recent weeks had been crisscrossing the city reaching out to voters, including several events aimed at residents of color.
"We had beautifully diverse support from the entire city and, undoubtedly, the backbone of our support came from the North Side, our Black, Somali and Latino voters," Frey said.
He also had strong support from the business community, and some high-profile endorsements including from Gov. Tim Walz and Courteney Ross, who was Floyd's girlfriend.
The announcement that Frey won came Wednesday after two rounds of ranked-choice voting tabulation. Challenger Kate Knuth came in second in the final round, pulling in 38% of votes compared with Frey's 49%.
People around the nation were watching to see whether the city would oust or re-elect Frey, as well as replace its Police Department with a Department of Public Safety. Voters rejected that proposal in a separate question Tuesday, and Frey credits his victory mainly to his consistent opposition to activists' calls to defund and abolish the police.