On a gorgeous Saturday morning, Lisa Goodman sat alone on a grassy hillside in Bryn Mawr, collecting her thoughts. She was about to go into Anwatin Middle School to deliver a speech about why she should remain the City Council member for the Seventh Ward, which she has represented for 20 years.
Newcomer Janne Flisrand was making her own pitch to delegates and voters inside, touting her community activism and pushing for change within the DFL, a theme that has echoed across the city. Over in north Minneapolis, in fact, a similar debate was going on in the Fourth Ward between another 20-year veteran council member, Barb Johnson, and challenger Phillipe Cunningham, a senior policy aide for Mayor Betsy Hodges.
It was an episode of "Family Feud," Minneapolis style, that ended in two deadlocked conventions. Goodman got 55 percent of the needed 60 percent of delegates, falling just short of the nomination. It was the first time either Goodman or Johnson failed to get their party's endorsement, though the dynamics were different.
The Fourth Ward race is more about which candidate better represents the area, incumbent Johnson or Cunningham. The Seventh Ward is a reflection of the millennial push to dismantle the status quo, regardless of philosophical alliances. Flisrand caucused for Bernie Sanders and in her convention speech painted herself as the "true progressive," a term she mentioned numerous times during the 15-minute talk.
Leaders like Goodman and Council President Johnson, both elected in 1997, "were well suited to issues we faced in the 1990s," Flisrand said. But those challenges have been replaced with new ones that can best be fought by new faces, she said.
Flisrand ticked all the buzz words: Affordable housing. "Dismantling racist institutions." Black Lives Matter. She rides her bike to work, grows food in her yard in Lowry Hill and she knits.
So now we have a choice between two women of roughly the same age and race: Goodman, the youngest woman to ever be elected to the council and a former aide to the late Sen. Paul Wellstone, and Flisrand, who sees transformational change in heeding the call of a 75-year-old white man who has been in office for more than 25 years.
Be the change.