Alondra Cano has marched with Black Lives Matter, publicly accused her Minneapolis City Council colleagues of misogyny, tweeted the phone numbers of her critics and called on supporters to elect more like-minded council members.
In her first term, Cano has emerged as a vocal and often uncompromising advocate for disrupting what she calls the "status quo" at City Hall. She has championed the concerns of immigrants and minorities, from workplace reforms to neighborhood pollution, and pushed back against those perceived to be standing in the way.
Her tactics have been criticized by some colleagues, including Council President Barb Johnson, who said Cano's words in a recent budget debate were "unfortunate" and contrary to "a collegial atmosphere" on the council. But Cano, who represents the South Side's diverse and left-leaning Ninth Ward, said she's elevating viewpoints that are often ignored.
"To allow the voice of the new electorate to be here, it's going to feel different," said Cano, who frequently calls upon her background as a Latina, a renter and a single mother. "And I think different is OK. I think we need more of that diversity here."
When two male colleagues proposed nixing funds for a neighborhood sustainability program last month, Cano remarked that she was "looking forward to the day that the misogyny on this council can end." The comments drew applause from activists in the room.
"I think that makes it more difficult when you start name calling folks," said former Council Member Tony Scallon, who represented the Ninth Ward in the 1980s and '90s. "I was taken aback by that."
Later that month, she attracted controversy for tweeting e-mails — including contact information — from people who were angry she was participating in a Black Lives Matter protest at the Mall of America. In October, when an effort to mandate advanced scheduling for workers wilted under fierce business opposition, Cano said it was an invitation to reform the council in 2017 — a rare mention of electoral politics on the council dais. Cano was among those who voted to table the measure.
"I was kind of posing it as a challenge to the community," Cano said this past week of those comments. "If you want to see some of these issues move forward, you're going to have to figure out who represents those issues and get that person here. Because obviously right now we don't have that."