City politics were scrappier when Dan Cohen last ran for mayor of Minneapolis.
Then the City Council's young, ambitious president, he traded daily barbs in 1969 with police detective Charlie Stenvig on the campaign trail. Stenvig accused hoodlums of dictating City Hall policies. Cohen said Stenvig's agenda could lead to a police state. Stenvig supporters slapped bumper stickers over Cohen's face on billboards.
Forty-four years later, Cohen is back for more — but he's learned some lessons. "You're not going to see any picture of me on my billboards," he said.
Cohen has proved to be an unlikely player in the 2013 race, winning early name recognition among 35 candidates by pouring a personal fortune into radio and television advertising. He's hoping that fierce opposition to the Vikings stadium deal and the promise of a downtown casino will bring him a political revival this fall.
He strikes a jovial tone in private company, but Cohen is still known for his blunt style, often relating the Vikings stadium troubles to a "script from the Sopranos."
"There's no holding back with Dan Cohen," said former mayor Al Hofstede. "What you see is what you hear and what you get."
After being soundly defeated by Stenvig in 1969, Cohen never quite disappeared from the scene. He served a four-year term on the city planning commission in the 1970s, then worked in public relations and advertising in the 1980s.
In 1982, he squared off unsuccessfully against Mark Andrew in a primary for Hennepin County Commissioner.