St. Paul's City Council elections are still months away, but Sunday will mark a key moment for this fall's candidates: The city DFL will hold caucuses and conventions to determine who gets the party's endorsement.
All seven council seats are up for election in November and four of those seats are open, with races that don't have incumbents. Four St. Paul school board seats will also be on the ballot.
How much weight does the party's stamp of approval carry in Minnesota's largely liberal capital city? St. Paul DFL Chair Dieu Do said candidates who receive the party's endorsement get support and resources, including coordinated campaign organizing and volunteers to help with phone banking and door knocking.
"It also says something to a city that's widely Democratic — that they align with our values of equity, inclusion, of racial justice and economic and climate justice, and are supportive of the policy priorities that we hold true," said Do, 23, the first woman of color to serve as the city's DFL chair.
Kathy Lantry, a former City Council president who served on the council from 1998 to 2015, said she considered the DFL endorsement "essential" during her campaigns. When she first joined the council, St. Paul's mayor was Norm Coleman, a Republican — a prospect that now seems unlikely with an electorate that gave DFL Gov. Tim Walz 80% of its votes last fall.
"I don't know that the DFL endorsement is as critical as I once thought it was," Lantry said. "It's still important. But now we're all from the same party, basically."
Council President Amy Brendmoen is living proof that a local candidate can get elected without the St. Paul DFL's backing. When she ran for the council's Fifth Ward seat in 2011 and again in 2015, neither Brendmoen nor her opponents mustered the 60% of delegate support needed to receive the endorsement.
Without state or federal offices on the ballot, city elections often draw relatively low turnout, noted Brendmoen, who is not seeking re-election this fall.