A St. Paul election whose front-runners represent the old and new guard of an evolving DFL Party could shift the dynamics of City Council leadership.
Former City Council President Russ Stark left office in February for a job in Mayor Melvin Carter's office, leaving the Fourth Ward seat open for the first time in a decade. Parks advocate Shirley Erstad, 51, and Mitra Jalali Nelson, 32, community representative for U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison, entered the race in February and have garnered high-profile endorsements.
Hamline-Midway resident and consultant David Martinez, 38, filed his candidacy Tuesday. The election is scheduled for Aug. 14, and the winner will take office in late August or early September.
"It's going to be a really important time to be joining the council, and I would say they'll probably have a fair amount of leverage," said Council Member Jane Prince, who has endorsed Erstad. "It's an exciting opportunity for everyone."
The Fourth Ward includes Hamline-Midway, Merriam Park, St. Anthony Park and parts of the Mac-Groveland and Como neighborhoods. It's home to universities and apartment complexes, quiet residential streets and the bustling Green Line corridor. Allianz Field, though in the First Ward, is bordered on two sides by the Fourth.
Nelson, who grew up in the Twin Cities and moved to St. Anthony Park two years ago, would be the only renter on the seven-member council. Her platform includes plans on affordable housing, public safety and police accountability, transportation, education and a $15 minimum wage.
When Nelson talks about big development projects like the soccer stadium, she sees an opportunity to make the city a better place to live while protecting nearby renters from being priced out of their homes.
"We have a moment in our city to really define what the future's going to be," she said. "We have a moment to build a politics that really reflects everybody who lives here."