Donald Trump's presidency has come with a silver lining for DFLers at Minneapolis City Hall: He's rallying the base.
In a municipal election year, the new president has set a fire under Democrats and triggered a vigorous competition among politicians over who can denounce him the loudest.
Mayoral candidates Betsy Hodges and Jacob Frey have both repeatedly said that Minneapolis — its values and its residents — are "under attack" from Trump, and each argues they are the one best able to protect the city. Several council candidates have made Trump an issue in their campaigns.
"We've been getting a lot of calls from people wanting to get involved and help take our country back," said Dan McConnell, chairman of the Minneapolis DFL. "It's focused on immigration, women's rights, just the chaos that seems to follow everywhere he goes," McConnell said of the president.
On Tuesday, Minneapolis City Council chambers were full at the often lightly attended meeting of the Intergovernmental Relations Committee, this time focused on Trump's immigration executive orders.
City Attorney Susan Segal said at the start that "Minneapolis does not violate federal law, according to legal precedent," and likely would not be considered a sanctuary city under Trump's Jan. 25 executive order, which threatens to cut off federal funds to governmental jurisdictions that refuse to help enforce federal immigration laws.
Segal's comments did not stop the meeting from plowing on for another two hours, though, with everyone in apparent agreement that the city should resist the Trump administration.
Hodges attended, which she rarely does for committee meetings, and spoke briefly.