Rep. Kaohly Vang Her, DFL-St. Paul, speaks on the House floor in 2024 as the St. Paul mayoral race draws attention and delays a final result due to the city’s ranked-choice voting system. After the first round of unofficial results, Mayor Melvin Carter held just above 40% of the vote, while state Rep. Kaohly Her recorded a surprisingly strong challenge, earning just over 38%.
With no candidate holding a majority, the race moves into the next stage of tabulation. Candidates with the fewest votes are eliminated, and their voters’ second choices are redistributed. This process repeats until a candidate secures a majority.
Her’s robust performance, after jumping into the race only in August, highlights growing dissatisfaction among voters over the state of the city. St. Paul continues to grapple with pandemic recovery, facing high office vacancy rates and the resulting property tax hikes for homeowners. Earlier this year, the city’s only downtown grocery store closed, as did another in the Midway area, which has suffered from stalled development despite the presence of the professional soccer stadium.
A rent control initiative, passed with Mayor Carter’s backing in 2021, has also come under heavy criticism. It was deemed such a failure that the City Council, at Carter’s urging, exempted all units built after 2004 earlier this year.
Despite these challenges, Carter has maintained a loyal base of supporters, which could still guide him to victory. Ron Dexter, an 85-year-old Navy veteran and retired IT specialist at the University of Minnesota, shared his support after voting at the Martin Luther King Jr. Recreation Center. “I met him once. I liked him. I like that he’s Black. That’s good for the community,” Dexter said.
No matter the outcome, Carter—once considered a rising star in Democratic-Farmer-Labor politics—will face new questions about his approach to governing and campaigning, especially if the margin of victory over Her remains narrow. Notably, Her previously served as Carter’s policy aide.
If elected, Kaohly Her would become both the city’s first Hmong-American and first woman mayor. Her journey to this moment began as a 3-year-old refugee, arriving in the United States after the Vietnam War.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/st-paul-mayoral-race-needs-051204712.html