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Days Since Minneapolis Was An Embarassment: Back To Zero

AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

;;Minnesota.  The land of solid folks, sports chokes, and a political class we only wish were a joke.  

I moved here from North Dakota after college - and while I've always maintained a bit of homer pride (go Bison), it's taken on a bit of an edge in the past decade or so; I've come to stress almost as a reflex that I'm not actually from this place that seems to breed such insanity.  

But it's not the whole state, pinky swear.   

Yes, I know - it's the state that legalized abortion until birth, and in some cases after, but earnestly debates whether wild rice has rights.  

I wish I was joking:

But pinky swear - it's mostly Minneapolis!

You may say, "Minneapolis and Saint Paul are twin cities - it's even in the name of the baseball team!"  And you'd have a point, sort of.  Saint Paul has more than its fair share of loonies, disproportionally concentrated in government, same as Minneapolis. 

But during the George Floyd riots, as the violence spread across the river (to my neighborhood, as it happens), Saint Paul's police chief Todd Axtell was the single, solitary public official on either side of the river to not acquit himself like a clown or a blubbering ninny, telling the world that Saint Paul wasn't abandoning any precincts.  We had one day of rioting in Saint Paul, as opposed to six days (and, if you've been by "George Floyd Square" at 38th and Chicago lately) six years of institutional thumbing of noses at civil order that bled fairly seamlessly into the ICE protests of this past few months.  

Nah.  It's Minneapolis. 

It's a city whose commercial tax base is eroding faster than Cesar Chavez's public standing; according to Adam Platt, one of the single-digit number of solid mainstream journos in the Twin Cities:

The collapse of the commercial real estate market has been a constant in the news since 2020. It has driven a chain reaction of phenomena that portend deep problems for the core Twin Cities and even some suburbs. But it’s a slow-moving crisis whose depths and ultimate impact remain difficult to gauge. 

Depending on who you talk to and which articles you read, the problem is work-from-home, the problem is leverage, the problem is vacancies, the problem is employers indifferent to the health of cities, the problem is bad landlords, or maybe there’s no problem at all other than capitalism. 

And it's not just business; while crime is falling nationwide, it's not falling nearly as fast in Minneapolis.  And the social service fraud you may have heard about?  Overwhelmingly focused there and in its immediate suburbs.  

So what does the city's government spend its time on?

I'm not sure if there's a city in America that has more thoroughly "normalized relations" with Cuba's communist regime than Minneapolis.  

It was even borderline too much for some on the council:

That is, indeed, the big conflict in Minneapolis, a city no less single-party than Havana or Pyongyang; between councilmembers like Vetaw who are there to try to run a failing city, and others...

...who seem to think they're on an international stage.  

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Ed Morrissey 10:00 PM | March 27, 2026
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