Minneapolis city council names socialists as majority and minority leaders

The Minneapolis City Council appointed members of the Democratic Socialists of America to both majority and minority leader positions during its first meeting of the year. Aisha Chughtai was selected as majority leader, while Robin Wonsley was named minority leader, drawing protests from moderate members over lack of political diversity. The move revives leadership titles eliminated by voters in a 2021 referendum.

At the Minneapolis City Council's inaugural meeting of 2026, progressives secured the appointment of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) members to key leadership roles. Aisha Chughtai, the council's first Muslim woman and youngest member ever elected, was named majority leader. She described her role as identifying "uncontroversial ideas that the rest of the body largely agreed with," according to the Star Tribune.

Chughtai nominated Robin Wonsley for minority leader, who accepted the position. Wonsley, a self-described Democratic Socialist pursuing a PhD in Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, explained the minority leader's duties as recognizing the council's "political diversity," particularly among the four DSA members: Chughtai, Wonsley, Jason Chavez, and Soren Stevenson. Unlike the others, who align with the Democrat-Farmer-Labor (DFL) party, Wonsley identifies as an independent, a point highlighted by Council President Elliot Payne, who noted her "very specific lens."

The appointments sparked objections from moderate council members. LaTrisha Vetaw argued that installing two DSA members in these roles failed to represent true political diversity. Linea Palmisano, the council's longest-serving member, criticized the over-representation of DSA affiliates on committees, stating, "President Payne, you put the four DSA-ascribed members on everything. This is over-representation." She added that the leaders "almost always voted the same way," undermining claims of diversity. Palmisano was assigned to lead the only committee chaired by a moderate: the Enterprise and Labor Relations Committee.

The council, technically nonpartisan, had eliminated these partisan-style titles in a 2021 voter referendum. City Attorney Susan Segal emphasized that the roles "didn’t have to do with political parties." Star Tribune columnist Eric Roper expressed skepticism, writing, "for those following at home: The majority leader, a democratic socialist, is the steward of consensus issues. And the minority leader, a democratic socialist, is the progressive champion."

Wonsley defended the selections, noting, "Democratic socialism has been a growing political movement nationwide," and clarified it is not a party. She outlined priorities including generating "progressive revenue" through a tax on the rich and deploying unarmed mental health professionals for 911 calls. The moderates, aligned with Mayor Jacob Frey, hold a minority position on the 13-member council.

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