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2005 Minneapolis municipal election

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2005 Minneapolis municipal election

← 2001 September 13, 2005 (2005-09-13) (primary)
November 8, 2005 (2005-11-08) (general)
2009 →

City Council results by ward

The 2005 Minneapolis municipal elections in the U.S. state of Minnesota held a scheduled primary election on 13 September and a general election on 8 November. Voters in the city elected:

Results

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Mayor

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  • Incumbent R.T. Rybak and Hennepin County Commissioner Peter McLaughlin, both DFLers, advanced to the general election on November 8 for the mayoral post. Both candidates had sought endorsement at the DFL City Convention, but neither was able to reach the 60% required.[1] In the Primary election, Rybak was the overall winner with 44.49% of the vote, while McLaughlin received 35.33%.
CandidatePrimaryGeneral
Votes%Votes%
R. T. Rybak14,78244.4943,19861.47
Peter McLaughlin11,73935.3325,80736.72
Farheen Hakeem4,60013.84
Mark Koscielski5851.76
Don Johnson4231.27
Dick Franson2690.81
Gerald James Savage2400.72
Marcus Harcus1470.44
Tim Nolan1400.42
Gregory A. Brown1080.33
David A. Alvarado1010.30
Gregory Groettum930.28
Write-in1,2681.80
Total33,227100.0070,273100.00
Source: [2]

City Council

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  • The DFL-endorsed candidates won in all races except Ward 2 (Green Party Cam Gordon won by 141 votes over DFLer Cara Letofsky). In wards where there was no DFL endorsement (8 & 10), the seat was won by the candidate who came closest to getting the DFL endorsement.

Other Offices

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  • In other offices, the DFL-endorsed candidates won in all races except 1 Park Board seat (Incumbent Annie Young had no DFL-endorsed opponent) and 1 Library Board seat (Incumbent Anita Duckor (independent) beat Gary Thaden (DFL). (Thaden was later appointed by the Minneapolis City Council).

Later developments

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City Council Member Dean Zimmermann was accused by the Federal Bureau of Investigation of accepting bribes, see Minneapolis City Council. In December 2006, he was convicted and sentenced to prison. He was held in a Federal Prison in Colorado, but was released in summer 2008 to a halfway house in Minneapolis.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved June 23, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "2005 Election results". City of Minneapolis. Archived from the original on August 28, 2024. Retrieved August 27, 2024.
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