Young Minneapolis mayor in spotlight after police killing, protests
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[May 30, 2020]
By Sharon Bernstein
(Reuters) - Shaken and angry, Minneapolis'
telegenic young mayor stood in front of television cameras over and over
this week - first to decry the police killing of George Floyd, and on
Friday to impose a curfew as parts of his city burned in ongoing
protests.
Disturbing footage showing a Minneapolis law enforcement officer
pressing his knee into Floyd's neck and the ensuing unrest after the
46-year-old's death have drawn international attention to Mayor Jacob
Frey, a 38-year-old attorney and former professional athlete who ran for
office on a platform of reforming the police.
"Being black in America should not be a death sentence," Frey declared
at a news conference after Floyd's killing, and called openly for the
arrest of the officer involved, Derek Chauvin. He fired all four
officers who had been at the scene as Floyd repeatedly cried out that he
could not breathe, and Chauvin was charged Friday with third degree
murder.
A former civil rights and employment attorney, Frey's political future
may hinge on his handling of Floyd's death and its violent aftermath,
which have followed the coronavirus pandemic that shut down his city for
two months.
Frey grew up in Virginia near Washington, D.C., but fell in love with
Minneapolis when running a marathon there, his official website said. He
moved to Minneapolis after receiving his law degree from Villanova
University near Philadelphia in 2009.
After four years on the city council, he became mayor in 2018, taking
over a city that despite a longstanding liberal reputation had been
wracked by high-profile cases of police shootings - the death of Jamar
Clark, a black man, in 2015, and the death of Justine Ruszczyk, a white
woman, in 2017.
Frey had vowed to reform the police department, and had won awards for
his civil rights work in Minneapolis, a rapidly changing city where the
black or African-American population grew by 36% or 95,000 people from
2010 to 2018, the Minnesota state website shows.
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State patrol members guard at the area in the aftermath of a protest
against the death in Minneapolis police custody of African-American
man George Floyd, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S., May 29, 2020.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria
But by this week's end, with the smell of burned plastic and
building materials wafting through the city, Frey's credibility was
"understandably at a low point in communities of color," the
Minneapolis Star-Tribune's editorial board wrote.
David Schultz, a professor of political science at Hamline
University in St. Paul, said Frey is leading a city that, while
politically mostly liberal, is divided among affluent white areas
and poorer, mostly black areas that did not benefit as much from the
region's booming economy.
Taking over a city that before coronavirus had a miniscule
unemployment rate, Frey has now been doubly challenged, Schultz
said. His ability to bring the city back both from the devastating
virus shutdown and Floyd's death and its aftermath, will be crucial
to his mayoralty, as well as any future political ambitions, Schultz
said.
"He has to come out of this addressing not only the disparity but
now addressing the destruction," said Schultz.
On Friday, Frey became a target of Republican President Donald
Trump, who called him "weak" for not quelling the unrest that
included people breaking into stores and the burning of a police
station. Trump has attacked Frey before, calling him a "radical
left" Democrat on Twitter last October.
"Donald Trump knows nothing about the strength of Minneapolis," Frey
said Friday. "We are strong as hell."
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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