Frey, a Democrat who fought off a crowded field of challengers,
had opposed a ballot measure backed by his more liberal rivals
that would have replaced the police department with a new public
safety agency. Minneapolis voters rejected the measure.
Instead, Frey, 40, charted a middle course, calling for police
reforms while also vowing to hire more officers for a department
that has been hit hard by departures and has struggled to curb a
spike in violent crime.
After election returns showed that he had won, he urged city
officials to come together "to begin restoring a fractured
faith, not just in our institutions but in one another."
"This is our Minneapolis moment to heal and move forward
together with renewed purpose toward shared goals and overdue
change," he said on Twitter on Wednesday.
Speaking to reporters, he added, "I'm calling on everyone to
come together to unite around common principles and values and
to work with us in good faith towards the progress that we all
collectively need to see in our city."
In Buffalo, India Walton, who captured the Democratic mayoral
nomination in June in a surprise upset against long-time Mayor
Byron Brown, conceded on Wednesday that she had lost the general
election after the incumbent mounted a rare write-in campaign.
"While we anticipate that the margins will narrow, it seems
unlikely that we will end up with enough votes to inaugurate a
Walton administration in January," she said in a statement on
Wednesday after initially refusing to concede.
Brown's victory gives him a fifth four-year term.
Minneapolis employs a ranked-choice system for its mayoral
election, in which voters can rank up to three candidates in
order of preference.
Frey led after the first round of votes were counted on Tuesday,
but he fell short of the mark needed for an outright victory. He
cemented his win in a subsequent round of counting on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford and Peter Szekely; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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