Melvin Carter III

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Melvin Carter III
Image of Melvin Carter  III
Mayor of St. Paul
Tenure

2018 - Present

Term ends

2026

Years in position

6

Prior offices
St. Paul City Council

Elections and appointments
Last elected

November 2, 2021

Education

Bachelor's

Florida A&M University

Graduate

University of Minnesota

Personal
Profession
Executive director, Minnesota Children's Cabinet
Contact

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Melvin Carter III is the Mayor of St. Paul in Minnesota. He assumed office on January 1, 2018. His current term ends on January 1, 2026.

Carter ran for re-election for Mayor of St. Paul in Minnesota. He won in the general election on November 2, 2021.

Mayoral elections in St. Paul are nonpartisan. Media outlets have reported that Carter is affiliated with the Democratic Party.[1][2]

Carter served on the St. Paul City Council from 2008 to 2013.[3]

Biography

Carter earned his bachelor's degree in business administration from Florida A&M University. He later received his master's degree in public policy from the University of Minnesota. Carter's professional experience includes working as the executive director of the Minnesota Children's Cabinet.[3]

Elections

2021

See also: Mayoral election in St. Paul, Minnesota (2021)

General election

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General election for Mayor of St. Paul

The ranked-choice voting election was won by Melvin Carter III in round 1 .


Total votes: 59,103
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.

2017

See also: Municipal elections in St. Paul, Minnesota (2017)

The city of St. Paul, Minnesota, held an election for mayor on November 7, 2017. The filing deadline for this election was August 15, 2017. Mayor Chris Coleman (D) did not file for re-election because of his 2018 campaign for governor.[4] The following candidates ran in the general election for mayor of St. Paul.

Mayor of St. Paul, General Election, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Melvin Carter III 50.86% 31,353
Pat Harris 24.79% 15,281
Dai Thao 12.31% 7,590
Elizabeth Dickinson 4.75% 2,927
Tom Goldstein 3.83% 2,360
Chris Holbrook 1.39% 854
Sharon Anderson 0.79% 487
Tim Holden 0.72% 446
Trahern Jeen Crews 0.26% 162
Barnabas Y'shua 0.15% 94
Write-in votes 0.15% 92
Total Votes 61,646
Source: Ramsey County, Minnesota, "Election Results," accessed November 28, 2017

Campaign themes

2017

Carter's campaign website included the following themes:

People
Everyone in Saint Paul deserves access to a brighter future through high-quality education and workforce training.

  • We will support efforts to expand schools that offer high-quality education along with a wide array of supportive services for children and families in every neighborhood throughout our city.
  • Working together, we will prepare our residents to secure good-paying jobs, but put them on a path to creating their own businesses and new jobs right here in Saint Paul.
  • We will stand up for our workers by fighting for a $15 minimum wage. No one working full-time should have to raise his/her family in poverty.

Places
We will work to make Saint Paul a destination for families, businesses, and organizations to plant their roots. Our vision is to create aligned learning communities that prepare our young people to go anywhere and compete in a global economy and a city so vibrant and rich with opportunity, they choose to plant their roots and grow their families here, in Saint Paul.

  • We will create flexible work spaces to meet the needs of new and existing businesses and neighborhoods that offer safe transportation options from driving and busing to biking and walking. We will work to make Saint Paul a destination for families, businesses, and organizations to plant their roots.
  • New development along the Green Line has demonstrated the incredible potential to add density, tax base, and community assets along key corridors throughout our city. As new transit lines connect our neighborhoods to the historic Union Depot, we will encourage the kind of transit-oriented development and placemaking that the market, and families, demand and deserve.
  • As we create new spaces, we will ensure they reflect our shared Saint Paul values and diverse cultural communities. We are fortunate to have a city that is incredibly rich in diversity, yet we haven’t fully realized it. We need to capitalize on those strengths and embrace our identity as a global microcosm, ensuring that we are welcoming and inclusive to all of our residents.

Partnership
Too often, city staff are set up to play the role of referee; as projects and new developments move forward, they blow the whistle when things go out of bounds. I will work with city staff to make it clear that when people want to invest in our city – whether residents or business owners – our job is to roll out the red carpet and ask how we can help. Together, we will transform our approach from reactive referee into proactive champion, coach, and teammate for investors large and small. Residents and businesses will have a true partner in City Hall, working to help them succeed.

  • If a business owner wants to open a new restaurant or storefront, our staff will work right alongside them to explain what steps to take, make the process as smooth as possible, and help achieve their goals.
  • If a homeowner wishes to improve his/her property, our staff will walk them through the process and navigate the often-complicated rules and regulations.
  • We will work to streamline the process for issuing permits and licenses, removing barriers to investment.

Community Policing
Our most precious and invaluable public safety asset is the trust that flows between our officers and our community. Sadly, this fragile trust has been damaged, both in Saint Paul and across the country, in ways that hurt all of us. We must work together to rebuild, strengthen, and protect all of our faith and confidence in our police department.

I possess a unique perspective on our department. As the son of a retired officer, I grew up praying daily for the safety of our Saint Paul Police. As an African American man, I have personally experienced racial profiling and unexplainable police stops since I was 16 years old. These experiences have fueled my passion and work on quality, accountable policing over the past 10 years.

As a City Council Member, I advocated for police accountability in the aftermath of the Republican National Convention in Saint Paul, and worked with our former chief to rewrite our department’s policies governing taser use.

As an advisor to Governor Dayton, I worked to inform the Governor’s perspective and statements, facilitated realtime communication with protestors and other public stakeholders, and helped set up the Governor’s Council on Law Enforcement and Community Relations after Philando Castile was killed by police this past summer.

As Mayor, I will work closely with our Chief to implement community policing best practices, including:

  • Ensure Saint Paul remains a Sanctuary City, and that our police are never called upon to enforce federal immigration policy.
  • Eliminate racial, religious, and every other type of profiling so no one in our community ever feels targeted by police.
  • Implement Character-Based hiring practices that focus on identifying and recruiting individuals with the quality character and temperament, who have a stake in our community and reflect the diversity of our city’s neighborhoods.
  • Leverage mobile technology and neighborhood partner organizations to make it easier to provide feedback about an officer’s performance.
  • Decriminalize mental health and addiction issues by equipping officers with training and resources to help people in crisis get the help they need.
  • Encourage, incentivize and reward officers for volunteer hours served in our city’s schools, rec centers, libraries and neighborhood organizations.
  • Maximize transparency and accountability of our Internal Affairs and Civilian Review process, and foster public, ongoing dialog about the role and relationship of police in our community, including public reporting of aggregate level information about our Civilian Review process.

Finally, I’ll work with our Police Chief to review documents like President Obama’s 21st Century Policing Task Force report; the Saint Paul City Attorney’s 2015 audit of the Saint Paul Police Civilian Internal Affairs Review Commission; the historic 2001 agreement between our police department and the Saint Paul NAACP; and guidelines and best practices issued by the US Department of Justice, for every opportunity to improve police practices and restore trust in Saint Paul.[5][6]

—Melvin Carter III (2017)

Notable endorsements

See also: Ballotpedia: Our approach to covering endorsements

This section displays endorsements this individual made in elections within Ballotpedia's coverage scope.

Notable candidate endorsements by Melvin Carter III
EndorseeElectionStageOutcome
Zuki Ellis  source  (Nonpartisan) Saint Paul Board of Education At-large (2023) GeneralLost General
Amy Klobuchar  source President of the United States (2020) Withdrew in Convention
Notable ballot measure endorsements by Melvin Carter III
MeasurePositionOutcome
St. Paul, Minnesota, Question 1, Limits on Rent Increases Initiative (November 2021)  source SupportApproved

Noteworthy events

Events and activity following the death of George Floyd

See also: Events following the death of George Floyd and responses in select cities from May 29-31, 2020

Carter was mayor of St. Paul during the weekend of May 29-31, 2020, when events and activity took place in cities across the U.S. following the death of George Floyd.

Events in the Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, area began on Tuesday, May 26, the day after George Floyd's death.[7] On May 28, Gov. Tim Walz (D) activated and deployed the Minnesota National Guard to the cities at the request of Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D).[8] That night, people occupied and set fire to the Third Precinct police department building in Minneapolis.[9] On May 29, Frey and St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter III (D) instituted curfews in the cities.[10]

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Melvin Carter Mayor of St. Paul. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

St. Paul, Minnesota Minnesota Municipal government Other local coverage
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External links

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Footnotes

  1. CBS Minnesota, "Democrat Melvin Carter Wins St. Paul Mayoral Election," November 8, 2017
  2. TommieMedia, "Melvin Carter wins St. Paul mayoral election," November 7, 2017
  3. 3.0 3.1 Melvin Carter 2017 campaign website, "About," accessed August 25, 2017
  4. Minnesota Secretary of State, "2017 Municipal and School District Elections," accessed August 9, 2017
  5. Melvin Carter 2017 campaign website, "Vision," accessed August 25, 2017
  6. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  7. Minnesota Public Radio, "Tear gas, chaos, rain: Protests rage after man dies in Mpls. police custody," May 26, 2020
  8. NBC DFW 5, "Nationwide Protests Over George Floyd’s Death Turn Violent," May 29, 2020
  9. Fox 9 KMSP, "Rioters set Minneapolis police precinct on fire as protests reignite over George Floyd's death," May 28, 2020
  10. NBC 10 News, "More National Guard members to be called up after 4th night of Minneapolis unrest," May 30, 2020
  11. Washington Post, "The death of George Floyd: What video and other records show about his final minutes," May 30, 2020
  12. The New York Times, "8 Minutes and 46 Seconds: How George Floyd Was Killed in Police Custody," May 31, 2020
  13. 13.0 13.1 USA Today, "Medical examiner and family-commissioned autopsy agree: George Floyd's death was a homicide," June 1, 2020
  14. Associated Press, "Chauvin guilty of murder and manslaughter in Floyd’s death," April 20, 2021
  15. CNN, "Protests across America after George Floyd's death," accessed June 2, 2020
  16. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named chi1