A local boot camp for progressive politicos will test a fresh crop of candidates in this year's Minneapolis city elections. When locals gather to choose delegates at DFL precinct caucuses Tuesday, three Minneapolis City Council candidates will be looking for the first signs of success from skills they picked up at a recent weekend at Camp Wellstone.
Four years ago, the same candidate-training program did the trick for three other council hopefuls who went on to win election later that year. The best-known graduates of Camp Wellstone's January 2005 session are U.S. Rep. Tim Walz, now in his second term representing Minnesota's First District, and Minnesota Secretary of State Mark Ritchie, who has gained a national profile during the recent U.S. Senate election recount.
But it's the local victories by three members the Camp Wellstone Class of 2005 - Minneapolis City Council members Ralph Remington, Diane Hofstede and Elizabeth Glidden - that offer the most direct inspiration to council aspirants from this year's camp: Charley Underwood, Doron Clark and Kenya McKnight.
All three find themselves in crowded fields: Underwood in Ward 12, the last to send a Republican to the council; Clark in Ward 1, where the retirement of DFL incumbent Paul Ostrow is creating one of three open council seats this year; and McKnight in Ward 5, where a number of others are also said to be mulling efforts to oust DFL incumbent Don Samuels.
Two others attended the recent candidate camp with the Minneapolis City Council in mind. Charles Carlson just announced that he has dropped out of contention for the DFL endorsement in Ward 2 for the seat now held by the council's lone Green Party member, Cam Gordon. And Peter Eichten said last month he was still considering whether to enter the Ward 9 race as the second Green Party challenger (after Dave Bicking) to Gary Schiff, the DFL incumbent.
Carlson had been looking to get farther than Bill Svrluga, a 2005 Camp Wellstone grad who vied for but didn't win the DFL endorsement in Ward 2 that year. Svrluga's fellow camper Kevin McDonald took his race all the way to the November 2005 general election, when he drew nearly 40 percent of the votes in the city's 12th ward, losing to DFL incumbent Sandy Colvin Roy.
This year Colvin Roy faces another newly minted Camp Wellstone grad in Underwood, who tells the Minnesota Independent he's now been through all three tracks the camp has to offer. He completed the campaign-staffer track while working on Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer's 2006 bid for Congress, and later the track for citizen activists.
That's the role Underwood says comes most naturally. This is his first time running as a candidate himself since he lost the race for Macalester College student body president in 1968 to Tim O'Brien, now a well-known author.
But three days of role-playing over the last weekend in January primed Underwood for tasks like phoning for campaign donations. That chore got easier for Underwood with this Camp Wellstone advice: "Ask for a certain amount of money, then pick up your coffee cup. Let the silence be there. Don't bargain them down."
McKnight concurs: "I enjoyed the hands-on learning, which helped me become much more comfortable with my approach talking with people, my 90-second speech. ... It was a great start for me."
For weeks leading up to the March 3 precinct caucuses, candidates spend evening after evening dialing not only for dollars but also for the support of prospective delegates. Once elected on Caucus Night, DFL Party delegates will choose candidates at ward conventions held later this month, with contenders for citywide offices (including mayor and at-large park commissioners) selected at the city convention in the spring.
The Green and Republican parties conduct parallel processes, though they're conducted in a much more compact manner than those of the DFL.
Camp Wellstone is part of the St. Paul-based organization Wellstone Action (named for the late Sen. Paul Wellstone and his wife, Sheila), which offers eight training programs in all. Communications Director Elana Wolowitz says the camps are held throughout the year and across the country, often at the request of local groups. Since 2006, more than 300 Camp Wellstone alums have won elective office.
Wolowitz says most participants are progressive-minded, and the organization describes itself as progressive - but also nonpartisan and non-ideological, with at least one Independence Party candidate on its graduation rolls.
Might wound-licking Republicans now flock to Camp Wellstone for tips? Wolowitz is dubious, since conservatives have their own institutes - on which Camp Wellstone is modeled in part.
Graduates are more likely to run into each other in places like Minneapolis where the two-party system means DFLers and Greens. Underwood, a DFLer who counts many Greens among his circle of friends and fellow activists, says it's only by chance that no city council race this year pits two Camp Wellstone grads against each other.

















