Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis mayor drew closer to his Jewish identity after Oct. 7, rise in antisemitism; 'I have to be more out front'
Before Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks last year, Jacob Frey, the mayor of Minneapolis, had never identified first and foremost as a Jew, even as he had always been mindful of his heritage.
But in the wake of the attacks and the ensuing war in Gaza, Frey’s personal investment in confronting a surge in antisemitic activity, he said, has forced him to reconsider how he has connected to his Judaism. “My ethnicity has risen greatly over the last year in the way that I think of myself and how others think of me,” he said in an interview with Jewish Insider on Monday, echoing many Jews who have also felt a deeper attachment to their faith amid the ongoing conflict.
“There was a moment where I thought to myself, ‘Oh my gosh, there are all these people coming out against Jews, should I not be as out in front? Should I not be as vocal about my identity as a Jew?’” Frey, a two-term Democrat, explained. “And as soon as I thought that, it was almost a slap in the face: ‘No, I have to be more out front. I have to be more vocal.’”
The level of antisemitism he has witnessed during the past year, including in Minneapolis, “has never been something that I’ve experienced in my life,” he said. “People are saying it very clearly, their hatred for Jews,” he added. “It is problematic, and I’m not going to back down.”
Last month, Frey — who is already facing a handful of emerging challengers as he prepares to seek reelection next year — spoke out against a local teachers’ union for inviting an anti-Israel activist with a history of antisemitic remarks to join one of its seminars, urging the group to cancel its event with a participant who “hates Jews,” as he put it in a widely viewed social media post.
More recently, Frey vetoed a City Council resolution supporting students at the University of Minnesota facing disciplinary action and at least one criminal charge for occupying a school building during an October protest calling for divestment from Israel.
In a letter on Monday blocking the resolution, he called the protest “neither peaceful nor protected speech” and suggested that the Council had “taken a position simply because it aligns with a cause they support, rather than the basic principles of law.”
“I supported a cease-fire, then and now. I support the return of the hostages, then and now. I’ve been oppositional to [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, then and now,” Frey told JI. “At the same time, I’m not going to sign on to a completely one-sided resolution that reduces the entire existence of the State of Israel to illegality.”
The 43-year-old mayor has also clashed with the City Council over a cease-fire resolution he viewed as “one-sided,” releasing his own proclamation on the conflict after the legislative body had rejected his veto — a tool he has frequently used during his time as the city’s chief executive.
Even as he reiterated that he has long been in favor of a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, Frey said that the resolution, which was denounced by Jewish leaders for demonizing Israel, underscored what he described as “a desire” among some far-left Council members to “find where the fault line exists — and then push a little further.”
“I supported a cease-fire, then and now. I support the return of the hostages, then and now. I’ve been oppositional to [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, then and now,” he told JI. “At the same time, I’m not going to sign on to a completely one-sided resolution that reduces the entire existence of the State of Israel to illegality.”
In addition, he said he was “not going to allow for teachers to get taught by someone who has quite literally said Jews should not be our friends and they’re enemy No. 1,” alluding to Taher Herzallah, the extremist speaker who was set to be featured at the recent teachers’ union event. “Obviously, that’s problematic,” Frey said. “Everybody should be acknowledging the problem there.”
Frey, who is the second Jewish mayor to represent Minneapolis, confirmed that he intends to run for a third term next year, but did not share a timeline for announcing his campaign. Last week, he drew two new challengers, including Omar Fateh, a democratic socialist in the state Senate, and Emily Koski, a relatively moderate Democrat on the City Council who has nevertheless differed with the mayor over some progressive policies.
Both challengers have argued that Frey’s repeated divisions with the City Council — where he served before he was elected mayor — are an impediment to productive governance.
But speaking with JI, Frey, who fended off several challengers in a hotly contested election three years ago, said he is confident about his prospects in the upcoming mayoral race — claiming he has “a lot of momentum right now.”
“We also need to have the guts to tell our own side, at times, what they don’t want to hear,” Frey told JI. “I’ve seen more than a few Council members cave to support something they don’t think is right because of the pressure. They’ll tell me privately, ‘Oh, I know what you’re doing is the right thing to do, but I can’t support it.’”
“At this point in time, experience matters, and people are very much recognizing that,” he argued. “There’s also a dynamic that is happening federally, and we need to make sure that we respond correctly to it. The election at the federal level did not go the way that I had hoped, obviously, and I’m hearing from some that they need to counter Donald Trump by going further to the extreme on the left. That is not the right approach, and it is counterproductive.”
Highlighting comments he expressed in an opinion piece for The Minneapolis Star Tribune last week, Frey insisted that “the opposite of extremism is not the opposite extreme” but is instead what he called “good, thoughtful government” backed by data and evidence. “It’s a willingness to listen to experts and to do right by the city, loving the city more than you love your ideology,” said Frey, who has prominently feuded with the hard left over efforts to defund the police. “I think we need to base our progressivism in reality, not in belief.”
“We also need to have the guts to tell our own side, at times, what they don’t want to hear,” Frey told JI. “I’ve seen more than a few Council members cave to support something they don’t think is right because of the pressure. They’ll tell me privately, ‘Oh, I know what you’re doing is the right thing to do, but I can’t support it.’”
His efforts to speak out against antisemitism after the Oct. 7 attacks are a part of his broader approach, he suggested, particularly amid rising antisemitism he himself has experienced personally “many times” as mayor. “I tell the truth and I stand by my values,” he said.
“Judaism is very much based more in law than it is belief,” Frey elaborated. “There’s a fairness and an objectivity I deeply appreciate and that I certainly incorporate into my leadership as mayor. There’s also not just a beautiful acceptance — but a kind of hospitality of inclusivity that is entrenched in the fabric of being a Jew, and that’s something I also believe in.”
“Jews are resilient. We are tough. We’re strong,” Frey said. “We stand up for what’s right — and we should be proud of that. We should also be proud of the way that we stand up for other people.”
As he vows to continue fighting antisemitism, Frey stressed the value of education to counter prejudice and said “we also need to make sure that both Jews and their allies have the courage to stand up to hate in all forms” — including “hate against Palestinians and Arabs.”
“We’ve got a history as a people and we should be talking about it,” he told JI, noting that the “reason I’m alive” and “in America right now” is because his great-grandparents chose to leave their small town in Ukraine before World War II. “Years later,” he said,” they checked back in to see how the rest of the family was doing, and they were all slaughtered in either the pogroms or the Holocaust.”
“Jews are resilient. We are tough. We’re strong,” he said, while reflecting on how recent events have strengthened his sense of Jewish identity. “We stand up for what’s right — and we should be proud of that. We should also be proud of the way that we stand up for other people.”
Minneapolis, MN
Bauhaus Brew Labs in northeast Minneapolis set to close next month
Minneapolis, MN
With evictions on the rise, Minnesota lawmakers pass $40 million in rental assistance
Minnesota legislators passed a housing bill on May 13 that includes $40 million in emergency rental assistance, a partial answer to pleas that have been coming from Twin Cities metro area officials and others since the early December start of Operation Metro Surge.
The $165 million bill is now headed to the desk of Gov. Tim Walz. It also includes $100 million to build affordable housing, $14 million for housing meant to meet workforce needs in Greater Minnesota, $4 million to support manufactured homes and $4 million for a homelessness prevention strategy threatened by federal cuts.
State Rep. Liish Kozlowski (DFL-Duluth), who authored the rental assistance portion of the bill, said it has been “the most pressing issue facing Minnesotans” since the session began.
The funds will be distributed through the state’s Family Homeless Prevention and Assistance Program, which partners with counties, nonprofits and other organizations. To be eligible, participants must be Minnesota residents undergoing a housing crisis who have an income at or below 200% of federal poverty guidelines.
Legislature passes housing bill amid feds’ threat to strategy to prevent homelessness
Kozlowski believes the “lion’s share” of the funding will go toward the Twin Cities metro, but that every county in the state will receive some portion. They added that they were hopeful that residents would receive the dollars by the time June rent comes due, but that money would definitely be available by July.
Kozlowski said the bill was “the thing I’m most proud of and also it gives me heartburn,” acknowledging that even a figure as large as $40 million pales in comparison to the estimated cost of meeting emergency assistance needs for the state’s low-income households, which Minnesota Housing pegs at $350 million.
The decision comes as eviction filing rates statewide continue to slightly outpace last year. As of May 1, 2026, nearly 8,500 households had received an eviction notice this year, up about 8% from the same time period in 2025.
In Minneapolis, evictions are outpacing solutions
The money will come from a state fund originally created for counties to pay out settlements connected to a U.S. Supreme Court decision that found the state’s forfeiture law was unconstitutional.
Minneapolis City Council members, who have been calling on the state to add to funds approved by the city, as well as those raised privately through sites like Stand With Minnesota, said they were relieved to see it finally happen.
“My community, my colleagues and I on the Council, and people throughout the city and state have been telling lawmakers that emergency rental assistance is desperately needed in the wake of Operation Metro Surge,” said Council member Aisha Chughtai (Ward 10). “This is a win for working class people.”
Council member Jason Chavez agreed, saying that “this action is exactly what is needed to keep more neighbors housed.” He added, though, that many residents still need more time – a nod to the Council’s efforts to extend the eviction timeline, which have been met with vetos from Mayor Jacob Frey.
Frey’s spokesperson said the mayor was thankful that the state has invested in emergency rental assistance, a measure he has said he prefers to eviction period extensions.
St. Paul City Council President Rebecca Noecker (Ward 2) said the bill’s passage was “really exciting news,” saying the need for rental assistance is bottomless.
“We’ll be fighting for as much of that money as possible in St. Paul,” Noecker said. The announcement made her even more grateful, she said, that the Council passed an ordinance extending St. Paul’s eviction timeline to 60 days – which coincidentally went into effect on May 14 and will last through the end of 2026.
Related
Minneapolis, MN
PTSD leave policy adds financial pressure to Minneapolis Fire Department
“You will expose yourself to things that most of the public won’t see, except maybe once in their life. But yep, we’re doing it. Fire departments are doing it on a very regular basis,” said Mike Dobesh, president of MNFire, an organization dedicated to keeping firefighters healthy, mentally and physically, and on the job.
“The fire service is recognizing that any of those unexpected events that we go to, yes, we sign up to do it, but at the same time, those unexpected events can cause trauma; that trauma can lead to PTSD,” Dobesh said.
However, paying for all those firefighters on mandatory PTSD leave is putting the Minneapolis Fire Department in the red. It’s all the overtime needed to fill in for the firefighters on leave.
“From the therapists that I’ve talked to, usually eight to 10 visits can get that firefighter back on the rig,” Dobesh said, which is the goal of the mandatory leave with treatment. “But then it’s going to be something that’s going to have to be managed for the… probably the rest of their career, because it’s not something that’s just going to go away.”
Dobesh says that PTSD was the number one claim MNFire had on its critical illness policy last year.
In 2023, Minnesota lawmakers created the PTSD leave policy in an effort to keep firefighters from applying for permanent duty disability benefits. The policy requires firefighters and other first responders to take up to 32 weeks of paid leave and get treatment first.
“A trauma-informed therapist can meet with a firefighter, desensitize that firefighter, get them back to work,” Dobesh said.
But that policy is costing some fire departments millions. The Minneapolis Fire Department told the city council this week that 7% to 8% of its firefighters are currently out on PTSD leave, and the overtime other firefighters are working to fill in for them has put the department up to $7 million over budget in recent years. It’s projected to go over again this year.
So what are things they can do to maybe prevent some of these problems that they’re having because of PTSD? Speed up access to treatment, according to Dobesh.
“The sooner we can get in and have that firefighter seen, the more likely they’re going to have a very positive outcome and get back on the job,” he said.
Dobesh says if and when a firefighter needs help varies from person to person, but his organization provides five free treatment sessions for any firefighter who’s struggling.
Minnesota firefighters can call MnFIRE’s helpline 24/7 at 888-784-6634 or visit mnfirehealth.org.
MFD Interim Chief Melanie Rucker shared the following statement late Wednesday night:
“The utilization of these leaves is often unavoidable and reflects benefits that support the health and well-being of our fire personnel. We take the health and wellness very seriously, including mental health. Through transparent communication with leadership regarding evolving staffing needs and necessary overtime budget adjustments, we can effectively address the budget overages and return to a sustainable path forward.”
Click here to watch the Minneapolis Budget Committee meeting on May 4.
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