There were clear winners in several wards on election night. Green Council Member Cam Gordon, who did not have an opponent, won re-election. Other council members who won on election night include DFLers Lisa Goodman, Lisa Bender, Andrew Johnson, and Linea Palmisano. Ward 8 DFL candidate Andrea Jenkins also won, replacing retiring DFL Council Member Elizabeth Glidden. Wards which did not have a clear winner underwent several rounds of vote transfers on November 8. Three incumbents lost re-election. DFL Council President Barb Johnson lost to DFL candidate Phillipe Cunningham, DFL Council Member Blong Yang to DFL candidate Jeremiah Ellison, and DFL Council Member John Quincy to DFL candidate Jeremy Schroeder. DFL Council Members Kevin Reich, Abdi Warsame, and Alondra Cano retained their seats. In Ward 3, DFL candidate Steve Fletcher won over Socialist Alternative candidate Ginger Jentzen, who won the most first-choice votes but did not gain sufficient transfer votes. This was the first occurrence of the initial leader not ending up the winner of an election in Minneapolis since it switched to ranked-choice voting in 2009. A similar situation subsequently occurred in Ward 4 in which Johnson lost to Cunningham. Jenkins and Cunningham are the first transgender persons to be elected to the City Council.
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President of the City Council election
After the election, which resulted in the defeat of Council President Barb Johnson, it was reported that DFL Council Members Lisa Bender, Linea Palmisano, and Council Member-elect Andrea Jenkins were seeking to replace her. When the new City Council convened on January 8, 2018, it unanimously elected Bender to be president. Following Bender's election, it was revealed that Jenkins and Palmisano were respectively seeking to be elected president and vice-president as a ticket. Bender said that while she had the votes to defeat them and install her supporters as chairs of choice committees, she wanted to avoid the Council splitting into factions that had sometimes characterized the previous City Council. As part of a deal to get her unanimous support and to present a united front, Bender agreed that Jenkins would be vice-president, who was also elected unanimously. A new committee structure was agreed to and council members that did not nominally support her would be given choice committee chairs. Bender said that all council members had to compromise. A final deal was not reached until January 7.