Molly Coleman is seated on the St. Paul City Council

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With family at her side, St. Paul City Council’s newest member, Molly Coleman, took the oath of office Wednesday at City Hall.

Coleman said her predecessor, Council President Mitra Jalali, had set a “high bar” for progressive leadership and that she had “very big shoes to fill.”

In a brief speech after the swearing-in, she outlined what she said were the main reasons she decided to run.

“The first: I love the city of St Paul. The second: I believe that we have a duty to build an economically just city. The third, I believe that we have an obligation to build a functional democracy,” she said.

Molly Coleman, new St. Paul City Councilmember for Ward 4, (third from right) with the six other members of the St. Paul City Council on Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025, after taking the oath of office. On Coleman’s right are members Saura Jost and Anika Bowie. To her left are Rebecca Noecker, HwaJeong Kim, Nelsie Yang and Cheniqua Johnson. (Alex Derosier / Pioneer Press)

Coleman, the daughter of former St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman, will represent Ward 4, which includes Hamline-Midway, Merriam Park, St. Anthony Park, and parts of Macalester-Groveland and Como.

The Harvard Law School graduate and founder of the progressive court reform nonprofit People’s Parity Project won in an Aug. 12 special election with 52% of the vote. Since her share of the vote exceeded the 50% mark, St. Paul’s ranked-choice voting process didn’t kick in.

The Ward 4 seat was open after Jalali left the council in March. Mayor Melvin Carter had appointed Matt Privratsky to fill the seat until voters could choose a permanent replacement. Coleman will serve as Ward 4 councilmember through the November 2028 election.

While council races are officially nonpartisan, the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party typically endorses candidates. But that wasn’t the case this year as the St. Paul DFL is in the process of reconstituting itself.

Coleman significantly outraised the other candidates and received donations from DFL figures such as Carter, former U.S. Sen. Al Franken, and former Minneapolis Mayor RT Rybak. She also got support from real estate developers.

Coleman joins the City Council as the city faces what likely will be a challenging budget year amid declining property values and federal cuts.

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