Brooklyn Center early voting opens June 26 for city primary
Brooklyn Center, MN – Early voting starts June 26 for an Aug. 11 primary that will narrow crowded mayor and council races ahead of Nov. 3.
Early voting opens Friday, June 26, 2026, for Brooklyn Center’s Aug. 11 municipal primary, giving residents more than six weeks to cast ballots before Election Day in races for mayor and two City Council seats.
The primary matters because the fields are larger than the November ballot can carry. Four candidates are listed for mayor, and nine candidates are currently listed for two council seats. The Aug. 11 vote will narrow the mayor’s race to two candidates and the council race to four candidates for the Nov. 3 general election.
When and where to vote early
The City of Brooklyn Center lists the primary election date as Tuesday, Aug. 11, with early voting running from Friday, June 26, through Monday, Aug. 10. The city also lists Saturday voting hours on Aug. 8 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
For the general election, the city lists Election Day as Tuesday, Nov. 3. Early voting for the general election is scheduled to run from Friday, Sept. 18, through Monday, Nov. 2, with Saturday hours on Oct. 31 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Early in-person voting is available at Brooklyn Center City Hall, 6301 Shingle Creek Parkway, during normal business hours, according to the city’s elections page. Voters who are already registered do not need to bring identification for early in-person voting. Residents who need to register when voting early in person should bring proper proof of residence.
Voters may also request an absentee ballot by mail. The city says absentee ballots returned by mail or in person must arrive by 8 p.m. on Election Day, so residents using mail should leave enough time for the request, delivery and return process.
Who is on the ballot now
The current official mayoral candidates listed by the city and the Minnesota Secretary of State are Alexander Koenig, Teneshia Kragness, Latrecia J. Mayo and Laurie Ann Moore.
The current official City Council candidates for two seats are Georgette Byers, Jacob Carter, Gretchen Enger, Dan Jerzak, Nahid Khan, Justin McGuire, Ebonie L. McMillan, Mark Viste and Aniya White.
Those official lists are the key reference point for voters because candidate fields can change after filing. Earlier local coverage reported a 10-candidate council field, but the current city and Secretary of State lists show nine council candidates.
Why this primary is getting attention
Local reporting has focused on both the crowded ballot and the representation stakes of the 2026 election. CCX Media reported that the Brooklyn Center mayor and council fields triggered an Aug. 11 primary. Mshale reported that Mayor April Graves is not seeking reelection and that Kragness, a current council member, is running for mayor.
With the mayor’s office and two council seats on the ballot, Mshale reported that the outcome could affect whether Brooklyn Center’s five-member council includes Black elected officials after the November election.
That is a possibility, not a result. The primary has not happened, early votes are not final results, and the general election is still scheduled for Nov. 3.
Census Bureau QuickFacts describes Brooklyn Center as a city of about 31,800 residents in 2025. The same Census table lists Black residents and white residents each at 31.5% of the population, Asian residents at 15.2%, Hispanic or Latino residents at 16.5%, and foreign-born residents at 21.7%. Those figures provide community context, but they do not predict turnout or election outcomes.
What to watch next
The next practical deadline for voters is the close of primary early voting on Monday, Aug. 10, followed by the primary on Tuesday, Aug. 11. After that, the mayoral field is expected to be reduced to two candidates and the council field to four for the Nov. 3 general election.
Residents should check official city and state election pages before voting for current candidate lists, absentee instructions, polling details and any updates to voting hours.
Sources
- City of Brooklyn Center elections page
- Minnesota Secretary of State candidate filings
- Mshale report on Brooklyn Center representation
- CCX Media candidate filing report
- U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts for Brooklyn Center
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