Voters are likely to make history next week in south Minneapolis.

The City Council could see its first Hispanic member ever — or first active Socialist since the 1920s — if either front-runner wins an open seat representing the Powderhorn and Phillips communities next Tuesday. Overall, seven of 13 seats could have new representation next year because three sitting members are facing stiff challengers and four incumbents are not returning.

Six candidates are vying for the Ninth Ward seat being vacated by longtime Council Member Gary Schiff, but the leading contenders are Ty Moore, a Socialist Alternative candidate backed by the Green Party, and Alondra Cano, endorsed by the DFL Party.

Schiff, a DFLer, said he has not endorsed a successor because he believes that the candidates have similar values, but different leadership styles.

“Ty Moore has the strong street organizing skills but risks being seen as a protester who won’t be effective in City Hall,” Schiff said. “Alondra’s challenge is convincing people that a DFL candidate can hold strong against corporate welfare.”

Moore is an activist who co-founded the local Occupy Homes movement, which stages sit-ins to prevent banks from seizing particular foreclosed houses. His campaign has focused heavily on stopping foreclosures and raising the city’s minimum wage to $15 an hour — the latter of which would require state action. He has been endorsed by the Service Employees International Union, and he accuses Cano of being too close to corporate interests and the mainstream DFL.

Cano

At a protest Monday criticizing outside spending in the race, Moore said the DFL runs the city “more in the interest of big business than the interests of working people.”

Cano is a communications specialist for Minneapolis Public Schools who would be the first Mexican-American on the council. She is a former aide to Sixth Ward Council Member Robert Lilligren, worked as an activist on Latino issues, and has billed herself as the candidate with the most relationships at City Hall and elsewhere to help advocate on behalf of the ward. Mayor R.T. Rybak attended a fundraiser for her earlier this month.

Cano views Moore’s campaign platform as too narrow and has pushed a broader focus. She said that foreclosures are important, but that there is much more to the issue: promoting homeownership; supporting those who will never have the down payment or credit score to buy a house; helping property owners reduce their utility bills through energy efficiency; and providing living-wage jobs.

She said when she talks to small-business owners on Lake Street about Moore’s plans to hike the minimum wage to $15, they say such a change would close them down.

The other registered candidates are Charles Curtis, Patrick Fleetham, Abdi Abdulle and Gregory McDonald.

Here’s a breakdown on the other three open seats:

Fifth Ward, including Willard-Hay, Near North, Jordan

Safety and economic development are the driving issues in the competition to represent the city’s most challenged ward, where Council Member Don Samuels is leaving his seat to run for mayor.

Attorney Ian Alexander came within two votes of winning DFL backing this spring, but the convention adjourned without an endorsement. He is focused on economic development more than crime, because crime is a symptom of “economic inopportunity,” he said.

Brett Buckner, a community organizer, wants to stabilize neighborhoods, create living wage jobs, and ensure that the city and especially the police are better public servants.

Attorney Blong Yang said that safety is the most important issue for voters and that the Police Department is understaffed by about 100 officers based on national standards. He wants to have a more workable civilian police review board with subpoena power.

Those candidates are all DFLers.

Also running is Kale Severson, a community activist and a member of the Green Party.

12th Ward, including Longfellow, Cooper, Howe, Hiawatha, Ericsson

Three candidates head into Election Day with big-name endorsements, though DFLer Andrew Johnson has amassed the most support.

Johnson’s aggressive campaign blocked incumbent Sandy Colvin Roy from snagging the DFL endorsement this spring. Colvin Roy, a veteran of the council, later stopped running and endorsed consultant Ben Gisselman. Johnson has labor support, in addition to endorsements from Mayor R.T. Rybak and several council members.

Moore

The Green Party has endorsed Chris Lautenschlager, a communications director at an art gallery.

Johnson, who is experienced in IT, would like the city to make more information easily accessible online, such as checkbook-level spending details, council votes and landlord violations.

Gisselman strongly opposes any efforts for the city to municipalize its utilities. Johnson and Lautenschlager both have expressed support for the idea.

Independent Charlie Casserly is also running.

13th Ward 13, including Armatage, East Harriet, Fulton, Kenny, Linden Hills

Four candidates are vying to succeed Council Member Betsy Hodges, who is giving up her seat to run for mayor, in the city’s affluent southwestern corner, where density and property tax issues dominate.

The DFL has endorsed UnitedHealth Group product development manager Linea Palmisano, who wants to hire more police officers and who supports a “zero-waste” city.

Community organizer and DFLer Matt Perry supports development in surface parking lots downtown as well as “micro-density.”

Missy Durant, also a DFLer, wants to protect funding for key services such as police, fire, sanitation and maintenance, while also keeping taxes steady.

Bob Reuer, an independent who owns a small business, wants to strengthen police and fire services and supports a downtown casino.