Rep. Keith Ellison Keith Maurice EllisonOfficers in George Floyd's death appear in court, motion for separate trials Ex-Minneapolis officer involved in Floyd death asks judge to dismiss murder charge Over 50 current, former law enforcement professionals sign letter urging Congress to decriminalize marijuana MORE (D-Minn.) and former Labor Secretary Tom Perez Thomas Edward PerezClinton’s top five vice presidential picks Government social programs: Triumph of hope over evidence Labor’s 'wasteful spending and mismanagement” at Workers’ Comp MORE, both running for Democratic National Committee chair, met for dinner Wednesday night in Washington, D.C., just 10 days before DNC elections.

Nomiki Konst, a journalist with The Young Turks, spotted the two men after a candidate forum at the Woman's National Democratic Club. The two were dining at Cafe Dupont, in the city's Dupont Circle neighborhood.

That time you have dinner at the bar alone and see @TomPerez & @EllisonCampaign walk in - and then have dinner together. Hmm. #DNCChair pic.twitter.com/x5v4KyUmQg — Nomiki Konst (@NomikiKonst) February 16, 2017

The two campaigns released a brief statement after the dinner, explaining that the two DNC chair candidates talked about cooperation no matter the outcome of the Feb. 25 vote in Atlanta.

"Tom and Keith are friends and grabbed dinner together to discuss how to move the Democratic Party forward if either of them wins. Just as they've done with other candidates."

Perez and Ellison are considered the strong front-runners in the race — both men's campaigns claim that they are nearing the majority of voting members needed to win the position. But if no candidate eclipses the majority on the first ballot, the race will move to subsequent rounds, where the outcome becomes less predictable.

That's likely the best hope for the other candidates who are trying to pitch themselves as unifiers, playing up on Ellison's support from the progressive wing of the party and Perez's backing from more establishment liberals. New Hampshire Party Chairman Raymond Buckley, South Carolina Party Chairman Jaime Harrison, South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Idaho Party executive director Sally Boynton Brown and former Fox News pundit Jehmu Greene are also in the race.