Detroit mayoral candidates battle for a spot in Mike Duggan's shadow
Last week, five leading candidates for mayor took the island debate stage to battle for a spot in the shadow of Mike Duggan.
In 2013, the city was shedding its paralyzing debt in bankruptcy court and preparing to usher in a new era of investment, service restoration and hope.
That era, financially, is coming to a close, with long-deferred pension payments coming due, stimulus money drying up and the specter of dramatic federal funding cuts looming under President Donald Trump.
Each of the five candidates debating at the Detroit Regional Chamber's Mackinac Policy Conference sought to ride a precarious line ― promising to maintain the trajectory of economic progress fostered by Duggan, who is stepping down at the end of this year to run for governor as an independent, and pledging to deliver more direct results to the neighborhoods most in need of investment.
'We're that phoenix that has been rising from the ashes. We need to make sure that it doesn't crash into a window,' said mayoral candidate Fred Durhal III, a Detroit city councilman whose father, Fred Durhal Jr., was a candidate on that 2013 debate stage.
'The next mayor will face a completely different financial reality than the current mayor,' mayoral candidate and former council president Saunteel Jenkins said during Thursday's debate.
For Solomon Kinloch, pastor of Triumph Church ― the only candidate at the debate without government experience ― it's particularly important to establish himself as the candidate who could best take Duggan's ball and run with it. 'While we come from a dark place of dismal debt, (Duggan) gave us a great fiscal foundation for us to do bigger and bolder,' he said.
Former Police Chief James Craig, appointed in 2013 by Orr, pointed out he's the only candidate who served directly under Duggan, arguing that practical experience gives him an edge: 'There's no book for this. You need someone who can plug in and do it right and do it the first time.'
Candidate Mary Sheffield, who has been president of the Detroit City Council since 2022 and is the frontrunner in the race, according to a Target Insyght poll released last month, said she wants to keep Detroit Police Chief Todd Bettison in his role, and to expand existing initiatives around youth crime diversion and robust mental health strategy. And she believes she's best positioned to maintain a business-friendly posture.
'I will make sure that Detroit is the best place in America to start a business,' she said.
Kinloch and Durhal each pinpointed a key element in that upcoming election.
'A majority of the electorate is not even engaged in the democratic process,' Kinloch said.
'The question is ― who's protecting and speaking and communicating for the people who aren't in the room,' Durhal said.
Those may have been the most telling comments of the week.
Four other candidates ― Todd Perkins, DaNetta Simpson, Jonathan Barlow and Joel Haashiim ― weren't invited to appear.
The five candidates debated the issues in front of a crowd of newsmakers and moneymakers, and faced a handful of groans, chuckles and heckles.
But it was a far more muted crowd than those that await them back home.
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Improving the quality of K-12 education, and with it the potential for more families to stay in the city, remains the largest hurdle in Detroit's path to prosperity. Everyone agrees about that.
Detroit's public schools do not fall under the mayor's purview. There's an elected school board ― once sidelined by emergency management and still sensitive to interference ― that is responsible for driving the district forward.
But, everyone also seems to agree, the mayor's office has a key role to play in offering support in the areas of transportation and after school programming.
'I think it's important for the next mayor to build on that and fill gaps,' Superintendent Nikolai Vitti told the Free Press on the island Wednesday.
'The wrong leader could put us backwards. Leadership matters. Who is mayor matters … From a school district point of view, I'm hopeful that (Detroit's next) leader understands collaboration and seeking to understand problems, rather than just reacting to them.'
Kinloch wants to appoint a chief educational officer to coordinate support services for the school district.
Sheffield wants to expand the Community Education Commission, a Duggan-era entity that operates in northwest Detroit, to support bussing and accountability measures for both traditional and charter schools.
But there was little discussion during Thursday's debate on improving overall public transit in the city, which Vitti says is a primary issue for families with children in Detroit schools, both for getting kids to school and getting parents to work.
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Meanwhile ― and this is a hell of a meanwhile ― Michiganders are also facing 2026 races for governor and U.S. Senate, each race with its own implications of immense proportions.
Most of the candidates in those races were fiercely making the rounds on the island last week.
Duggan, who is running for governor as an independent, having abandoned the Democratic Party, introduced an elaborate, statewide school improvement plan that he framed as a systemic disruption that he believes would upend Michigan's two-party political system: boosting school budgets and early reading programs, career and technical education programs and threatening to fire school principals and superintendents who don't improve student performance within five years.
'Now look at that list and tell me which thing would Republicans or Democrats disagree with. There's nothing partisan about this,' Duggan said about his plan.
There is, in fact, plenty that Democrats and Republicans would debate about his plan. But the message was strong. And his opponents have their work cut out for them.
Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democratic candidate for governor, intends her own disruptions.
She calls investing in education "the whole ballgame," and sees robust mental health support for kids as key. She wants to do away with antiquated business tax breaks and incentives. And she wants to build a vast light rail across the state.
Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson, another Democratic gubernatorial candidate, has healthy outstate name recognition, according to a Glengariff Group poll released at the conference. As a sitting sheriff, he has the strongest public safety background in the race, promising significant reforms for both police accountability and effective crime prevention.
Candidates for governor, including Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist and former Republican Attorney General Mike Cox, U.S. Rep. John James, R-Shelby Township, and state Sen. Aric Nesbitt, R-Porter Township, have more than a year to stake their own claims to succeed Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who spent the week on Mackinac celebrating recent bipartisan-flavored wins with Trump backing a new fighter mission at Selfridge Air Base and efforts to keep invasive Asian carp out of the Great Lakes.
But unlike the mayor's race, there'll be another Mackinac Policy Conference next May before those elections take place.
Things generally don't change on Mackinac Island. That's kind of the point.
Horse-drawn carriages, pristinely maintained historic landmarks, the faint, ever-present odor of horse manure.
It's an oasis of old-timey charm, where cars are banned, isolated from Michigan's mainland, and far removed from the problems of everyday life.
The annual Mackinac Policy Conference, now 45 years in ― minus a COVID-19 cancellation ― is supposed to be about progress, growth and solutions. But those solutions tend to develop at the pace of a snail making its way up the steep hill to the island's plantation-esque Grand Hotel.
It all lends a sense of deja vu.
Back in 2013, Detroiters were trying to figure out who to put in the mayor's office in an election of gargantuan importance.
Detroiters are back in the same position. This time around, after more than a decade of debt relief, federal aid and modest-to-impressive quality of life improvements across the board and unquestionable progress, the most pressing issues are the same ― crime reduction, school improvement, affordable housing, neighborhood stability and diversifying the city's economy.
In 2013, the city was approaching bankruptcy, and had nowhere to go but up. This time, Detroit has everything to lose.
Khalil AlHajal is deputy editorial page editor of the Detroit Free Press. Contact: kalhajal@freepress.com. Submit a letter to the editor at freep.com/letters, and we may publish it online and in print.
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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit mayoral candidates vie to replace Mike Duggan | Opinion
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CBS News
3 hours ago
- CBS News
Meet the nine candidates running in the 2025 Detroit mayoral primary
The Detroit mayoral primary is set for Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025, and nine candidates are vying to secure one of two spots in the November general election. The candidates include two current members of the Detroit City Council, a former city council president, the city's former police chief and a prominent pastor. The field is running to replace three-term mayor Mike Duggan, who announced in December his independent bid for Michigan governor in 2026. Here are the candidates running in Tuesday's primary election: Jonathan Barlow is a business leader and community activist. Barlow graduated from Detroit Public Schools Community District and attended Wayne State University. His career has included helping homeowners during the foreclosure crisis and working with city leaders to support economic growth. He is on staff at Mt. Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church, where he is a former youth pastor. "I believe that we're in a good position. We've never been in this place before, where we can really come together as a village, make Detroit family again, and start to build toward the future," he said in a video posted on his social media. James Craig is the city's former police chief. Craig's law enforcement career began in 1977, with service both in Detroit and in Los Angeles. He was Detroit's police chief from 2013 until retiring in 2021. He attempted runs for Michigan governor in 2022 and U.S. Senate in 2023, both times as a Republican. "Detroit is a city full of promise, but it needs leadership that delivers results. James Craig has a record of making tough decisions and getting things done, and he is ready to do the same as mayor," he said when announcing his campaign. His campaign themes during the mayoral race are public safety, economic development, education, youth empowerment and government accountability. Detroit City Councilman Fred Durhal III announced in January 2025 that he was running for mayor. Durhal previously served on the Michigan House of Representatives, succeeding his father. At the time of his announcement, he acknowledged a downward trend in homicides, which the Detroit police reported seeing fewer in decades. However, he pointed out a continued concern about auto theft and wanted to focus on the community programs that are contributing to the decline in violent crimes. Durhal sat down with CBS News Detroit on Monday and said one of the key issues that needs to be addressed is neighborhood stabilization and reducing property taxes. "We've done a significant job of tearing down a lot of the blight and abandonment, but I think folks want to see us push commerical cooridors for creating walkable neighborhoods that improve their quality of life, so that they have access to fresh groceries, they have access to a doctor, a pharmacy, as well as sitdown restaurants adjacent to the neighborhoods that they live in. I think that will help us make sure that everybody is feeling Detroit's growth," he said. Joel Haashiim began his business career at a young age when he opened his first of three party stores before selling the businesses and becoming a distributor and wholesaler. Haashiim graduated from the Detroit Public Schools Community District and later attended college and several trade schools. "I will advocate and promote for a better quality of life," Haashiim said on his campaign site. "We are laying a political and financial foundation for our children and grandchildren. "Working together, we can create and maintain a better quality of life for our seniors, residents and city workers." Former City Councilwoman Saunteel Jenkins officially announced her campaign in January 2025. Jenkins served on the council from 2010 to 2014, including as president, before being named CEO of the nonprofit The Heat and Warmth (THAW), an organization that aims to help families with heat, electrical and water assistance. Jenkins says she will focus on investing in after-school programs, creating master plans for every district, cracking down on violent crimes, launching youth programs, and providing residents with access to childcare and affordable housing. In her sit-down with CBS News Detroit last week, Jenkins said public transportation and jobs are also priorities. "We have to be responsible fiscal managers of the dollars that we have," she said. "The next mayor will have to come in and do a real assessment of where we are. What are our revenues? What are our liabilities? And we'll have to manage within our budget." Solomon Kinloch is the senior pastor at Triumph Church in Detroit. Under his leadership, Triumph has expanded to eight campuses and has been called one of the fastest-growing churches in the United States. Before becoming a pastor in 1998, Kinloch worked at the Chevrolet Gear and Axle Plant, where he was a member of UAW Local 235. He is a graduate of Northwestern High School. "The central question for Detroit is, where do we go from here? For the first time in a long time, we have a foundation. I want to build on it," Kinloch said. His campaign goals include good jobs, strong schools, and thriving neighborhoods with affordable housing and safe streets. Todd Perkins is the founder of The Perkins Law Group, one of the city's largest Black-owned law firms. A Detroit native, Perkins is a graduate of the University of Detroit Jesuit High School. He received a bachelor's degree from Dartmouth College and graduated from the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law. Perkins also founded and operates the sports management company, Kilimanjaro Sports Management. "My experience as an attorney and business owner, relationships with the business and legal sectors, and my deep ties to the community give me the unique ability to unite all of Detroit and continue its positive trajectory and progress," Perkins said on his campaign site. During a sit-down with CBS News Detroit, Perkins discussed his plans to continue the city's upward trajectory while overcoming challenges that may arise. Perkins identified public safety, education, public housing and economic development as the keys to Detroit's continued growth. "All of those things have to continue, and they have to continue aggressively, and you have to have someone who has a plan to know how to make sure that those things continue, even understand that we're going to have to do more with less," Perkins said. City Council President Mary Sheffield was one of the first people to throw their name into the Detroit mayoral race. Sheffield was first elected to the city council in November 2013, representing the city's fifth district. She was selected council president in 2022. With her campaign slogan, "Together We Can, Together We Will," Sheffield says she is focused on strengthening the city's economy and education, reducing crime, supporting small businesses and lowering property taxes for residents and businesses. She says she is also focused on providing access to affordable housing for all Detroiters. "We will be the place where our best and our brightest, our most vulnerable, our most creative, our most audacious are inspired to find their purpose right here in the city that we all love and call home," Sheffield said in December 2024. "Detroit, I believe that our best days are ahead of us." DaNetta Simpson is running in the Detroit mayoral primary for a third time. She previously ran for the Michigan House of Representatives.


San Francisco Chronicle
6 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
AP Decision Notes: What to expect in Detroit's mayoral primary
WASHINGTON (AP) — Detroit voters will take a key step toward choosing a new mayor in the municipal primary on Tuesday, when nine candidates will appear on the ballot in the city's first open-seat mayoral race in a dozen years. The top two vote-getters in the nonpartisan primary will advance to the November general election. The winner will replace outgoing three-term Mayor Mike Duggan, who is running for governor of Michigan as an independent. The crowded field includes former police chief James Craig, city council member Fred Durhal, former city council president Saunteel Jenkins, Triumph Church pastor Solomon Kinloch, attorney Todd Perkins and current city council president Mary Sheffield. Also in the running are businessmen Jonathan Barlow and Joel Haashiim and three-time mayoral hopeful DaNetta Simpson. Sheffield leads the field in campaign fundraising. She brought in nearly $1.3 million since entering the race in December, more than double the roughly $574,000 Jenkins raised. Kinloch raised about $408,000, while Perkins and Durhal each raised more than $250,000. Sheffield also had about $451,000 in the bank heading into the final two-week stretch before the primary, more than double the rest of the field combined. Sheffield's major endorsements include the Detroit Free Press and the Michigan branch of the SEIU labor union. Jenkins was endorsed by The Detroit News and former Mayor Dave Bing, Duggan's immediate predecessor. Durhal has the backing of the mayors of Lansing, Grand Rapids and Pontiac, all of whom are former colleagues from the state Legislature. Although Michigan voters do not register by party and candidates for mayor do not run on a party label, most candidates in the field identify with the Democratic Party. Craig, on the other hand, is a Republican, having sought the GOP nomination for governor in 2022 and the U.S. Senate in 2024. The Detroit electorate is overwhelmingly Democratic. In 2024, voters in the city supported Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris over Republican Donald Trump by about a 9-1 ratio. The city faces a vastly different situation than it did when Duggan was first elected in 2013. In July of that year, it became the largest U.S. city ever to file for bankruptcy. The city now has a budget surplus, 12 years of balanced budgets under its belt and projected economic growth for the next five years. Homicides and violent crimes are down, while the city's population is up for the second consecutive year, according to the U.S. census. Still, the next mayor will face numerous challenges, including a shortage of affordable housing and vast economic disparities along racial lines. The Associated Press does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it's determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why. Michigan's mandatory recount law does not apply to Detroit's mayoral primary. Instead, candidates may request and pay for a recount, with the payment refunded if the recount changes the outcome. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is subject to a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome. Here's a look at what to expect on Tuesday: Primary day Detroit's mayoral primary will be held Tuesday. Polls close at 8 p.m. ET. What's on the ballot The AP will provide vote results and declare winners in Detroit's nonpartisan primary for mayor. Detroit, as well as cities and towns across Michigan, will hold a variety of other municipal elections on Tuesday, but they will not be included in the AP's vote tabulation. Who gets to vote Any voter registered in Detroit may participate in the mayoral primary. What do turnout and advance vote look like There were about 518,000 registered voters in Detroit as of late July. In the 2021 mayoral primary, turnout was about 14% of registered voters. About 67% of votes in that election were cast before primary day. As of Thursday, more than 41,000 ballots had been cast before primary day. Michigan adopted early in-person voting starting with the 2024 election season. How long does vote-counting usually take? In the Aug. 2024 state primary, the AP first reported results in Wayne County at 8:21 p.m. ET, or 21 minutes after polls closed. The election night tabulation ended the following day at 9:17 a.m. ET with about 98% of total votes counted. As of Tuesday, there will be 91 days until the November general election for Detroit mayor.

Associated Press
6 hours ago
- Associated Press
AP Decision Notes: What to expect in Detroit's mayoral primary
WASHINGTON (AP) — Detroit voters will take a key step toward choosing a new mayor in the municipal primary on Tuesday, when nine candidates will appear on the ballot in the city's first open-seat mayoral race in a dozen years. The top two vote-getters in the nonpartisan primary will advance to the November general election. The winner will replace outgoing three-term Mayor Mike Duggan, who is running for governor of Michigan as an independent. The crowded field includes former police chief James Craig, city council member Fred Durhal, former city council president Saunteel Jenkins, Triumph Church pastor Solomon Kinloch, attorney Todd Perkins and current city council president Mary Sheffield. Also in the running are businessmen Jonathan Barlow and Joel Haashiim and three-time mayoral hopeful DaNetta Simpson. Sheffield leads the field in campaign fundraising. She brought in nearly $1.3 million since entering the race in December, more than double the roughly $574,000 Jenkins raised. Kinloch raised about $408,000, while Perkins and Durhal each raised more than $250,000. Sheffield also had about $451,000 in the bank heading into the final two-week stretch before the primary, more than double the rest of the field combined. Sheffield's major endorsements include the Detroit Free Press and the Michigan branch of the SEIU labor union. Jenkins was endorsed by The Detroit News and former Mayor Dave Bing, Duggan's immediate predecessor. Durhal has the backing of the mayors of Lansing, Grand Rapids and Pontiac, all of whom are former colleagues from the state Legislature. Although Michigan voters do not register by party and candidates for mayor do not run on a party label, most candidates in the field identify with the Democratic Party. Craig, on the other hand, is a Republican, having sought the GOP nomination for governor in 2022 and the U.S. Senate in 2024. The Detroit electorate is overwhelmingly Democratic. In 2024, voters in the city supported Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris over Republican Donald Trump by about a 9-1 ratio. The city faces a vastly different situation than it did when Duggan was first elected in 2013. In July of that year, it became the largest U.S. city ever to file for bankruptcy. The city now has a budget surplus, 12 years of balanced budgets under its belt and projected economic growth for the next five years. Homicides and violent crimes are down, while the city's population is up for the second consecutive year, according to the U.S. census. Still, the next mayor will face numerous challenges, including a shortage of affordable housing and vast economic disparities along racial lines. The Associated Press does not make projections and will declare a winner only when it's determined there is no scenario that would allow the trailing candidates to close the gap. If a race has not been called, the AP will continue to cover any newsworthy developments, such as candidate concessions or declarations of victory. In doing so, the AP will make clear that it has not yet declared a winner and explain why. Michigan's mandatory recount law does not apply to Detroit's mayoral primary. Instead, candidates may request and pay for a recount, with the payment refunded if the recount changes the outcome. The AP may declare a winner in a race that is subject to a recount if it can determine the lead is too large for a recount or legal challenge to change the outcome. Here's a look at what to expect on Tuesday: Primary day Detroit's mayoral primary will be held Tuesday. Polls close at 8 p.m. ET. What's on the ballot The AP will provide vote results and declare winners in Detroit's nonpartisan primary for mayor. Detroit, as well as cities and towns across Michigan, will hold a variety of other municipal elections on Tuesday, but they will not be included in the AP's vote tabulation. Who gets to vote Any voter registered in Detroit may participate in the mayoral primary. What do turnout and advance vote look like There were about 518,000 registered voters in Detroit as of late July. In the 2021 mayoral primary, turnout was about 14% of registered voters. About 67% of votes in that election were cast before primary day. As of Thursday, more than 41,000 ballots had been cast before primary day. Michigan adopted early in-person voting starting with the 2024 election season. How long does vote-counting usually take? In the Aug. 2024 state primary, the AP first reported results in Wayne County at 8:21 p.m. ET, or 21 minutes after polls closed. The election night tabulation ended the following day at 9:17 a.m. ET with about 98% of total votes counted. Are we there yet? As of Tuesday, there will be 91 days until the November general election for Detroit mayor.