DETROIT (AP) — Mary Sheffield, Detroit’s City Council president, has advanced to the November election that will decide who will succeed popular three-term Mayor Mike Duggan, who is not seeking reelection.
A field of eight other candidates are still vying to become the second person advancing from Tuesday’s primary to the general election.
If elected, Sheffield would be the first woman and the first Black woman to hold the role of Detroit mayor. She was first elected to City Council in 2013 at age 26 and has been president since 2022.
Mary Sheffield spoke to supporters at a downtown rooftop venue Tuesday night.
“Detroit, we made this moment together," she said. "We claimed it together, and, Detroit, I believe that our best days are ahead of us.â€
She said the primary win belongs to every boy or girl told to “dream small,†every neighborhood where people feel left behind, every senior who “paved the way†and every college student who wants to stay in the city.
“This is our moment,†she said.
Sheffield has been among the city's most visible elected leaders over the past several years, spending a lot of time in Detroit neighborhoods and publicly celebrating the city's accomplishments.
Similar accomplishments and the continued growth of the city could be at stake since Duggan, who is running for Michigan's governor in 2026 as an independent, has helmed Detroit as it exited the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history and surged back to respectability following decades of economic hardship. The former prosecutor and medical center chief has overseen a massive anti-blight campaign and pushed affordable housing developments across the city.
A long list of candidates
The field of eight other candidates include a current City Council member, former council member, pastor of a megachurch and a popular ex-police chief.
Saunteel Jenkins was elected in 2009 to the City Council where she spent one four-year term. Jenkins later became chief executive of a nonprofit that provides utility assistance for families.
Current council member Fred Durhal III also is on the primary ballot. He has been on the City Council since 2021 and was a Michigan state representative from 2014 to 2019.
The Rev. Solomon Kinloch Jr. has been senior pastor at Triumph Church for about 27 years. The Detroit-based church has more than 40,000 members across a number of campuses. Kinloch also was an autoworker and member of the United Auto Workers union.
Former police Chief James Craig came to Detroit in 2013 amid the city's bankruptcy crisis and remained in charge of the police department until . Craig failed to make the Republican ballot due to fraudulent signatures on campaign petitions. In 2024, he for an open U.S. Senate seat.
Other candidates include attorney Todd Perkins, digital creator DaNetta Simpson, business owner Joel Haashiim and entrepreneur John Barlow.
Late Tuesday evening, the race for second was too early to call, with Kinloch and Jenkins leading the rest of the field.
The stakes for Detroit
The next mayor will inherit a city on much firmer footing than the one Duggan was when an emergency manager installed by the state to oversee the city's flailing finances on its behalf.
Detroit shed or restructured about $7 billion in debt and exited bankruptcy in December 2014. managed the city’s finances for several years. Detroit has had 12 consecutive years of .
Developers have built hundreds of affordable housing units in the city, and more than 25,000 vacant and derelict homes and buildings have been demolished.
The next mayor will be under pressure to maintain that progress and continue to keep the city's financial and population growth going. In 2023, the census estimated that to 633,218 from 631,366 the previous year. It was the first time the city had shown population growth in decades.
Detroit also is becoming a destination for visitors. The 2024 with more than 775,000 in attendance.
New hotels are popping up in and around downtown. But perhaps the most visual example of the city's turnaround has been the renovation of the once-blighted monolithic .
For decades, the massive building just west of downtown symbolized all that was wrong with Detroit. That's before Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford Motor Co. stepped in and bought the old Michigan Central and adjacent properties. It reopened in 2024 following a six-year, multimillion-dollar renovation that created a hub for mobility projects.
While no longer a manufacturing powerhouse, Detroit's economy still is intertwined with the auto industry, which currently faces threatened and imposed by the Trump administration. Stellantis, the maker of Jeep and Ram vehicles, has two facilities in Detroit. that its preliminary estimates show a $2.68 billion net loss in the first half of the year due to U.S. tariffs and some hefty charges.