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2025 is a critical election year for residents of Detroit.
For the first time in 12 years, Mike Duggan won’t be a candidate for Detroit mayor. The city’s political future is up for grabs, and residents will need critical information about candidates and issues before they make electoral decisions in 2025.
In addition to a new mayor, Detroit voters will select an entirely new City Council slate following redistricting, seven members of the Board of Police Commissioners and the city clerk.
All candidates for elected office must be residents of Detroit and must maintain their principal residence here for one year at the time of filing for office and must remain a resident throughout their tenure in office. For City Council, Board of Police Commissioner and Community Advisory Council, the candidates must be residents in the districts they are running to represent.
Unsure about voting? We’re here to help!
- Want a quick rundown of how to vote and where to go? Check out our voter guide.
- Are you ready to vote early? Here’s a list of locations where you can go.
- Not sure what positions are up for election. We’ve got a guide for that, too.
- Have questions about the election and how it all works? Check out our FAQ.
- Not sure if you’re registered to vote? Check out the state’s Voter Information Center.
- Prefer a deep dive into Detroit’s politics with a heavy focus on issues and exclusive interviews with candidates? Check out the Detroit Next show on YouTube. If you prefer listening to watching, it’s also a podcast.
- Want to check out an election-related event in the community? Follow along with reporter Malachi Barrett’s calendar as he keeps it updated as new things get scheduled.
- If you don’t know where to begin, check out our Elections page for all our content and be sure to let us know if we’re missing something you think would be helpful.
MAP: Districts, precincts, early voting sites and ballot drop boxes
Key dates to know:
- Oct. 24: Write-in candidate deadline for the general election.
- Oct. 25: Nine days of early voting begins for the general election.
- Nov. 4: ELECTION DAY – Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m. Voters in line at 8 p.m. can still cast ballots.
Who oversees elections?
In Wayne County, that would be Wayne County Clerk Cathy Garrett
The clerk’s office is located at 2 Woodward Ave., City-County Bldg Rm 502, Detroit, Michigan 48226-3463
Phone: (313) 224-5525
Fax: (313) 224-6424
Email: jredmond@waynecounty.com
In Detroit, City Clerk Janice Winfrey oversees elections.
The clerk’s office is located at 2 Woodward Ave., Suite 200, Detroit, Michigan 48226. The Department of Elections has an office at 2978 W. Grand Blvd., Detroit, Michigan 48235. They are open from 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Monday – Friday.
Phone: (313) 876-0190
Fax: (313) 224-1466
Email: winfreyj@detroitmi.gov
Am I registered to vote?
You can check your voter registration status at https://mvic.sos.state.mi.us/Voter/Index or call your local clerk.
How can I register to vote?
Michigan voters are encouraged to register as early as possible before an election. Methods and requirements for voter registration depend on the following deadlines:
If there are 15+ days before an election, voters can register online, by mail, or in person.
Within 14 days of an election, and on Election Day, voters may only register by visiting their local clerk’s office to register in person with proof of residency documentation.
Voters can check their voter registration status and look up their local clerk information at Michigan.gov/Vote.
Register using a printable registration form: You may register to vote using a translated, printable voter registration form. You can register using a printed registration form if:
- You have either a valid state of Michigan ID or Driver’s License or the last 4 digits of your social security number (only one is required).
- You are at least 17.5 years of age
- You are not within 14 days of an Election Day
Printable voter registration form
Register in person at your clerk’s office: You can visit your local clerk’s office to register to vote in-person. Within 14 days of an election, you must register in-person at your local clerk’s office and must present proof of residency. Proof of residency is an official document listing your full name and current address, and may include a bank statement, a valid MI driver’s license or ID, a lease, or a utility bill.
Source: Michigan Secretary of State
Combatting misinformation
Unfortunately, there are bad actors out there who like to take advantage of election time to spread disinformation (information that is untrue) and misinformation (information that is untrue and deliberately harmful).
This can apply to the candidates themselves, campaigners at and off polling sites, ads, robocalls and more.
Michigan officials are aiming to deter “deep fakes” in political campaigning as artificial intelligence becomes more convincing.
Laws require disclaimers on any campaign ads or political content that were digitally altered using AI. Failure to do so could lead to stiff criminal penalties. Supporters of the changes feared if left unchecked, such content could be used to spread false information in a way that influences election results.
If you get a robocall, receive literature at your house or hear a political ad and you are unsure if it is accurate information about candidates or issues, there are several reputable sources you can turn to.
BridgeDetroit (bridgedetroit.com), our sister publication Bridge Michigan (bridgemi.com) and the local chapter of Votebeat (votebeat.org/michigan) strive to provide nonpartisan information. You can also visit Ballotpedia (ballotpedia.org/Michigan) for candidate information and voting records. The League of Women Voters of Michigan (lwvdetroit.org) is also a reputable source for nonpartisan election information.
The general rule to take: If something sounds too good to be true or uses “absolute” language like “never,” “always,” etc, it’s worth fact-checking. Issues are rarely so black and white.
If you encounter what you believe to be misinformation, you can report it to the state by emailing misinformation@michigan.gov
Early voting
Local clerks are required to provide at least nine days of early voting for eight hours a day ahead of statewide elections, starting the second Saturday before an election until the Sunday before the election.
Early voters this year will experience the voting booths, poll workers and “I Voted” stickers synonymous with Election Day. They’ll also get to personally feed their ballot into a tabulator that will count it.
Clerks can allow longer periods of early voting if they choose, as the proposal and subsequent implementation laws allow for up to 29 days of early voting for statewide elections.
In Detroit, you can vote in person at the Detroit City Clerk’s office or at an Early Voting Site.
When you vote at an Early Voting Site, your voting experience will be similar to that of voting at a polling place on Election Day. You will complete your ballot, place it in a secrecy sleeve, and then deposit it into the voting tabulator.
All Early Voting Sites below will be open from Oct. 25 – Nov. 3 for the general election.
Early voting locations:
- City Clerk’s Office, 2 Woodward Ave. Ste 200 48226
- WCCCD Northwest Campus, 8200 W. Outer Dr. 48219
- Northwest Activities Center, 18100 Meyers Rd. 48235
- Farwell Recreation Center, 2711 E. Outer Dr. 48234
- WCCCD Eastern Campus, 5901 Conner St. 48213
- Department of Elections, 2978 W. Grand Blvd. 48202
- Clark Park, 1130 Clark St. 48209
- Adams Butzel Recreation Complex, 10500 Lyndon St. 48238
Source: City of Detroit
How does absentee voting work?
Apply for an absentee ballot:
Every registered voter in Michigan can vote using an absent voter (AV) ballot. To request an AV ballot, you must complete and submit an Absent Voter Ballot Application.
Options for completing an Absent Voter Ballot Application:
- Complete and submit an application online using a browser featuring an auto-translate feature.
- Call your city or township clerk and ask that a printed application be mailed to you.
- Download a printable, translated application to return by mail or in person to your local clerk or township.
- In-person at your designated local clerk’s office.
Completed applications must be received by your designated clerk via mail, email or dropped off in-person by 5:00 p.m. the Friday before Election Day. Applications can also be filled out in person at the clerk’s office by 4 p.m. the day before Election Day.
Completing and returning your absentee voter ballot:
After submitting a completed application, a ballot will be mailed to your address. Your absent voter ballot may also be issued in-person while visiting your designated local clerk’s office within 40 days of election day. Returned your completed absentee ballot to your designated absentee ballot dropbox or by hand to your city, township, or village clerk by 8 p.m. on Election Day.
Options for returning a completed absentee voter ballot:
- Hand-deliver your completed ballot to your designated local clerk in-person.
- Mail your completed ballot to your designated local clerk (not recommended within two weeks of Election Day).
- Use your designated clerk’s drop-box location.
Drop-box information and locations:
Every Michigan municipality is now required to have at least one secure ballot drop box for absentee voters in future elections, with an additional drop box for every 15,000 registered voters. You can drop off your absentee ballot at these drop box locations throughout the city. All are available 24/7.
- District 1:
- Crowell Community Center, 16630 Lahser Rd. 48219
- North Rosedale Park Community House, 18445 Scarsdale St. 48223
- Greater Grace Temple, 23500 W. Seven Mile Rd. 48219
- District 2:
- Liberty Temple Baptist Church, 17188 Greenfield Rd. 48235
- Greater Emmanuel Institutional COGIC, 19190 Schaefer Hwy. 48235
- Tindal Recreation Center, 10301 W. Seven Mile Rd. 48221
- Palmer Park Community Center, 1121 Merrill Plaisance St. 48203
- District 3:
- Perfecting Church, 7616 E. Nevada St. 48234
- Faith Temple, 19000 Conant St. 48234
- Greater St. Paul, 15325 Gratiot Ave. 48205
- Heilmann Recreation Center, 19601 Brock Ave. 48205
- District 4:
- Balduck Park, 18151 E. Warren Ave. 48236
- District 5:
- Considine Center, 8904 Woodward Ave. 48202
- Greater Christ Baptist Church, 8521 Mack Ave. 48214
- Horatio Williams Foundation, 1010 Antietam Ave. 48207
- Renaissance Baptist Church, 1045 E. Grand Blvd. 48207
- Butzel Family Center, 7737 Kercheval Ave. 48214
- District 6:
- Detroit Pistons Performance Center, 6201 Second Ave. 48202
- WCCCD Downtown Campus, 1001 W. Fort St. 48226
- Unity Baptist Church, 7500 Tireman St. 48204
- Kemeny Recreation Center, 2260 S. Fort St. 48217
- District 7:
- Davison Service Yard, 8221 W. Davison Ave. 48238
- Rouge Park Golf Course, 11701 Burt Rd. 48228
- William S. Ford Memorial Church, 16400 W. Warren Ave. 48228
- Edison Library, 18400 Joy Rd. 48228
- Christ Temple Baptist Church, 10628 Plymouth Rd. 48204
Early in-person voting centers with dropboxes:
- City Clerk’s Office, 2 Woodward Ave. Ste 106 48226
- WCCCD Northwest Campus, 8200 W. Outer Dr. 48219
- Northwest Activities Center, 18100 Meyers Rd. 48235
- Farwell Recreation Center, 2711 E. Outer Dr. 48234
- WCCCD Eastern Campus, 5901 Conner St. 48213
- Department of Elections, 2978 W. Grand Blvd. 48202
- Clark Park, 1130 Clark St. 48209
- Adams Butzel Recreation Complex, 10500 Lyndon St. 48238
View locations at Michigan.gov/Vote
On Election Day
Voters can come in person to cast their ballots on Election Day, but they also have the option to do so in advance under the state’s new early voting law.
How does in-person voting work?
Procedurally, early voting and Election Day voting are treated the same: a voter fills out a ballot and feeds it directly into their polling place’s tabulator. With the press of a button, the voter casts their ballot for counting, though they have the option before that to scrap it and request a new one if the tabulator identifies a mistake, like voting for multiple candidates for one office.
Tabulators keep a running total of ballots cast, and the ballots themselves drop down into a bag inside the machine. Ballots with votes for write-in candidates are checked manually by election workers.
The votes are stored on two memory cards in the machine, which are sealed with a tamper-evident lock that can be broken only once the polls close on Election Day. Once the polls close, the chair and co-chair of the precinct (two election workers of different political parties), enter a code into the machine given to them by the city clerk that prints off three paper reports with the results.
At that point, election officials are tasked with securely transporting the memory cards, the election reports and sealed bags of ballots to their local clerk’s office. The results on the memory cards are then uploaded into the clerk’s computer system and sent to the county clerk’s office.
One of the paper copies of the results stays with the city clerk, one is sent to the Board of County Canvassers, and one is sent to the county’s chief probate judge.
After Election Day
Ever wonder what happens after you cast your ballot? Or how they keep track of and make sure all absentee and early voting ballots get counted. Here’s how:
What happens after Election Day is over?
Both absentee and in-person ballots are sealed into official ballot containers and stored securely, where they must remain for at least 30 days after the Board of State Canvassers certifies the election results.
Unofficial results are first reviewed by county canvassing boards — four-person panels made up of two Democrats and two Republicans nominated by their respective parties — to ensure the number of voters matches the number of ballots cast. If there are discrepancies, canvassers can require the ballots to be brought before the board in a public meeting to address any issues.
Once county canvassers sign off, the Board of State Canvassers reviews results from all counties and votes to officially certify the results. For the general election, canvassers are required to meet no later than Nov. 25.
If a statewide political race is decided by 2,000 votes or less, an automatic recount is triggered. A candidate can also request a recount within 48 hours after results are certified, though the process is expensive and rarely reverse the original result.
If a recount is triggered, canvassers in contested jurisdictions have 20 days for primary elections or 30 days for general elections to finish the job.
After election results are certified and any recounts are complete, local clerks move the ballots into storage, where they must be kept for 22 months. The elections process is also audited at state and local levels following a major election cycle to determine whether procedures were properly followed, with the Bureau of Elections randomly selecting precincts in specific contests for post-election review.
BridgeDetroit 2025 Voter Guide: Frequently asked questions
Here are some frequently asked questions about voting:
Q. Where can I see a sample of my ballot?
A. You can look up your ballot ahead of time by going to https://mvic.sos.state.mi.us/Voter/Index and putting in your information.
Q. Where is my polling place?
A. With hundreds of locations in Detroit, the easiest way to determine you polling place is to go to https://mvic.sos.state.mi.us/Voter/Index and put in your information. You can also consult your voter registration card. Or you can call your city clerk. Chances are good that your polling place will be near the address you registered to vote with.
Q. What to do if you have a disability and need help with voting?
A. Voters with disabilities can contact the Michigan Bureau of Elections Ombudsperson for Accessible Elections for assistance.
Email: MDOS-ADAVoting@Michigan.gov
Phone: 517-335-2730
More information on accessible elections and voting is available at Michigan.gov/Vote.
Source: Michigan Secretary of State
Q. What kind of ID do I need to vote?
A. Lawmakers last year approved legislation to expand what forms of voter identification are accepted at the polls. Options include a voter’s U.S. passport, tribal photo identification, military identification or a student ID in addition to a person’s driver’s license.
Voters without identification on their person are still allowed to sign an affidavit confirming their identity to cast their ballot, a controversial rule opposed by Republicans that was enshrined into the constitution under 2022’s Proposal 2.
Q. What are my voting rights in Michigan?
A. Language access
Michigan residents have the right to bring a non-English interpreter with them to the polls for assistance in casting a ballot. Your interpreter cannot influence your vote, cannot be your employer, an agent of your employer, or an officer or agent of your labor union.
No photo identification requirement
If you do not have picture ID with you, you can still cast a ballot.
No-reason absentee voting
Every registered voter in Michigan has the right to use an absent voter ballot to vote from home, vote early, or vote by mail.
Same-day voter registration
Eligible Michigan residents can register to vote on Election Day by visiting a designated local clerk’s office and providing proof of residency.
Returning citizens
Michigan residents who are not currently serving a sentence in jail or prison have the right to register to vote and cast a ballot.
Voter accessibility
Michigan voters have the right to accessible polling places and to utilize Voter Assist Terminals (VATs) for assistance casting a ballot. VATs are ballot marking devices with special accommodations for hearing, visual, physical, and other disabilities. Voters have the right to vote independently and privately without assistance using a VAT, and on-site election inspectors (poll workers) are available to assist or provide instruction upon request.
Q. What can I do if I feel my voting rights are being violated?
A. If you experience any issues casting your ballot on or before Election Day, contact the Election Protection Hotline for assistance:
- English: 866-OUR-VOTE (866-687-8683)
- Spanish: 888-VE-Y-VOTA (888-839-8682)
- Arabic: 844-YALLA-US (844-925-5287)
- Bengali, Cantonese, Hindi, Korean, Mandarin, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese: 888-API-VOTE (888-274-8683)
Q. What is teen pre-registration?
A. The voting age is still 18, but 16- and 17-year-olds in Michigan will be able to pre-register to vote so they are automatically registered upon turning 18.
The option is available until a teen is less than six months from turning 18, at which point they’d have to wait to register until their birthday.
Q. What guardrails are in place for election results certification?
A. New laws governing election certification align Michigan with the federal Electoral Count Reform Act, which was introduced in Congress with a handful of GOP co-sponsors and signed last year by Democratic President Joe Biden.
Among other things, the federal law makes clear that the vice president has a “ministerial” duty to count electoral votes that states send to Congress, contradicting former President Donald Trump’s claim that Mike Pence could and should have blocked certification of the 2020 presidential election.
The new Michigan law similarly states that partisan election canvassers at both the county and state levels have a “ministerial, clerical, and nondiscretionary duty” to certify results based on results compiled by local clerks.
The Michigan measure also speeds up the timeline for completing the post-election canvass and clarifies that only the governor can submit a list of presidential electors to congress. It also changes the nominating process for the bipartisan Board of State Canvassers.
Q. How can I work as a poll worker?
A. Detroit has 503 voting precincts and 134 absentee counting boards. During an election, each of these precincts and boards requires a staff of paid precinct inspectors to assist voters as they arrive at the polls on Election Day.
Registered voters interested in serving as precinct inspectors must submit an election inspector application and take a brief test at the Detroit Department of Elections. In addition to your name, address and date of birth, applicants must include their political party preference and qualifications to fill the position such as education or experience.
A precinct inspector who is 18 years of age or older must be a registered voter of the State. They cannot be a challenger, candidate, member of a candidate’s immediate family, or a member of the local Board of Canvassers. Anyone convicted of a felony or an election crime may not serve.
Citizens who are 16 and 17 may also apply and work as a precinct inspector.
Go to the Department of Elections and complete the Election Inspector Application (https://app.smartsheet.com/b/form/b04e588355bc479994d4afa45f626a32)
Each training session will last approximately two and a half hours.
You do not have to be a resident of Detroit. If you are 18 years of age or older, you must be registered to vote in Michigan. 16 or 17 year olds may also work as a poll worker.
You will be assigned to one of the polling precincts located throughout the City of Detroit. The goal is to assign you to the closest available polling precinct to your home.
You will be paid based on classification. All Poll workers checks are mailed within three to six weeks after each election.
Source: City of Detroit
Q. What protections have been put in place for poll workers?
A. A 2023 law makes it a crime to intimidate or otherwise threaten election workers in an attempt to stop them from performing their duties. Penalties would start at 93 days in jail and up to a $500 fine for a first offense.
Other legislation signed in recent years created an option for prospective election workers to apply online.
Q. Can I get a ride to the polls?
A. Another recent law repeals a ban on hired transportation to voting booths, an 1895 law believed to have been the only one of its kind left in the country.
Ride-share companies such as Uber and Lyft had cited the law for not offering discounted rides to polls, as the companies do in other states, and the ban had long been the subject of legal disputes.
Q. How can I get translation services?
A. Go to https://www.michigan.gov/sos/language-services
Q. How is my absentee ballot tracked and processed?
A. No-reason absentee voting, approved by voters in 2018, has become a popular option for casting ballots in Michigan — more than 1.6 million voters requested absentee ballots in weeks prior to the 2022 general election.
Voters can sign up for email or text alerts to track the status of their ballots once they’re submitted. In Detroit, you can go to detroitav.ballottrax.net/voter.
The more stringent tracking system also requires election officials to notify voters if their absentee application or ballot was rejected, along with the reason for doing so and how to resolve any issues.
From a procedural standpoint, cities and townships of any size are now allowed to process and tabulate absentee ballots between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. on the Monday before Election Day, or on any of the eight days prior to Election Day if the municipality has over 5,000 residents.
However, they cannot report any results until polls close at 8 p.m. on Election Day.
Once voters return their absentee ballots by mail, drop them off at a designated ballot drop box or deliver them to their local clerk in person, election officials scan the ballot envelope into the computer system and verify that the signature on the ballot envelope correlates with the signature on file.
If a voter forgets to sign the envelope or the signature is significantly different than the one on file — or if someone else signed the envelope — the clerk’s office is supposed to notify the voter of the discrepancy and ask them to correct it.
Ballots are then sorted by voters’ ward and precinct and cross-checked to ensure the number of ballots matches what’s recorded on the computer. The ballots are then stored in bins by ward and precinct and remain in storage until they can be processed or counted unless there’s a change in a voter’s status or a voter asks to spoil their ballot ahead of Election Day.
Cities and townships of any size are now allowed to process and tabulate absentee ballots between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. on the Monday before Election Day, or on any of the eight days prior to Election Day if the municipality has over 5,000 residents. However, they cannot report any results until polls close at 8 p.m. on Election Day.
Q. What is permanent absentee voting?
A. Instead of submitting a new absentee ballot application for every election cycle, voters can opt to vote by mail in every election with a single application.
Registered voters who choose this option will get absentee ballots for all future elections unless they rescind their application, move without updating their registration address or don’t vote for six consecutive years.
Voters can apply online and opt into the permanent program through the Secretary of State or by contacting their local clerk’s office.
Don’t worry about finding a stamp, either — the changes also require election officials to provide pre-paid postage for absentee ballot-related mail.
Q. How does absentee voting work for deployed military?
A. Absentee ballots cast by military or overseas voters will be given more time to count starting in 2024, even if they arrive after Election Day.
Typically, the deadline for voting is 8 p.m. on the day of an election. But under new election laws, if an out-of-country or military vote was postmarked on or before Election Day, and received by a clerk within six days of the election, the ballot would be added to the final count.
BridgeDetroit 2025 Voter Guide: What jobs are Detroiters voting to fill
MAYOR
Number of spots: 1 total, 1 up for election
Term: 4 years
Term limits: None
Compensation: $224,572 by July 2025
Role: The mayor is the chief executive of the city of Detroit and is accountable for the executive branch of the government. These duties include:
- Develop and execute a vision for the city
- Act as a conservator of the peace of the city and administer oaths and take affidavits.
- Appoint and manage deputies, department directors and other key personnel who oversee the operations of the city
- Hold at least one community meeting in each of the non at-large districts and a city-wide community meeting
- Manage the preparation, amendment, administration, and financial reporting of the city budget.
- Represent the city on a world stage
- Champion city initiatives
- Communicate with the public
CITY COUNCIL
Number of spots: 9 total, 9 up for election (1 from each of 7 districts and 2 chosen at-large)
Term: 4 years
Term limits: Two positions, City Council president and president pro tempore, are elected from within the body at the beginning of each new session and last for four-year terms.
Compensation: For council members: $106,231 by July 2025; for council president: $111,647 by July 2025
Role: The City Council acts as the legislative body for the city and engages in the following tasks:
- Operate at least five committees
- Budget and Finance
- Neighborhood and Community Services
- Human Resources
- Law and Public Safety
- Planning and Economic Development
- Any other committee the council deems necessary
- Adopt the city budget
- Pass ordinances and resolutions, including those to meet a public emergency
- Make investigations into the affairs of the city and the conduct of any city agency.
- Subpoena witnesses, administer oaths, take testimony and require the production of evidence in any matter pending before it or any of its committees.
- Approval of mayoral appointments of the Chief of Police, Fire Commissioner, Director of Planning and Development, Director of Human Resources and Corporation Counsel
- Oversee city property, including approving any property sales or disposal or new purchases of property
- Setting sewer and water rates as well as other general tax and service rates
- Overriding a mayoral veto
- Setting the council agenda for its meetings
- Representing their respective districts and the interests of residents
- Working with the community to understand local issues and get feedback
CITY CLERK
Number of spots: 1 total, 1 up for election
Term: 4 years
Term limits: None
Compensation: $106,231 (as of July 2025)
Role:
- Keep all papers filed in or pertaining to the Office of the City Clerk
- Keep the corporation seal of the city
- When requested, certify, under the corporate seal, copies of all papers and records for the office
- Administer oaths
- Take affidavits
- Maintain reasonably accessible voter registration sites throughout the city on a year-round basis
- Serve as City Council’s clerk and keep a record of all its ordinances, resolutions, and other proceedings and perform other such duties as it may provide
- Exercise other powers and duties as provided by law, the City Charter or ordinance.
BOARD OF POLICE COMMISSIONERS
Number of spots: 11 total, 7 up for election (Four members of the Board shall be appointed by the mayor)
Term: 4 years
Term limits: None
Compensation: Elected members shall not be entitled to salaries, retirement benefits, health benefits or other fringe benefits
Role:
- Establish policies, rules and regulations in consultation with the police chief and with the approval of the mayor
- Review and approve the departmental budget before its submission to the mayor
- Receive and resolve any complaint concerning the operation of the Detroit Police Department and forward all allegations of criminality to the appropriate internal or external law enforcement agency for further investigation
- Act as the final authority in imposing or reviewing discipline of police department employees
- Make an annual report to the mayor, the City Council, and the public of the police department’s activities during the previous year, including the handling of crime and complaints. The Board may subpoena witnesses, administer oaths, take testimony, and require the production of evidence
COMMUNITY ADVISORY COUNCIL
Number of spots: 7 total, 3 up for election (5 from individual districts, 1 youth member between 13-17, 1 senior representative). No candidates made the ballot for the CAC.
Term: 4 years
Term limits: No more than two consecutive 4-year terms. The youth member cannot be reelected if they are older than 17.
Compensation: Unpaid (must hold public meetings at least four times per year)
Funding: Community Advisory Councils shall receive no appropriations from city funds, but may accept donations or grants in accordance with state, federal or local laws.
Role:
- Communicate local district concerns to the City Council
- Community problem solving by meeting with different groups, agencies, businesses and residents
- Disseminating information to groups, agencies, businesses and residents on social and physical plans for the districts areas.
- Providing advice to community representatives and City Council on major issues within the council district, including housing development, commercial blight, safety and security, economic and community development, employment opportunities, code enforcement and environmental conditions.
- Assisting the community in understanding the City Charter and Master Plan.
- Meet annually with the mayor and City Council on issues affecting the district.
Who is running for Detroit mayor
Editor’s note: This list has been updated as of Oct. 28. Write-in campaigns are being run by multiple people, but only some have signed up officially with the City Clerk’s office. We have included the names of all who are running write-in campaigns but specify if they are on the clerk’s approved write-in candidate list.

Mary Sheffield – Detroit City Council President
In her role as council president, Sheffield has had to carefully navigate decisions on offering massive tax breaks to secure developments that, in turn, create jobs and eventually new revenue for city services. Sheffield has often said she’s not against development but needs to see real benefits for residents in exchange for subsidies. She opposed a version of Detroit’s Community Benefits Ordinance that was backed by Duggan and approved by voters. Sheffield worried about the enforcement of community investments negotiated by residents and developers under the direction of the city. One of Sheffield’s first decisions on the council was to transfer city land to the Downtown Development Authority to build Little Caesars Arena. Sheffield said it was the right decision because the city needs new jobs.
Sheffield launched her campaign in December by proposing an entertainment tax or a ticket surcharge at the entertainment venues of downtown, an idea to generate income for the city and reduce resident taxes by taxing visitors to the city.

Solomon Kinloch – Senior pastor, Triumph Church
Congregants confiding that they’ve felt ignored by government leaders is part of the reason why Rev. Solomon Kinloch says he decided to run for mayor in 2025. He’s seeking to unite corporate, nonprofit and community leaders around fixing Detroit’s biggest problems. Yet, Kinloch said he has no plans to step down from his role at the helm of a 40,000-member network of churches across the metro region.
He plans to release a four-year plan that outlines his ambitions for a prospective first term: Building new grocery stores to “end food deserts,” creating 10,000 units of affordable housing, supporting workforce training for $35 per hour jobs and launching the “greatest” downpayment assistance programs in Detroit’s history.
Write-in candidates
- Rogelio Landin – political advocate
- Angelo Brown – businessman
- Langston Burke
- Jeremy Conn – teacher
- Delores Scott
- Jamelle Sims
Unofficial Write-in
- Arnold Boyd – businessman
Who is funding the mayoral candidates?
Mary Sheffield has a large fundraising advantage in the Detroit mayoral race, according to campaign finance disclosures released a week before the Aug. 5 primary election.
Sheffield collected the most in donations, spent the most and has the most cash left to spend as of July 20, according to disclosures reported by the Wayne County clerk. That means she has a major financial advantage over Solomon Kinloch’s campaign.
Campaigns were required to report their fundraising activities by the end of the day Friday, July 24. The documents show donations collected and dollars spent between the start of the year and July 20. Candidates raised roughly $2.5 million combined, and roughly half of that ($1.3 million) went to Sheffield.
The next disclosure will come on Sept. 4 and cover campaign finances from Jan. 1 through Aug. 25.
Who is running for City Council
Editor’s note: This list has been updated as of Oct. 28. Write-in campaigns are being run by multiple people, but only some have signed up officially with the City Clerk’s office. We have included the names of all who are running write-in campaigns but specify if they are on the clerk’s approved write-in candidate list.
District 1
James Tate (incumbent running unopposed)
Age: 50
Education: Benedictine High School, Wayne State University
Occupation: City Council member
Neighborhood: North Rosedale Park
James Tate was first elected to the Detroit City Council in 2009. He is currently the president pro-tem. Before he became a council member, Tate worked in communications for the Detroit Police Department. He also spent time with WXYZ-TV (Channel 7) where he was an assignment editor and he won an Emmy.
Tate, who consistently hosts three monthly community district meetings, said the rallying cry for his next term will be working more closely together as a community.
The councilman said he makes no apologies about focusing on the district’s most challenging neighborhoods, including Brightmoor, which he said has faced difficulties for his entire life. The area has been plagued with blight, vacant housing, poverty and other challenges.
He said he’s focused on revitalization, “and making sure neighborhood revitalization truly means revitalizing with the community and not to the community. This is very key.”
Earlier this year at the Detroit Policy Conference, Tate joined other council members for a panel on what matters most to Detroiters. His answer: “Affordable, accessible and attainable housing. It has become one of the most challenging things for residents and families to find.” He also said the next administration needs to find ways to continue programs residents have come to rely on that run the risk of closing now that American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) money has run out.
Tate is the council’s longest-serving member. He reflected on navigating emergency management and bankruptcy as well as the devastating health and financial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic during a BridgeDetroit Meet the Candidates event earlier this year.
“Through 15 years, there have been a lot of changes. I am thankful to be in a position to play a role from where we were to where we are now,” Tate told a crowd of about a dozen community members. The city, he added, is much better off today than it was during his first term, but is “a long way from declaring victory.”
Tate said immigrants serve a major positive role in the city. In District 1, there’s a sizable Afro-Caribbean population. He said Trump’s return to office has created a “chilling effect” on those who are here and an integral part of the community.
“We’ve got to remove this idea that because you are an immigrant that you are evil, bad and violating the law,” he said. “This country itself was founded on immigrants who moved here and took it over.
Tate is married to Dr. Nutrena Watts Tate. He is running unopposed in the November election.
Write-in candidates: James Chandler and Tashawna Rushin
Read more: District 1 Meet the Candidates | What to know about City Council District 1
District 2
Angela Whitfield-Calloway
Age: 64
Education: Cooley High School, Spelman College, Detroit College of Law.
Occupation: Adult education instructor, human resources administrator
Neighborhood: Green Acres
In her first term, Whitfield-Calloway has been vocal in council discussions surrounding local business support, transparency in contracting, enhancing Palmer Park, holding landlords accountable and historic preservation, among other things.
Whitfield-Calloway said she was relatively unknown in 2021 when she first ran for office but has since proven her merit.
“I’ve not been a rubber stamp,” she said at a June event hosted by the Election Department. “I’ve been a fighter since day one.”
Whitfield-Calloway’s tenure has shown her skepticism of large tax subsidies without strong community benefits, a demand to award city contracts to Detroit-based businesses and a willingness to diverge from proposals pushed by Mayor Mike Duggan’s administration. She’s been known for tough questioning of city departments and positioned herself as a watchdog on the council.
She chairs the council’s Rules Committee and serves on the Neighborhood and Community Services and Internal Operations committees. Whitfield-Calloway launched and leads a youth and civic engagement task force and a human trafficking task force.
Whitfield-Calloway backed a ban on cannabis business ads near schools, parks and other youth-focused areas. She also codified regulations for electronic scooters.
Whitfield-Calloway has led efforts to put a moratorium on new dollar store openings, helped pass a law requiring Detroit businesses to accept cash and opposes partial demolition of the Renaissance Center. Whitfield-Calloway supported creating a Tenant Bill of Rights to create renter protections, but the proposal hasn’t been adopted.
A study of riverboat taxis was launched at Whitfield-Calloway’s request, and she expressed support for creating water transit options to Belle Isle. She’s pursued partnerships with lawmakers to explore an amusement tax on downtown entertainment.
Whitfield-Calloway has been an outspoken critic of the city’s Solar Neighborhood Initiative, arguing there’s better uses for vacant land than solar energy fields that power city buildings. Whitfield-Calloway says the project would displace housing opportunities and fail to address blight.
She often criticized the city’s demolition efforts, urging the Duggan administration to preserve historic properties. Whitfield-Calloway was strongly opposed to tearing down the Michigan State Fairgrounds Coliseum.
Whitfield‑Calloway voted against the renewal of a contract with ShotSpotter, a controversial gunshot surveillance system. She also voted against tax breaks for Dan Gilbert’s downtown Hudson’s Detroit project and the Future of Health project in New Center.
She’s pursuing regulation of short‑term rental properties to address housing shortages and neighborhood disruptions. Whitfield-Calloway was among a group of council members who proposed a $203 million affordable housing strategy in partnership with Duggan.
Whitfield-Calloway secured nearly $1.3 million in this year’s budget to fund things like the city’s Goal Line program, which provides transportation to after-school programs; add recycling bins to city streets and create a stipend for a citizens’ blight patrol.
A year earlier, Whitfield-Calloway secured $5.8 million for projects like a lead paint protection program, repairs to the historic Merrill Fountain in Palmer Park, the Goal Line program and support for Black-owned farms.
Before serving on the council, Whitfield-Calloway created the city’s first women’s commission. Public records show she previously lived in Farmington Hills and West Bloomfield.
She is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Gamma Phi Delta Sorority, the NAACP, the National Alumnae Association of Spelman College Detroit Chapter, the National Association of Hearing Officers, and the United Nations Local Chapter.
Whitfield-Calloway loaned her campaign $13,749 in personal funds to run for office in 2021. Her largest donation in that race ($3,500) came from Laborers’ Local Union 1191. City Clerk Janice Winfrey’s campaign committee donated $125 to Whitfield-Calloway in August 2024.
She unseated McCalister in 2021 by winning 55% of the vote.
Roy McCalister Jr.
Age: 71
Education: Mackenzie High School, Eastern Michigan University, University of Oklahoma
Occupation: Retired
Neighborhood: Greenwich
McCalister is a lifelong Detroiter who worked in the Detroit Police Department as commanding officer of the homicide section. He performed other roles in internal affairs within DPD and was a special agent in the U.S. Army Criminal Investigative Division.
He joined the council in 2018 after beating Virgil Smith to represent District 2. McCalister was denied reelection by Whitfield-Calloway in 2021, who beat him by 1,900 votes.
McCalister was also president of his neighborhood community association and an adjunct professor at the University of Phoenix. He was director of operations for Disabled American Veterans before running for council in 2017.
While serving in the U.S. Army Reserves, McCalister was deployed to Iraq as an investigator who interviewed members of Saddam Hussein’s former regime. McCalister retired after 23 years, and later retired from DPD as a Detective Lieutenant.
McCalister says he’s service-oriented and prioritizes enhancing quality of life issues in the city, with a focus on building up mental health resources. He said improving education, public safety and infrastructure are top issues.
“District 2 is very diverse; you have people that are living in $1 million homes all the way down to $15,000 homes and barely making it,” McCalister said. “You can’t just expand or focus on one group, you have to focus on each and every community.”
Turning renters into homeowners is vital to revitalizing residential areas and boosting tax revenue for the city, he said. McCalister wants to build up a workforce of residents who can take on good-paying, skilled trades jobs and rebuild neighborhoods, he said, suggesting the city could have saved homes that fell into disrepair if it had a stronger talent pipeline.
Tax abatements should be granted to developers that enhance neighborhoods, he said. McCalister opposes using taxpayer resources to support the redevelopment of the riverfront Renaissance Center, arguing that the impact is concentrated downtown.
“I always say that District 2 is the highest tax-paying and the highest-voting district in the city of Detroit,” McCalister said. “I’m going to have a big voice. If we’re the ones paying taxes and voting, you’re going to listen to what we have to say. If you can’t bring something back to the community, I’m going to vote against it.”
McCalister said he held regular roundtable conversations when he served on the council to seek feedback from residents. He’s undecided on whether the city’s solar neighborhood initiative should be expanded to new areas, saying he needs to do more research.
The Detroit Land Bank Authority should be eliminated, McCalister said, arguing that it has too much control over vacant land.
McCalister’s political ambitions stretch back more than three decades. He ran for a seat on the Charter Revision Commission of 1993 but was disqualified due to being a city employee. He mounted failed campaigns for City Council in 2005 and 2009, before the city adopted council districts and all candidates ran at-large.
McCalister ran for an at-large seat on the council again in 2013 after districts were created but lost to Saunteel Jenkins, who is now running for mayor. McCalister then ran for a seat in the Michigan House of Representatives, but lost in the Democratic primary to Leslie Love.
McCalister declined to say who he wants to be Detroit’s next mayor, but he’s eager to work with the winner as a liaison between the community and the city’s executive leader.
McCalister said he wants to improve community relations with police and secure greater investment in violence prevention programs that support young people who are unhoused or otherwise vulnerable.
According to his campaign website, McCalister would formally integrate community violence intervention groups into the Detroit Police Department. Groups contracted with the city currently operate separately to reduce gun violence in select neighborhoods under the city’s oversight.
Read more: District 2 Meet the Candidates | Candidates who ran in the primary | What to know about City Council District 2
District 3
Cranstana Anderson
Age: 56
Education: Wayne State University’s (Africana Studies and Political Science)
Occupation: Real estate
Neighborhood: Butler
Cranstana “Gina” Anderson is running on a platform for property tax justice, a more robust police force, rebuilding roads, keeping streets and alleys clean and providing raises for firefighters. She has lived on the east side of Detroit her entire life.
On her website, Anderson describes her political philosophy as “rooted in the principles of empathy, integrity, and transparency.”
“I believe that an elected official must be professionally committed to their role, empathetic towards the needs of the people, and transparent in their actions and decisions,” she writes. “Upholding the laws and maintaining the integrity of the office are paramount.”
At 24, Anderson joined the United Auto Workers (UAW), rising through the ranks and being elected as Youth Committee Secretary, Trustee, and eventually Recording Secretary for UAW Local 235 — representing more than 2,500 members.
In 2004, she transitioned to administrative contracting, gaining experience with DTE Energy, Henry Ford Community College, and Title Source. Along the way, she says she began offering essential support services to her neighbors — helping with property tax assistance, loan modifications, resumes, unemployment filings and more.
According to her LinkedIn, Anderson owns her own business, Seehope Real Estate Investments LLC. She is also the president of the Gardenia Community Block Club Association.
Anderson’s mother worked for the State of Michigan and Chrysler before becoming a licensed cosmetologist and instructor, while her father—an automotive engineer and Detroit Athletic Club athlete—later became an independent contractor. When she was 17, her brother was fatally shot, and Anderson stepped in to raise his child. She now has two biological children as well.
She is facing Scott Benson in November.
Scott Benson
Age: 55
Education: Hampton University (undergraduate degree), Wayne State University (master’s of urban planning), National Naval War College, University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business (certificate).
Occupation: City Council member
Neighborhood: Regent Park
Scott Benson was elected to the City Council in 2013 to represent District 3 and has won re-election each time since. He says his top priority is to make the district a community where families settle and grow, and where the youth and seniors thrive and prosper.
Benson has more than 17 years of community development experience and served 24 years with the U.S. Coast Guard. During that time, he achieved the rank of commander and was deployed overseas twice. He also served as Small Business Director with Midtown Detroit, Inc. and was a real estate developer.
During his time with the council, Benson has helped to create or receive commitments on close to 1,000 jobs for the district. He reduced blight by authorizing the demolition of over 10,000 residential and commercial properties, and helped to reestablish the citywide street sweeping program. He also wrote and implemented an ordinance to aid in shutting down non-compliant and ultra-violent strip clubs.
Benson also touted progress with the reinvention plan for Detroit City Airport and the long-awaited deal to bring Davis Aerospace back to the grounds. He also discussed his “Dining with Confidence” ordinance. The law, which went into effect last fall, requires food service establishments to display color-coded placards to indicate whether they are in compliance or have been closed for failure to address serious violations of the state’s food safety code. Benson has been vocal about party stores and tobacco shops illegally selling products to youth and noted that six gas stations in the district have been shut down in response.
At the Detroit Policy Conference in January, Benson said his biggest focus for his next term would be wealth generation, attracting and supporting young families, retaining the middle class and making Detroit a place where middle-class and wealthy Detroiters want to come back.
He said he wants to help establish a dedicated funding source for museums in Detroit and wants to work with the state Legislature on a proposal that would allocate 10% of revenue from marijuana sales to youth intervention and drug prevention programs.
He’s also focused on business development.
“My three primary areas of public advocacy have been jobs, jobs and more jobs. I’m a firm believer that people need to be working and people need to be making money,” he told BridgeDetroit at a Meet the Candidates event earlier this summer.
Benson told BridgeDetroit he is a “strong supporter” of the land bank and has been since it was established in 2008 to oversee Detroit’s massive inventory of vacant, blighted properties. The land bank ramped up its staffing and efforts in the spring of 2014 with an infusion of federal Hardest Hit funding to launch an unprecedented demolition program, a cornerstone initiative of Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan’s tenure.
“The land bank is a critical tool that we need and will continue to need,” Benson said. “It will work itself out of business, but not anytime soon.”
Benson was born in Los Angeles and is the son of two public school teachers. A proponent of environmental conservation. Benson is a passionate bicyclist and can often be seen riding around the community. He is married to Andrea Benson.
Benson is running against Cranstana Anderson in the November election.
Write-in candidates: Tonia Gladney
Read more: District 3 Meet the Candidates | What to know about City Council District 3
District 4
Latisha Johnson (incumbent running unopposed)
Age: 49
Education: Unknown
Occupation: City Council member
Neighborhood: East English Village
Latisha Johnson was elected to City Council in 2021 and has served one term. But she’s been serving Detroiters much longer than that.
Over 20 years, she has served as a community organizer, marketing the city and attracting money to Detroit. In 2007, Johnson was elected to the executive board of East English Village Neighborhood Association, where she spent seven years advocating for her community. In 2014, she founded the nonprofit MECCA Development Corporation, a collaboration between three neighborhoods to address concerns of well-being, workforce development, youth engagement, and neighborhood revitalization. Latisha’s leadership has led to the implementation of the Community Closet free store, skill-building programs, and the rehab of affordable houses.
Johnson has also served as the Treasurer for the 5th Precinct Police/Community Relations Council, Vice-Chair for the City of Detroit’s Board of Zoning Appeals, Wayne Metro Community Action Agency Regional Advisory Council member, and Wayne State University’s AmeriCorps Urban Safety Program.
One of the major challenges Johnson has been tackling while serving District 4 is the aftermath of historic rainstorms in 2021 that left as many as 70% of residents with flooded basements and subsequently toxic mold.
“The sewer backups and flooding basements show this issue is already happening,” Johnson said during a BridgeDetroit Meet the Candidates event earlier this summer, addressing climate change.
“We’re working on addressing the seawalls, the stoploss system to shore up the shoreline in the Jefferson Chalmers community,” she said. “When it floods, the Detroit River rises and comes over the barriers.”
Johnson said she decided to run for City Council four years ago because she had been doing volunteer work and felt disconnected from City Hall.
Moving forward, Johnson said she is focused on helping the next administration rightsize staffing and programs in a post-ARPA world.
“We may see some reductions in that, but between the administration and City Council we have to be clear about what’s in front of us and how we use those dollars,” Johnson said. “It’s important to communicate.”
Johnson lives in East English Village and is a mother of one. She is running unopposed in the November election.
Write-in candidate: Vera Cunningham
Read more: District 4 Meet the Candidates | What to know about City Council District 4
District 5
Renata Miller
Age: 56
Education: Unknown
Occupation: UAW Retiree
Neighborhood: Indian Village
Miller was born and raised in Detroit and currently lives in the Indian Village neighborhood where she has been an advocate for historic preservation, single-family residential zoning, and small businesses. She’s a UAW retiree, founder of the Historic Districts Alliance and a program director for The Lawn Academy which teaches environmental stewardship and provides job training to Detroit youth.
Miller said residents aren’t happy with current elected officials who she says have stuck to the status quo. “I believe I am a bold change for Detroiters. I believe I am the person to bridge, as they say, the two Detroits.”
The top three challenges facing Detroiters, according to Miller, are affordable housing, jobs and development and safety.
Miller said she believes the city needs to find a way to recalibrate the formula for calculating Area Median Income so it better represents Detroiters and their income, whereas now AMI encompasses surrounding cities and sits at approximately $77,397, despite Detroit having a median income of $39,575, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey data from 2024.
Having been a small business owner herself, Miller said she understands the unique challenges entrepreneurs face when developing and growing their business. On the other hand, her experience in grassroots organizing taught her the importance of communication and education. She hopes to leverage both experiences to bridge the divide between residents and city government, especially when it involves development.
Miller said she understands the importance of tax incentives but wants to see stronger community benefits agreements and better communication and education in the negotiation process.
“You’ve got to give people education and hope, because people are just surviving, we want them to thrive in the city.”
Additionally, Miller said she wants to see more “homegrown” business development.
On safety, Miller said she’ll push for expanding the neighborhood police officer program, investments in alley lights, gun safety programs, bringing mini police stations back, mental health awareness initiatives, among others.
In District 5 specifically, Miller said she wants to see an “adopt-a-block” initiative so nonprofits and foundations can “adopt” certain areas by investing in improvements that residents have long-complained about, such as sidewalks and alley lights.
Miller also said she’d like to see more investments in neighborhood amenities such as grocery stores, community pools, outdoor athletic facilities and recreational spaces.
She’s excited to work with the next mayoral administration and to serve as both the check and balance. “If you say you’re committed to the people, let’s prove it. If you say you’re committed to development, how can I help you? If you say you’re going to bring jobs, what can I do to be of service? I’m here to be that person that bridges residents with the vision.”
Amid federal and state budget cuts, Miller said city officials have to ensure someone is at the table advocating on behalf of the city.
Miller said she’d like to revamp the DLBA and she believes Detroiters should have a seat on its Board of Directors and first priority when it comes to buying properties. “For people who are turned away from buying lots next to their houses, or a portion of vacant land, and to call and find out that it’s on reserve,” Miller told BridgeDetroit, “this is disheartening for our residents.”
Miller has a domestic violence conviction from 2003, which she confirmed to BridgeDetroit and explained it was a situation that occurred between her and her spouse when she was in her 30s. Miller said she went through anger management as part of her probation and was discharged in 2005, less than a year after she was sentenced, Oakland County court records show.
“I learned that nothing is more important than me, my children and the reputation of my family, and that self control was essential,” Miller told BridgeDetroit, “It was a costly experience to learn from and I wish I had just walked away.”
Miller is facing Willie Burton in November.
Willie Burton
Age: 46
Education: Unknown
Occupation: Board of Police Commissioners (District 5) member since 2014
Neighborhood: Rivertown
Burton’s campaign did not respond to BridgeDetroit’s requests for an interview.
When Burton was elected to the Board of Police Commissioners, he was the youngest person to serve on a police oversight board in the United States. According to his campaign website, if elected, Burton plans to push for more affordable housing, lowering property taxes and water and sewage rates and improving public transit. Additionally, he wants to fight back against “immoral tax giveaways” and ensure that public tax dollars are serving the public, rather than developers. In a Facebook post on July 10, Burton said he believes District 5 is in need of stronger protections against displacement, fair development practices and transparency in city government. Additionally, Burton said District 5 would benefit from investments in affordable housing, public safety “rooted in community trust” and small, Black-owned businesses.
He said he would support diversifying the city’s revenue sources by way of partnerships with foundations, leveraging state programs and advocating for investments in infrastructure, housing and clean energy.
Burton said he’s not satisfied with public safety and as a current police commissioner, he’s witnessed firsthand how civilian oversight is undermined. He would support strengthening civilian oversight, faster investigations into police misconduct, and faster investigations for police misconduct complaints, and “non-police crisis response alternatives.”
During his tenure on the BOPC, Burton strongly opposed the city’s use of facial recognition technology.
When it comes to tax incentives for large development projects, Burton said he believes “public money should prioritize public needs,” and any investment should come with a benefit for Detroiters such as housing, jobs, and community reinvestment.
Burton said in his post that the land bank has “potential,” but he would amend the city’s agreement to improve oversight and residents’ access to city-owned land, and support community land trusts and nonprofit development projects.
Additionally, Burton says he would support an expansion of the low interest home repair program and grants for seniors and low-income residents, and advocate for an “emergency repair fund” using public tax dollars and partner with the skilled trades to offer free or low-cost home repairs through a workforce development pipeline.
Burton is facing Renata Miller in November.
Write-in candidate: DeQuincy Hyatt. Whitney Clarke, and Kevin Jones have expressed plans to run as write-ins.
Read more: Meet the candidates | Candidates who ran in the primary | What to know about City Council District 5
District 6
Tyrone Carter
Age: 63
Education: Southwestern High School, Central Michigan University (Bachelor’s in management), Wayne County Sheriff’s Police Academy
Occupation: State Representative for District 1; retired Wayne County Sheriff’s Office
Neighborhood: West Outer Drive
State Rep. Tyrone Carter is serving his fourth term in the Michigan House of Representatives. He currently represents the 1st House District, which covers a portion of the city of Detroit, as well as the cities of Ecorse and River Rouge.
Carter was born, raised and educated in the district and raised his own family there. He graduated from Southwestern High School and Central Michigan University.
Carter graduated from the Wayne County Sheriff’s Police Academy and spent 25 years with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, attaining the rank of Executive Lieutenant before retiring in 2008. Carter also graduated from the FBI National Academy and the Michigan Political Leadership Program. He has served as assistant director of campus police at Wayne County Community College District and as a community involvement specialist at Southwestern High School, his alma mater. Carter also has his own consulting firm, TLC Management and Consulting.
Carter has served on several nonprofit organizational boards committed to improving the quality of life for their populations of focus. He has served as president of his neighborhood organization and has mentored high school students through monthly presentations and an annual college tour. The college tours provide many of the students with their first opportunity to visit a college campus. Since 2015, Carter has worked with the AmeriCorps Urban Safety Summer Youth Program at Wayne State University Center for Urban Studies, ensuring that the youth in Detroit have positive experiences while providing service to Detroit and surrounding communities.
Carter currently serves as the Minority Vice Chair of the Judiciary Committee and as a member of the Finance and Regulatory Reform committees. In his six years as a state representative, he has sponsored or co-sponsored dozens of bills focused on everything from criminal justice reform and environmental protections to protecting immigrants and children.
During a BridgeDetroit Meet the Candidates event earlier this summer, Carter spoke about plans to tackle pollution, immigration enforcement and affordable housing in District 6.
“We’ve probably been the most researched, studied zip code anywhere. We’re also tired of all the talk about pollution, and we need action,” Carter said at the event. “It’s not just a (Southwest Detroit) problem. It has impacted our lives. It has made people lose their lives from things like cancer.”
Immigration also stood out as a major issue for residents in attendance. Carter pointed out that Southwest Detroit has a large Arabic-speaking population in addition to Spanish-speaking residents. He stressed the importance of information access.
“We want them to understand their status. Every person here deserves to be treated decently,” he said. “I’m a retired police officer (with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office). We’re not going to use city dollars to enforce federal laws.”
The Detroit Police Department has a policy to not assist US Immigration and Customs Enforcement or U.S. Border Patrol with deportations as part of an expanding federal policy. However, Detroit Police will show up if requested by either agency to help with crowd control.
Carter cited an effort at the state level to help undocumented individuals in Michigan get driver’s licenses. The effort, which had been underway since 2008, ultimately failed to get traction.
“Sometimes a loss is a blessing,” Carter said. “Can you imagine if the state had a database of all the undocumented immigrants?”
Carter is married to Lisa Carter, Detroit Police Commissioner for District 6. They have two sons, Tyrone II (deceased), and Tyler. Carter is facing off against Gabriela Santiago-Romero in November.
Gabriela Santiago-Romero (incumbent)
Age: 33
Education: University of Michigan
Occupation: Community organizer
Neighborhood: Central Southwest
The pillars of Gabriela Santiago-Romero’s campaign to retain her seat in District 6 are trust, transparency and service. She was first elected in 2021.
Santiago-Romero was born in Mexico, raised in Southwest Detroit and is an active organizer in Michigan. Prior to her stint on the City Council, she worked as an assistant to Wayne County Executive Warren Evans, was an organizer for the Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign and served in the cabinet of Detroit City Councilwoman Raquel Casteneda-Lopez. She also worked with state Rep. Stephanie Chang, D-Detroit, on her Girls Making Change program, which teaches young girls how to become involved in their communities. She is the former policy and research director for We the People, a Michigan-based movement organization.
Santiago-Romero was student union president during graduate school at the University of Michigan – School of Social Work. She was the first in her family to pursue higher education and graduate with a master’s degree. After grad school, she continued her education at Harvard Kennedy School in the Executive Education Certificate Program.
When the pandemic hit, Santiago-Romero connected with community leaders to form a mutual aid fund that has created lifelines of resources to people hardest hit.
“Growing up an immigrant in poverty in Southwest Detroit has forced me to see and learn things the hard way. I know our family isn’t the only one in our community that has experienced these struggles,” she says on her website. “Too many families in our community have struggled to make ends meet, have been pushed out of their homes by foreclosures, and have struggled to get to jobs or school due to the lack of reliable public transportation.”
She lists her priorities for the district as equitable development, transportation, housing, environmental justice, public safety and protecting and expanding resident rights.
Santiago-Romero said she is proud to have worked with the council to pass a fugitive dust ordinance earlier this year that requires facilities like scrapyards and concrete plants to control airborne particles linked to respiratory issues and other health problems. The proposal was in the works since 2022.
“If you see dust in our communities, you can call our office to report those companies, Santiago-Romero said during a BridgeDetroit Meet the Candidates event earlier this summer. “We’re also working on a truck route ordinance to prevent trucks from driving through neighborhoods. With the new bridge opening soon, truck traffic is likely to get a lot worse.”
Aside from air quality and the effects of pollution, District 6 has been impacted heavily by gentrification.
“As we’re becoming the cool spot on the block, it’s displacing a lot of us. We’re being gentrified,” Santiago-Romero said. “We’re being pushed out. We need to make sure we can afford to stay here.”
Santiago-Romero has made protecting residents in her district a priority even before she was elected to City Council and has said much of her community activism stems from her own experience as an immigrant.
She said the City Council has policies in place to outline how local police can and cannot interact with federal agents and that officers are not permitted to ask questions about someone’s immigration status. And she said she is spearheading other policies.
She also cited a city effort to get an independent contractor for handling Detroit IDs. The program allows for any resident, regardless of immigration status, to get an ID that will allow them to apply for relief programs and other assistance.
“Now that the Trump administration is going around FOIAing information, we have nothing to share with them,” she said.
Santiago-Romero is facing state Rep. Tyrone Carter in the November election.
Write-in candidate: Anita Martin
Read more: District 6 Meet the Candidates | What to know about City Council District 6
District 7
Denzel Hines-McCampbell
Age: 33
Education: Graduated from Michigan State University in 2013 with a Bachelor’s in Political Science and General Management
Occupation: Managing Director for Progress Michigan
Neighborhood: West Outer Drive
McCampbell said two reasons he believes he’s qualified for City Council are his experience working on public policy at various levels of government and the knowledge he gained about the council’s authority and the city’s overall structure while serving on the Charter Revision Commission.
“I just have that deep knowledge and passion behind really centering the neighborhoods and the needs and being innovative about the solutions we can push at the council table,” he told BridgeDetroit.
McCampbell said the top three challenges facing Detroiters are affordable housing, public transportation and well-resourced neighborhoods.
For affordable housing, McCampbell said he’ll work towards expanding down payment assistance and senior home repair programs, build up the Right to Counsel program and Tenants Rights Council and support nonprofit housing. He’d do so by leveraging resources and talent, and improving the permitting process so nonprofits and community land trusts aren’t locked out of development opportunities.
McCampbell’s vision also pairs workforce development and training with housing development by creating a public works program in partnership with the skilled trades so Detroiters have a broad range of opportunities and can participate in the revitalization of Detroit.
Public transportation is an economic justice issue, according to McCampbell, and the need for increased route frequency is among the top challenges that keep Detroiters from quality employment, groceries, healthcare and other essential services.
McCampbell said he’s committed to ensuring neighborhoods are “well-resourced:” city services that are abundant, frequent, high-quality and administered and delivered by Detroiters.
To accomplish this, his office would have a “robust” constituent services program to address the problems residents experience in District 7, such as city trees and lots that need to be cut. This also means tackling issues, such as public safety, with a “whole-of-government” approach, McCampbell told BridgeDetroit. Ensuring residents are connected to resources when they need to get out of a violent situation, such as housing, transportation and mental health resources, helps address the root causes of poverty and crime.
McCampbell told BridgeDetroit that community input and transparency in the decision-making process are essential, especially as it relates to the city’s budget, which the next city council will begin deliberations on in their first three months of taking office. “For me, transparency increases the leverage that I will have at the council table to really fight for the issues that my residents are working on,” he said.
“I think we also have to be very clear about how we are using public dollars and making sure as much as possible stays in the public domain, and that the city and its residents are actually benefiting from those things.”
His approach for tax incentives is based on the needs of Detroiters and an assessment of what’s needed in the area surrounding development could help inform decisions, he said. Additionally, McCampbell wants to improve the community benefits agreement process to ensure developers are holding up their end of the deal and that Detroiters have input from the very beginning of projects. “I think we need to make sure that folks are actually keeping up their end of the promises.”
When it comes to the Renaissance Center, McCampbell said, “The notion that something that was already built with public dollars, and then to use public dollars to demolish it, and then the goal is it still being in private hands…. If public dollars are being used for something, it needs to be a public entity.”
McCampbell supports renewable energy and efforts to achieve a carbon-neutral future, and although he supports solar fields, he wants Detroiters to benefit from the investment, such as reduced energy costs.
“I really want to be innovative in this way as we’re using public land, public dollars. How can we make sure that residents, especially those who are around these projects, are getting even more of a benefit?” he said.
“Ideally, I would like to see that function back in the city’s hands,” McCampbell said about the Detroit Land Bank Authority, adding that it’s a significant undertaking that would take time to accomplish. In the meantime, he said he wants to work towards a solution to increase Detroiters’ access to city-owned properties.
He is facing Karen Whitsett in November.
Karen Whitsett
Age: 57
Education: Unknown
Occupation: Michigan House of Representatives
Neighborhood: Littlefield Neighborhood
Whitsett didn’t respond to BridgeDetroit’s requests for an interview.
Whitsett is serving her fourth term in the state Legislature, and currently represents District 4 as a Democrat. Her name has made headlines on more than one occasion as she’s repeatedly clashed with her own party. In 2023, Whitsett was the sole Democrat in the Michigan House Health Policy Committee to vote against the Reproductive Health Act, an 11-bill package pertaining to abortion access. Most recently in December, she joined Republicans in boycotting lame duck session in the final days of the year and walked out of the chamber, refusing to return to vote and denying House Democrats the ability to pass several remaining bills before the end of the term.
Whitsett graduated from Cody High School and, prior to seeking office, was a community organizer and union supporter. As a state representative, Whitsett’s website says she is focused on “preventing and reforming tax foreclosure processes, protecting vital senior citizen services and assisting entrepreneurs secure resources to develop our community.”
She is facing Denzel McCampbell in November.
Write-in candidate: Charles Davis IV. Dustin Campbell and McClendon Starks have expressed plans to run as write-ins.
Read more: Candidates who ran in the primary | What to know about City Council District 7
At-Large
Mary Waters (incumbent)
Mary Waters, an incumbent, said there’s still a tremendous need for housing, employment and public safety improvements.
“Housing is a top challenge and I know that firsthand. I’m talking about true affordable housing. … We have people that make less than $30,000 a year,” Waters, 69, said.
She supports income-based housing, she said, and cited the Fast Track PILOT ordinance, offering property tax cuts to developers based on rent prices, as a way to bolster development in neighborhoods.
Waters said she’s a seasoned leader and touted her track record as a council member, including a one-stop shop and a call center for housing needs and a $203-million housing plan. She spearheaded the creation of a tenants rights’ commission to represent and advocate for residential renters.
If reelected, Waters said she’d advocate at the state and federal level for stronger renter protections, money for downpayment assistance programs and home repairs for aging infrastructure.
“If I wasn’t doing my job, I can understand why other people would want to take it. But I do my job, otherwise I would not be there and I believe that Detroiters know that,” said Waters, who lives in Lafayette Park.
Last year, Waters also ran for Michigan’s 13th Congressional District seat, losing the primary election to incumbent U.S. Rep. Shri Thanedar, D-Detroit. Waters previously served three terms in the state House, from 2001 to 2006, as a Democrat.
In 2010, Waters pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor for filing a fraudulent tax return and admitted to accepting a $6,000 watch, according to an FBI news release. She was sentenced to one year of probation.
In a written response, Waters said the plea occurred 15 years ago and said the IRS “eventually said I owed no taxes on the watch.”
“All this is mind boggling given that the people of Detroit elected me to Detroit City Council,” she said in a text message to the Free Press.
She cited her “perfect attendance ” in the state House, including her role as floor leader, and her journey from Alabama to being a University of Michigan graduate and surviving breast cancer.
Coleman Young Jr. (incumbent)
Coleman Young II said he wants to implement a guaranteed income pilot program, providing $500 to 125 people, based on their income, for up to 24 months.
That idea — and the funding for it — still is in the works, the incumbent council member said. He also listed off a number of other issues he’d like to tackle.
“I want to create more jobs. I want to lower taxes. I want to make sure that buses show up on time. I want to invest in public safety. And I want to make sure that we have a better, more responsive city for the citizens of Detroit because they deserve it,” Young, 42, said.
The top challenges confronting Detroiters are housing, public transit, public safety and jobs, Young said.
He wants more mixed-use and multi-family housing, as opposed to single-family housing. What would that look like? Condos, apartment buildings, tiny homes and 3D-printed houses, Young said.
“We also need to expand our community policing program,” he said. He wants to revive police mini-stations, an initiative his father, the late Mayor Coleman Young, started. The idea is to place officers in certain neighborhoods and inside senior buildings. It’s a pitch he made in his 2017 bid for Detroit mayor, which he lost. Young previously served in the state Senate and House as a Democrat. He lives in the Islandview neighborhood.
Janee’ Ayers
Former Council Member Janee’ Ayers has spent the last few years “doing the work without the title,” she said. She’s taught, consulted and worked for the city’s parks and recreation department — back where she started 26 years ago.
“I am running again because the work that we started is not finished,” Ayers, 43, said.
Ayers lost her council seat in 2021 amid a federal public corruption investigation into several officials, related to the towing industry. That case closed in January.
“Was it fair? No. Was it judged in the court of public opinion? Absolutely. But am I upset about it? Absolutely not,” she said. “Because they had a job to do and they did their job; and through their job and the due process, everything that I’ve said from the beginning — I haven’t done anything — has been proven to be true.”
The experience has taught her what it means to have the true spirit of Detroit, she said.
“I know what it means to be counted out. I know what it means to be drug through the mud. I know what it means to swing and keep fighting,” she said.
Ayers feels as though the timing of the investigation cost her the 2021 election, but it also “cost the people representation,” she said. She didn’t come to the decision to run again lightly, she added, but the closing of the case and interactions with community members prompted her desire to return to public service.
“I know exactly what our constituents are looking for in a leader. And, more importantly, what it is that they’re looking for in their neighborhoods, because I stay with boots on the ground, knowing what it is that people are looking for,” she said.
She cited fiscal responsibility, public safety and neighborhood growth as pressing issues for Detroit and Detroiters. Ayers currently lives in the Minock Park neighborhood.
James Harris
James Harris, community relations chief for the Detroit Fire Department, said he’s not a politician, he’s a public servant.
“I’m not trying to make a career out of being a politician. I want to get elected to serve the people,” Harris, 54, said.
Harris said not all Detroiters have felt the same resurgence as certain parts of the city, like Corktown, downtown and Midtown, and he wants to see similar development and small business growth in other neighborhoods. He said he’d create programming similar to the Motor City Makeover, Detroit’s annual city-wide volunteer cleanup and beautification initiative that takes place each May, bringing together thousands of volunteers to clean and beautify neighborhoods, parks and playgrounds, and around businesses, schools, and places of worship.
“I want our neighborhoods to look good. I want our trees to be cut. I want our grass to be trimmed. I want everybody to feel the rebirth of Detroit,” he said.
Safety is number one on his list. He emphasized the importance of educating the public on fire safety and pulling over to the right for first responders. He said he’d work with Community Violence Intervention groups to prevent crime. He said he’d also like to hire more firefighters to go out and educate the public on hands-only CPR, for instance.
Detroiters, both new and longtime residents, and regardless of their income, want to be safe, he said.
“When you go to work in the morning, when you leave out of your house, you want to be safe. You want to make sure your street lights are on if you got to go to work in the dark so you can see where you’re going. You want to make sure when you dial 911, not only is the fire department coming, the EMS is coming, but the police are coming,” he said.
Harris, who’s been with the Detroit Fire Department for nearly 28 years, said he lives in District 1, north of Rosedale Park.
Write-in candidates: Lucious Conway (previously a write-in candidate for Board of Police Commissioners) and Earl O’Neal Jr.
Read more: Meet the at-large candidates | Candidates who ran in the primary | What to know about the at-large race
Who is funding the City Council candidates?
It’s a lot cheaper to chase a City Council seat than to run for mayor.
Eighteen Detroiters on the Aug. 5 primary ballot collectively raised nearly $504,500 and spent $371,838, while mayoral candidates collectively spent nearly $2 million. A BridgeDetroit review of campaign disclosures shows some council races were funded by a handful of donors. Others were fueled by personal loans, political committees, business groups and people beyond the district boundaries.
Large dollar donations came directly from or groups affiliated with Ambassador Bridge Owner Matthew Moroun, billionaire Dan Gilbert and Gary Torgow, chairman of Huntington National Bank and Sterling Group.
Publicly available fundraising reports provide information on donations collected by July 20. City Council candidates spent approximately $20,600 on average during the reporting period, with some notable outliers. Mayoral candidates spent ten times as much on average.
Read more from Malachi Barrett.
Who is running for Board of Police Commissioners
Editor’s note: This list has been updated as of Oct. 28. Write-in campaigns are being run by multiple people, but only some have signed up officially with the City Clerk’s office. We have included the names of all who are running write-in campaigns but specify if they are on the clerk’s approved write-in candidate list.
Here are the candidates who have filed to run for Board of Police Commissioners:
District 1
- No certified candidates.
- Write-in candidates: Henrietta Ivey, Lynn Brown, Darryl Brown,Terrance Carter, Joshua Hughes, Larry Johnson
District 2
- Lavish Williams
- Write-in candidates: Linda Bernard, Charles Miles and Alan Mullin
District 3
- No certified candidates.
- Write-in candidates: Reginald Crawford, Oliver Gantt, Darious Morris, William Morrissette III and Taras Nykoriak
District 4
District 5
- No certified candidates
- Write-in candidates: Beverly Watts, E’yandra Otis, Teron Haynes, Chandra Darrisaw, Ronald Elliott, Tenay Hankins, Paul Smith
District 6
- Garrett Burton
- Lisa Carter (incumbent)
- Write in candidate: Jacqueline Sproles and Zeid Griffin
District 7
- Victoria Camille
- Write-in candidates: Walter Harris and Robert Olive
Write-in candidates can run, but if a seat remains empty after the general election, the mayor would get to appoint someone.
Who is running for city clerk?
Editor’s note: This list has been updated as of Oct. 8.

Editor’s note: This list has been updated as of Oct. 8.
On the ballot: Janice Winfrey
Janice Winfrey has been the city clerk for Detroit since 2005. She’s a graduate of Cass Technical High School and Eastern Michigan University. She is a member of the Detroit Federation of Teachers; the Association of Wayne County Clerks; the Michigan Municipal Clerks Association; the International Association of Clerks, Recorders, Election Officials and Treasurers; the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; and Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Before public service, she was a math teacher at Detroit Public Schools.

Write-in campaign: Articia Bomer
Articia Bomer ran for mayor in 2016, state representative in 2018, Congress in 2020, governor in 2022, and Wayne County sheriff in 2024. She lost each race. Read more on her from Metro Times.
Write-in campaign: Theresa Williams
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/7550191933914746125?lang=en-US&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.bridgedetroit.com%2Fdetroit-city-clerk-2025-election%2F&embedFrom=oembedWho is running for Community Advisory Council
Editor’s note: This list has been updated as of Oct. 28.
When Detroit revised its city charter in 2012, community advisory councils were added to create more citizen involvement in the government and a more direct path for communication with elected representatives. CACs are meant to inform City Council about residents’ and businesses’ needs in their district — especially how well city services and programs are working.
Currently, Detroit has three Community Advisory Councils, even though each district could have one.
District 7’s CAC has been around the longest: Its members were seated in 2017. District 4 followed in 2021 and District 5 in 2023. Residents elect five CAC members, and the city appoints one high school member and one “senior issues representative” to each council.
No candidates made the ballot to run for CAC. However, 14 residents have become official write-in candidates with the city clerk’s office. Here’s who is running in each district:
District 4
- Harun Bilal
- Brenda Butler
- LeJuan Council
- Duane Daniels
- Edythe Ford
- Juvette Hawkins-Williams
- Rose Jones
- Johnetta Holt
- LaJoy Morgan
- Lory Parks
- Toinu Reeves
- Kevin Trotter II
- Minya Irby
- Lauren Lemonious
District 5
- Dorian Ballard
- Jacob Graham
- Teresa Reneice Davis
- Robbi Sellers
- Victoria Collier
- Justin Hairston
- Jessica Howell
- Denise Lyles
- Yvonne Purifoy
- Cevone Smith
- Joann Warwick
District 7
- Theodora Broughton
- Amanda Carswell
- Bettina Little
- Valerie McPhaul
- Claude Norwood
- Eric Scott
- Herman Starks
- Clinton Topp
Editor’s note: Are you running and not on this list? Do you have a campaign website we missed? Reach out to lrazzaq@bridgedetroit.com.






