Mayor-elect Mary Sheffield said she feels the weight of history and the responsibility placed on her by voters to lead Detroit into the future after posting a landslide victory.
Detroit voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly chose Sheffield to become the city’s first woman mayor and lead the city starting in 2026. The Associated Press declared Sheffield the winner at 9:15 p.m., just over an hour after polls closed. Unofficial results showed Sheffield held 77% of the vote over her opponent, Rev. Solomon Kinloch Jr.
“Generations ago, it was right here in Detroit where our grandmothers and grandfathers came to build lives of dignity and pride to find good paying jobs, buy homes, raise families and imagine a better tomorrow,” Sheffield said during a victory speech at the MotorCity Casino Hotel. “They saw Detroit as a destination city, a world-class city. That has always been the promise and the hope of this city, and we will continue to march boldly toward that promise once again.”
The election marks the first change in the city’s top leadership since three-term Mayor Mike Duggan was first elected in 2014. Sheffield, 38, cast herself as a “people’s champion” and heir to Duggan as she seeks a promotion after serving on the City Council for the last decade. Kinloch, 52, pitched himself as a political outsider and “builder” inspired to seek government office to address the deep needs of residents who are failed by current leaders.
“I don’t take for granted that I stand on the shoulders of so many warrior women who have prayed, who have sacrificed just for us to be here in this moment, a torch carried from one generation to the next,” Sheffield said. “I say to every little girl watching tonight and to every child in this city, ‘never doubt yourself. You are gifted, you are powerful. You are fearfully and wonderfully made. No mountain is too high for you to climb. No dream is too big for you to realize if you believe and truly believe all things are possible.’”
Sheffield is the daughter of pastor and activist Horace Sheffield III and granddaughter of civil rights legend Horace Sheffield Jr. Sheffield’s mother was an educator and nurse, while her grandmother was an activist.
Her grandmother, Mary Coty, once described a young Sheffield as headstrong and determined. The 88-year-old accompanied Sheffield to the polls on Tuesday and celebrated with her on stage. Sheffield thanked her family for instilling faith and strength in her, including her late mother “who watches over me and guides my steps daily.”

“It all started with the belief that my parents had in me,” Sheffield said. “They reminded me again and again that no mountain was too high for their daughter to climb, no dream was too big.”
Guests at Sheffield’s campaign party included Detroit Police Chief Todd Bettison, City Council Member Fred Durhal III, state Sens. Mallory McMorrow and Stephanie Chang, as well as Michigan Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist, Michigan Democratic Party Chair Curtis Hertel and various Wayne County officials and community leaders.
“With her win, thousands of children in Detroit can now see themselves reflected in the city’s leadership in a way they never might have imagined before,” Hertel said in a Tuesday evening statement. “Mary Sheffield is a fighter, and I know she will stand up for working families and their children every single day as mayor; the city is lucky to have her.”
Detroit voter Mimi Forbes cast her ballot Tuesday at East English Village Academy in District 4 knowing Sheffield could make history. But she stressed that most of all, she believes Sheffield is qualified for the job.
“I think (having the first woman mayor) is very historic, and it’s positive, and she’s absolutely qualified. Because you don’t want to just pick a woman, just to have a woman, right? You want to have a qualified woman,” Forbes said.
Citing her years of experience in city government, resident Karlisa Neal, 44, also voted for Sheffield.
“She’s been on City Council for years, I know her father has done a lot in the community, so she’s been around,” Neal said. “She knows how to navigate us and our challenges in the city to get us to the next level.”

Neal said she is excited for the city’s first Black woman mayor.
“The city has been around for hundreds of years and for all those years, we’ve never thought that a woman was up for the job until 2025,” she said. “Now we have an option. I think she (Sheffield) will do well.”
The next mayor’s term starts in the new year. For now, Sheffield will continue leading the last few City Council formal sessions before its business concludes at the end of November. Sheffield said assembling a transition team would be her first priority. She plans to convene a team representing various issues — including gun violence, infrastructure, housing and transit — to craft a plan for the first 200 days of her administration.
“Tomorrow we know we go to work shoulder-to-shoulder with our City Council, with our regional partners, with our civic and business community, with our labor family, and most importantly, with each and every one of you all,” Sheffield told the election night crowd. “The work now begins; the work of rebuilding our neighborhoods, creating great jobs, lifting every Detroiter out of poverty, attracting and retaining our young people in this city and reclaiming Detroit as its rightful place among the world’s greatest cities.
“We made history together, we will build a brighter future together. We will rise higher.”
A decade of experience
Sheffield became the youngest council member in Detroit’s history in 2013 and served three consecutive terms. She was the first candidate to publicly launch her campaign and a clear frontrunner from the start. The primary field widened to nine candidates, most of whom candidly assumed Sheffield would advance to the November election.
A decade of experience on the City Council gave her credibility in public forums and a debate spectated by business leaders. She consolidated labor support with union relationships cultivated across her career. Sheffield earned more than half the primary vote and finished 34 points ahead of Kinloch.
Kinloch, in his Tuesday night concession speech, pointed to the low voter turnout, noting “the majority of the people in the city are still not engaged. They still don’t believe that politics and politicians can really make a difference in their lives.”
He went on to tell his supporters that “Solomon Kinloch and the Kinloch family ain’t going nowhere.”
“For 27 years, I have fought for you as the senior pastor of Triumph Church. I want you to know that fire just got reignited because for the rest of my days, I’m going to keep on fighting for the citizens of Detroit,” he said.
Some residents have lamented that Kinloch’s consistent avoidance of candidate forums and his residency became a campaign issue; he lived in an Oakland County home purchased from Triumph Church before running for mayor. He also navigated concerns about doing the job while remaining a pastor.
Sheffield also faced concerns about her compliance with ethics rules and associations with corporate donors. Kinloch argued she would enter the mayor’s office under a “cloud” of suspicion after voters learned she solicited concert tickets from Comerica Bank and once dated a demolition contractor who secured millions of dollars from in city contracts. Sheffield says she remained within the bounds of Detroit’s ethics rules in both cases.
Setting the tone
Almost exactly one year ago, city employees packed the Erma Henderson auditorium to hear Duggan announce he wouldn’t seek another term.
Duggan was reelected twice, each time commanding more than 70% of the vote, but walked away from a fourth term to pursue the Michigan governor’s seat in 2026. Duggan secured 75% in 2021, with 69,353 votes. At 11 p.m. on election night, unofficial results showed Sheffield with 78,148 votes.
In a room named for the first Black woman elected to the council, Duggan told reporters he would wait to support a successor. Sheffield launched her campaign a few weeks later, but Duggan kept an endorsement in his pocket until August.
Duggan officially embraced Sheffield outside the home of Geraldine Noble, who benefited from a roof repair grant program Sheffield was credited with expanding. Duggan called Sheffield “clearly the most qualified candidate.”
On Tuesday night, Duggan said in a statement that Sheffield “ran an outstanding campaign” and “will do a great job running the city of Detroit.”
“Our city’s progress is in very good hands and I know she and her team will make sure it not only continues, but expands,” he said.
Sheffield’s platform has seven pillars: Public safety, economic empowerment, accessible transportation, social services, affordable housing, quality education and neighborhood revitalization.
Duggan’s endorsement also mattered to voters BridgeDetroit encountered on Tuesday.
Indian Village resident Paul Williams said the election will determine if Detroit will continue the growth experienced during Duggan’s tenure in a more inclusive way. He voted for Sheffield in part because “she’s connected to Duggan. Williams said he views Sheffield as a business candidate while Kinloch is community-oriented.
“All in all, I’m happy with the way the city’s progressed. I could never understand the antagonism toward Duggan, because you can’t make something from nothing,” Williams said. “It’s slow because, quite frankly, there’s not that much money in the neighborhoods to push for changes that need to be made.”
Teresa Renice Davis, a write-in candidate for the District 5 Community Advisory Council, saw a similar dynamic at play. The main difference she sees between the candidates is Kinloch seems focused on the people, while Sheffield is more associated with business. Davis was optimistic about the city’s future regardless of who wins and planned to make her decision in the voting booth.
“The heart of the city is at stake,” Davis said. “That’s something to wonder about. What is the heart of the city?”

Detroit real estate agent James Purifoy took his 18-year-old cousin Devon to vote for the first time at the Detroit Election Department Headquarters, where they were both able to register to vote and cast a ballot after recently moving addresses.
James said there was no doubt he was voting for Sheffield, applauding her Occupy the Corner youth events and efforts to connect residents with resources. James has attended services at Triumph Church and described Kinloch as a good man, but Sheffield “comes from a long legacy of Detroiters who put in the work.”
“I’ve witnessed her transition from being on the City Council into being president and now being endorsed by Mayor Duggan,” James said. “I have mixed feelings about Mayor Duggan but I can’t deny the tremendous change I’ve seen in the city over the last 10 years. She was part of it and she’ll take the baton.”
Devon said most of the people in his generation don’t have much interest in local politics. He said more young Detroiters would stay in the city if there were more entertainment options and exciting things to do.
