Current:Home > MyMayor of North Carolina’s capital city won’t seek reelection this fall -MoneyMatrix
Mayor of North Carolina’s capital city won’t seek reelection this fall
View
Date:2025-04-17 16:47:54
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The mayor of North Carolina’s capital city announced on Tuesday that she wouldn’t seek reelection this fall, citing in part health challenges and mentioning a new job.
Mary-Ann Baldwin, whose time on Raleigh’s city council goes back to 2007, has been mayor since December 2019. Raleigh is North Carolina’s second largest city by population with over 475,000 people.
“It’s time to devote my energies to myself and my family, and to find other ways to serve,” Baldwin said in a video revealing her decision.
Baldwin described a breast cancer diagnosis last year and her husband’s open-heart surgery, along with their dog’s illness, news outlets reported. She said she is cancer-free, her husband is doing well and their dog is recovering.
“These events made life even more stressful, leaving me to wonder how much more I could take,” Baldwin said. “My head and my heart were in conflict.”
Baldwin also started a new role this month as the first executive director of a foundation designed to provide grants to people who can’t cover their monthly expenses.
Baldwin arrived in Raleigh in the late 1980s. She served on the city council until 2017, after which she was elected mayor in 2019. She was reelected in 2022.
Several announced mayoral candidates had emerged before Tuesday, including current council member Corey Branch and Janet Cowell, a former council member and the one-time state treasurer. Candidate filing begins in July.
In the video, Baldwin highlighted her efforts as mayor of the rapidly growing city to encourage affordable housing and to develop downtown’s Warehouse District. She also mentioned the upcoming renovation of PNC Arena — home to the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes and North Carolina State University men’s basketball — and the emerging development around it that will inject more private development in west Raleigh.
Baldwin was also at the helm of the city in 2020 at the start of COVID-19 pandemic. And there was criticism over local law enforcement’s handling of the protests that year in response to the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Some of the demonstrations resulted in vandalism and damage to downtown businesses.
veryGood! (33334)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Trump's attorneys argue for narrower protective order in 2020 election case
- Book excerpt: Somebody's Fool by Richard Russo
- Suspect in deadly Northern California stabbings declared mentally unfit for trial
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Inside Sandra Bullock and Bryan Randall's Private Love Story
- Influencer Kai Cenat announced a giveaway in New York. Chaos ensued
- Thousands of Los Angeles city workers walk off job for 24 hours alleging unfair labor practices
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Elon Musk is banking on his 'everything app.' But will it work?
Ranking
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- CDC says COVID variant EG.5 is now dominant, including strain some call Eris
- Mexico finds 491 migrants in vacant lot en route to U.S. — and 277 of them are children
- There's money in Magic: The booming business of rare game cards
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Paramount to sell Simon & Schuster to private equity firm KKR for $1.62 billion
- Woman critically injured by rare shark bite off NYC’s Rockaway Beach
- ACC explores adding Stanford and Cal; AAC, Mountain West also in mix for Pac-12 schools
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
NFL training camp notebook: Teams still trying to get arms around new fair-catch rule
Brian Austin Green Sends Message to Critics of His Newly Shaved Head
MLB suspends Chicago’s Tim Anderson 6 games, Cleveland’s José Ramírez 3 for fighting
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
FCC hands out historic fine to robocaller company over 5 billion auto warranty calls
New Hampshire is sued over removal of marker dedicated to Communist Party leader
With strike talk prevalent as UAW negotiates, labor expert weighs in