Pictured is Rev. Dr. Marvin McMickle, interim pastor at Antioch Baptist Church, one of Cleveland's most prominent Black churches
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Breaking news from Cleveland, Ohio from a Black perspective.©2025
Mon06302025
Last update03:41:59 pm
Pictured is Rev. Dr. Marvin McMickle, interim pastor at Antioch Baptist Church, one of Cleveland's most prominent Black churches
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CLEVELAND, Ohio- Newcomer Justin Bibb, a former Barack Obama intern and progressive who won the Cleveland nonpartisan runoff election for mayor in November over former Cleveland City Council President Kevin Kelley to become the city's fourth Black mayor and its second youngest behind former mayor Dennis Kucinich, took a ceremonial oath of office Saturday afternoon during an invited-guests-only inauguration ceremony at the Public Hall Auditorium. The event included top police brass and 11th Congressional District Congresswoman Shontel Brown.
Though he was officially sworn-in on Jan 3, and with no audience or hoopla, Bibb, 34, decided to hold Saturdays' ceremonial swearing in before an audience of about 70 people, and a wealth of media anxious to get a story as the pandemic roars on and residents of Cleveland and Ohio, which ranks seventh among the states in COVID-19 cases, remain disproportionately at risk for both the Delta Variant and the Omicon Variant. Flanked by his mother, Charlene Nichols, he was sworn in Saturday by Democratic Ohio Supreme Court Justice Melody Stewart, a former 8th District court of Appeals judge and the first Black elected to Ohio's highest court. He becomes the 58th mayor of the largely Black major American city of some 372,000 people, and succeeds four-term former mayor Frank Jackson, 75 and Cleveland's longest serving mayor.
During his inaugural address on Saturday Bibb complimented Jackson, a city-council president- turner mayor and the city's third Black mayor, for his many years of service to the city, and he said that he walks in his footsteps, along with those of former mayor Michael R. White, the city's second Black mayor, and Carl B Stokes, Cleveland's first Black mayor, and the first Black mayor of a major American city.
The new mayor laid out several initiatives he plans to address, including safety, economic growth, and education.
“We can achieve a safer, more equitable, healthier Cleveland,” the mayor said. “We can be the Cleveland that young people move back to because there are good jobs, safe streets, good schools, quality grocery stores, good healthcare. We don’t just have to dream about Cleveland, we can and will work toward that goal every minute of every single day.”
Congresswoman Brown, a Democrat who was elected in November to replace U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia Fudge, who vacated the post in March to join the administration of President Joe Biden, spoke before Bibb took to the podium and said that Bibb will put Cleveland first, and that he has what it takes to lead the city.
"I know Mayor Bibb's heart is with the people of our city and I know that he will do whatever it takes to char the course for a better tomorrow," said Brown.
The city's 58th mayor, Bibb will govern the impoverished city with help from new city council president Blaine Griffin, who is also Black, and a 17 member city council, the mayor, the council president and all 17 members of city council of whom are Democrats in a city that is a Democratic stronghold. Griffin, a Jackson ally and former community relations board director for the city who did not support Bibb for mayor, was conspicuously absent from the swearing in.
In spite of never holding office before, Bibb was the top vote-getter in a seven-way primary who ran on the political platform of decreasing crime and reforming the city's troubled police department. Armed with endorsements from key people like former mayors Michael R. White and Jane Campbell, U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown of Cleveland, and the Cleveland Plain Dealer, he went on to win the Cleveland nonpartisan election over then council president Kevin Kelley, a White west side councilman who placed second in the primary. It was an upset of large magnitudes, and a mandate by voters, Black voters in particular.
With the wisdom of campaign manager Ryan Puente, the former executive director of the Cuyahoga County Democratic party who is now the mayor's chief of governmental affairs, Bibb won the November general election with a whopping 63 percent of the vote compared to Kelley's 37 percent, even though Kelley had been endorsed by Jackson and a handful of other city council persons, including Black councilpersons Blaine Griffin, Kevin Bishop and Kevin Conwell.
Now a full time attorney, Kelley opted to run unsuccessfully for mayor rather than reelection to city council where he has served for 16 years representing Ward13, the last eight of those years as council president.
Bibb is also poised to revamp the city's largely Black Cleveland Metropolitan School District, which the city mayor has controlled since 1998 per a state law that eliminated an elected school board and replaced it with appointees of the mayor, a new state law pushed by then mayor Michael White and two Republicans who sponsored the legislation.
The son of a social worker and Cleveland cop who grew up in Cleveland's Mt Pleasant neighborhood, Mayor Bibb is a former banker who holds a law degree from Case Western Reserve University. He interned for Barack Obama when Obama, who later became president, was a junior U.S. senator.
Bibb ran a cleverly crafted grassroots campaign with the support of young progressives across racial lines who embraced his ideas and political stances. He knocked on doors and met with small community groups across the city long before the primary election got underway, and it paid off in the end when he won the crowded primary over six other candidates, all of them Democrats.
Cleveland sits in heavily Democratic Cuyahoga County, the second largest of Ohio's 88 counties, and most of its residents live in poverty. It is the most segregated city in the nation behind Boston and most Blacks reside on the city's east side and Whites on the west side, the two sides separated by the Cuyahoga River.
DAYTON, Ohio — Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, a Democratic candidate for governor, announced on Wednesday that former Cleveland Heights Mayor Cheryl Stephens, who is Black and also a Cuyahoga County Council member, is her pick for her lieutenant governor running mate as the May 3 Democratic primary nears.
"I’ve known Cheryl for years, since we both served as mayors of our cities, and she’s exactly the type of leader we don’t have enough of in this state," Whaley said.
Stephens said it is an honor to run on Whaley's ticket as a lieutenant governor candidate.
"I’ve spent my career fighting so that everyone has the opportunity to own a home and so that families can build wealth and leave something behind for their kids," said Stephens, who is vice president of Cuyahoga County Council. "Together, Nan and I will help build that dream for all Ohioans."
Whaley was elected mayor of Dayton in 2013 and is not seeking another term in 2022. She ran for governor in 2017, but dropped out to endorse Richard Cordray, who lost the general election to Mike DeWine in 2018.
If Whaley and Stephens were to win it would be the first time in Ohio history that both the governor and lieutenant governor were women.
While the primary is in May, the general election is Nov. 8. The deadline to register to vote in the general election is Oct. 11.
(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com) the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.
(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)
CLEVELAND, Ohio – Warrensville Heights Mayor Brad Sellers, a former NBA player for the Chicago Bulls and the protégé of U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Secretary Marcia Fudge, and who succeeded her into office to lead the majority Black Cleveland suburb when she became a congresswoman, announced on Wednesday that he is running for Cuyahoga County executive, the most influential political office in the county.
And he will be able to mount a competitive campaign, partly because he is a Democrat in a Democratic leaning county that is 29 percent Black.
He will also have Fudge's political machine, what's left of it since she became HUD secretary with President Biden's administration in March of 2020 and is limited in what she can do politically under the Hatch Act, a federal law that prohibits civil service employees in the executive branch of the federal government, except the president and vice president, from engaging in some forms of political activity. This also includes campaigning for a political candidate.
“I’m running for county executive for the same reason I came back and for the same reason I ran for mayor: To make important things happen for Cuyahoga County,” Sellers said Wednesday. “Cuyahoga County residents want, need, and deserve more good things happening for them and should expect a county government that can get the job done."
To date, and with the Feb 2 deadline for filing petitions with the county board of elections approaching, Sellers will face Chris Ronayne, the former head of University Circle Inc., in the Democratic primary. Lee Weingart, a Republican and former county commissioner, is also running, though it is unlikely that a Republican will win because the Democrats control the county while Republicans hold all of the state offices, including the office of governor, all but three seats on the seven-member majority Republican Ohio Supreme Court.
A Warrensville Heights native and divorced father of four who was married to former local radio personality Kim Sellers, Brad Sellers would succeed current two-term county executive Armond Budish, who is not seeking reelection following an FBI raid on his downtown offices and an investigation relative to malfeasance and heightened inmate deaths in the county jail. Sources said that Budish, who is embroiled with a conflict with the 11-member county council, was purportedly grooming Maple Heights Mayor Annette Blackwell to succeed him, Blackwell a Black Democrat who announced earlier this week that she was suspending her campaign for county executive because it would be difficult for her to win.
A suburban Black mayor who supported Budish for two terms and was economic director for the city of Warrensville for 11 years when Fudge was mayor, Sellers said the county, which is Ohio's second largest county, needs fresh leadership and that he has the experience and qualifications to guide it through the building of a new county jail where more than 10 inmates have died since, 2018 and other developments. He said that jobs and housing and economic development are key as well as the Lakefront and airports, and that his campaign will also focus on public policy matters designed to enhance the quality of life for county residents, a county where 18 percent of its residents live in poverty and half of the impoverish residents are Black.
Sellers endorsed 11th Congressional District Congresswoman Shontel Brown for Congress last year to succeed Fudge, Brown, like Sellers, a protégé of Fudge and a former county council woman who continues to lead the county Democratic party since winning a hard fought primary over former Ohio senator Nina Turner last August and then the general election in November against Republican nominee Lavern Gore.
Like both Fudge and Sellers, Brown is also a Warrensville Heights Democrat.
Sellers is also the half brother of former Cleveland councilman Zack Reed, who ran unsuccessfully for mayor on two occasions.
A Democratic stronghold, Cuyahoga County, with Cleveland its largest city, has a population of roughly 1.2 million people. It is governed by a county executive, Budish, and an 11-member county council, a county governance structure that took effect in 2011 after voters scrapped the three county commissioners and the elected offices of the county sheriff, auditor, treasurer, and clerk of courts.
Those offices, and all but the judges and county prosecutor, which is now Mike O'Malley, are appointed positions under the purview of the county executive, though county council has some leeway as to the selection of the county sheriff pursuant to a subsequent charter amendment that voters also approved.
Black leaders, led by the NAACP, then county commissioner Peter Lawson Jones, and Fudge, who was a congresswoman at the time, opposed the change in county governance arguing that it would dilute Black leadership, though county voters approved it by a two-to-one margin.
If Sellers wins the election for county executive Cleveland would histocically have a Black congresswoman in current Congresswoman Shontel Brown, a Black Cleveland mayor in current mayor Justin Bibb, a Black city council president in current city council president Blaine Griffin, a Black county council president in current county council president Pernel Jones, a Black county council vice president in current Cheryl Stephens, and a Black county executiv.(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com) the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.