The 2022 mayoral election in the city of
Raleigh, North Carolina, was originally scheduled to be held on Tuesday, October 5, 2021, but was postponed until November 8, 2022 by the passage of a state law in June 2021 that permanently moved Raleigh municipal elections to even years.[1][2][3] The law also changed the requirement that winners attain a majority of the vote in a runoff if necessary, instead allowing election by a simple plurality. Incumbent
mayorMary-Ann Baldwin sought election to a second term in office.[4] She was challenged by Terrance Ruth and DaQuanta Copeland.[5]
Baldwin succeeded in her bid for re-election, receiving 46.7% of the vote. Ruth finished in second with 40.6% and Copeland finished third with 10.1%.[6][7]
Background
Incumbent mayor Mary-Ann Baldwin was first elected in
2019 on a platform of
affordable housing. The city council passed an $80 million
bond to fund the construction of affordable housing via
ballot initiative in November 2020, though a similar proposal to fund the construction of
public parks was abandoned due to the complications of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Baldwin has faced criticism over being developer-friendly and for her perceived mishandling of
Black Lives Matterprotests in the summer of 2020, as well as the council's decision to ask the state legislature to move the election from odd-numbered to even-numbered years without public comment.[8][9]
Challenger Terrance Ruth announced his candidacy in January 2021, running on a platform of restoring public transparency, promoting engagement, and increasing affordability and equitability. He has served as a
Wake County principal, a non-profit director, and is currently a professor of public policy at
North Carolina State University.[10] He received the endorsement of the Wake County Democratic Party in July 2022.[11] He also has been endorsed by Livable Raleigh, an organization which opposes Baldwin and the city council's changes to zoning.[12][13]
General election
Candidates
Filing for mayoral candidates began at noon on July 1 and ended at noon on July 15.[14] Although the election is officially
nonpartisan, all three candidates are members of the
Democratic Party.
DaQuanta Copeland, vice chair of the
Wake County Health and Human Services Board[16][17]
Did not file
Milo Alston, local activist
Declined
Zainab Baloch, community activist, candidate for the Raleigh city council in 2017, and candidate for mayor in 2019 (running for city council district B)[18][19][16]