Cleveland’s longest-serving mayor will exit City Hall at the end the year, his 16th in office.
Mayor Frank G. Jackson on Thursday told a telephone town hall audience he will not seek a fifth term this year.
The news ends months of speculation about Jackson’s political intentions, while numerous contenders – from first-time candidates to long-tenured elected officials – clamor to replace him.
The decision marks the finale of a 32-year political career for the former councilman from Central who helmed the city through the Great Recession, a federal investigation of Cleveland’s police force and now the coronavirus pandemic.
Running on a pledge to “Make Cleveland great again,” then-City Council President Frank Jackson unseated incumbent Mayor Jane Campbell in 2005. In subsequent elections, Jackson trounced his electoral opponents with support from business leaders, building trade unions and much of the Cleveland political establishment.
With the help of the state legislature in 2012, Jackson reorganized the school system, giving the mayor’s office more power over the district. Voters approved a property tax hike for the schools that year, renewing it in 2016 and increasing it in 2020.
Cleveland’s division of police drew federal scrutiny after a pursuit on Nov. 29, 2012 ended with officers killing two unarmed people in a hail of 137 gunshots. The U.S. Department of Justice launched an investigation months later, determining in late 2014 that city police exhibited a pattern and practice of civil rights violations.
That announcement came on the heels of the November 2014 fatal shooting of 12-year-old Tamir Rice by a police officer.
The DOJ probe resulted in a years-long, court-mandated police reform effort that will likely continue into the administration of Jackson’s successor.
While Cleveland’s population continued its decades-long decline, the Jackson era saw new buds of development — supported by city tax incentives — in neighborhoods like Downtown, Ohio City, Tremont, Detroit-Shoreway and University Circle. But many parts of the city still bear the scars of the 2008 financial collapse, dotted with vacant lots where abandoned homes once stood.
In recent state of the city addresses, Jackson told supporters and civic leaders the city had a chance at greatness, but also that it was confronted by a “beast” of entrenched inequality. That disparity showed itself in the COVID-19 pandemic and during the unrest after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Jackson said last year.
While civic boosters and skeptics debated whether Cleveland’s position among U.S. cities had slipped over the last 50 years, Jackson offered his own take: Cleveland is a big city with big city problems, too.
“We’re not Disneyland,” Jackson told a group of reporters on a trolley tour of the city during his 2013 reelection bid. “We're a real urban center with all the feel, and the smell, the taste, the sound of an urban center.”
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