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Seattle incumbent mayor holds on to slim lead over socialist challenger as ballots counted

Progressive and socialist candidates made sweeping gains in early returns for other city offices.

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Progressive and socialist candidates made sweeping gains in early returns for other city offices.

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Ari Hoffman Seattle WA
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After the first ballot drop Tuesday night, incumbent moderate Democrat Bruce Harrell held a narrow lead in Seattle’s mayoral race according to Axios, with 53.32 percent of the vote compared to 46.18 percent for socialist challenger Katie Wilson, according to early results from King County Elections.

The results are preliminary, with mail-in ballots continuing to be counted until final certification on November 25. Harrell, who won his first term four years ago by 17 points, faces a significantly tighter race this time amid a city deeply divided over issues of policing, housing, and public safety.

Wilson, founder of Seattle’s far-left Transit Riders Union, drew comparisons to New York City socialist Zohran Mamdani. She mounted a grassroots challenge from the left flank of the Democratic Party, defeating Harrell by 10 points in the crowded August primary.

However, recently, Wilson’s campaign has been dogged by controversy. She has long advocated for dismantling Seattle’s police and justice systems, a stance she has recently downplayed. During the 2025 Seattle mayoral debate hosted by the Seattle Channel, Wilson denied making numerous past statements calling for the abolition of the Seattle Police Department (SPD).

After being challenged by moderators, she later admitted at a debate hosted by the Seattle Latino Chamber of Commerce that she had supported defunding the police.

Her comments resurfaced amid growing voter fatigue with the “defund” movement. In April 2025, the Seattle City Council voted to formally rescind previous pledges to defund SPD, citing the loss of more than 600 officers and a spike in violent crime as reasons for the reversal.

Wilson, 43, branded herself as a “working-class renter,” often campaigning in thrift-store clothes and emphasizing her struggles with high childcare costs. Yet recent reports have challenged that image.

Investigations revealed that Wilson receives regular financial assistance from her professor parents in New York to cover roughly $2,200 per month in childcare expenses. She declined to specify how much she receives, saying only that checks arrive “every few months.”

Her background also reflects privilege at odds with her populist image: she attended Oxford University and left just six weeks before graduation, debt-free due to family support. Financial disclosures from her nonprofit show that the Transit Riders Union paid her nearly $73,000 in 2022, though her city filings list up to $100,000 in income for that same year.

Wilson’s husband, currently unemployed, helps manage her campaign while the couple rents an apartment in Capitol Hill. The revelations have led critics to question whether her self-portrayal as a struggling worker aligns with reality.

The mayoral race is part of a broader leftward shift in Seattle politics this year. Progressive and socialist candidates made sweeping gains in early returns for city offices.

Progressive former Assistant US Attorney Erika Evans defeated former Democrat turned Republican Ann Davison in the Seattle City Attorney race with 62.54 to 37.16 percent of the vote.

Incumbent socialist Councilmember Alexis Mercedes Rinck won decisively over moderate Rachel Savage, capturing 78.75 percent of the vote in the race for City Council, District 8, a citywide position.

Progressive newcomer Dionne Foster unseated moderate council president Sara Nelson, with 57.92 percent to 41.65 percent in the race for citywide City Council, District 9. Nelson, 59, had focused her tenure on business revitalization, policing, and drug treatment. Foster, who has worked in progressive nonprofits and City Hall, was endorsed by Progressive Squad member Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA).
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