Los Angeles Times

City councilman is next Atlanta mayor

Andre Dickens wins runoff after placing second to colleague Felicia Moore.

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ATLANTA — City Councilman Andre Dickens won a runoff election Tuesday to become Atlanta’s next mayor, riding a surge of support that powered him past the council’s current president, Felicia Moore, after finishing second to her earlier in November.

Dickens won a campaign dominated by concern over rising violent crime, arguing that he would be more effective than Moore, who has often been a lonely critic of previous mayors in her 20 years on the City Council. Moore had been the leading candidate by a wide margin in the first round of voting Nov. 2 among 14 candidates in a nonpartisa­n race.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms created a wide-open succession race when she announced in May that she wouldn’t seek a second term.

The 47-year-old Dickens, an Atlanta native and engineer by training, joined the council in 2013. He argued that his broad range of experience would allow him to address crime and other city issues, including affordable housing and improving opportunit­y for poorer residents. Other issues included bolstering struggling city services and keeping the wealthy Buckhead neighborho­od from seceding.

“We voted for progress and a problem solver, for a bridge builder, for transforma­tion,” Dickens told a crowd of hundreds during his victory speech Tuesday night. “And this work will start right now. We can’t wait any longer to address these issues.”

Dickens went from trailing the pack to take second Nov. 2 and make the runoff, ending the comeback attempt of two-term former Mayor Kasim Reed, who finished third. That snowballin­g support for Dickens continued in the runoff, with endorsemen­ts by Bottoms, U.S. Rep. and Democratic Party of Georgia Chair Nikema Williams, Fulton County Dist. Atty. Fani Willis and Sharon Gay, an attorney who finished fourth in the Nov. 2 vote.

“I draw circles — I don’t draw lines,” Dickens said. “And the circle tonight got real large.”

Like many cities across the country, Atlanta has been dealing with an increase in killings. As of Nov. 13, homicides rose 10% over the same period last year and 57% compared with 2019, Atlanta police data show. Several of those killings captured widespread attention, including the shooting deaths of several people at Atlanta-area spas.

Dickens has pledged to increase the number of police officers, arrest gang leaders and implement community policing. He says he may keep current Police Chief Rodney Bryant, who came out of retirement in 2020 after a previous chief stepped down following a fatal police shooting of a Black man that led to unrest.

Dickens also wants to increase affordable housing, improve infrastruc­ture and ensure that current residents qualify for high-paying jobs.

Moore, 60, made a call for unity in her concession speech, saying there’s no difference between her supporters and Dickens’ because “we’re all Camp Atlanta.”

 ?? Ben Gray Associated Press ?? MAYOR-ELECT Andre Dickens pledged to tackle crime and housing issues.
Ben Gray Associated Press MAYOR-ELECT Andre Dickens pledged to tackle crime and housing issues.

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