The Motor City has a new mayor.
Mike Duggan, the former chief executive of the Detroit Medical Center, handily beat Wayne County sheriff Benny Napoleon on Tuesday night, according to the AP, becoming the city’s first white mayor in roughly 40 years.
Duggan won against Napoleon by a 55% to 45% margin, with 96% of precincts reporting, according to the Detroit Free Press, as of 11 p.m. ET. He had won the primary through write-in votes back in August, winning 45% of the vote.
Now comes the hard part, as the 55-year-old Democrat holds the reins of the recently bankrupt city with an 18.8% unemployment rate. But Duggan will have few powers initially as the city goes through its bankruptcy with a federal judge in charge of the city’s financial overhaul.









