Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, whose leadership was tested after the death of Freddie Gray, an unarmed black man in police custody, triggered days of massive protests and rioting in April, announced Friday she will not seek re-election next year.
Rawlings-Blake emphasized that “it was a very difficult decision” that she has been weighing of the past two months. The mayor said she chose to focus on “moving the city forward” and reform the police department, than campaigning.
“I needed to spend time – the remaining 15 months of my term – and focused on the city’s future, not my own,” she said at a news conference. “I’m focus on governance than campaigning at this critical time in our city history. This is a tough time.”
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Still, the mayor said she had no doubt about winning a second term, amid a crowded field of challengers. Rawlings-Blake boasted of her track record in office, including reducing the unemployment rate by a third and reforming the pension system. She said these accomplishments would have positioned her to victory.
“I haven’t lost an election since middle school. And it’s not that I think I could win. It’s that I had to ask myself the question: At what cost?” she said Friday. “I was determined to leave the city in a better position, so whoever becomes mayor will have the ability to move our city forward.”








