Democratic-aligned candidate defeats Omaha mayor in presidential battleground territory

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: First Female Mayor Omaha Concedes Race Likely First Black Mayor Rcna206713 - Politics and Government | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

Three-term Republican Mayor Jean Stothert conceded to challenger John Ewing after the election Tuesday.
John Ewing Jr. speaks during a town hall
John Ewing will likely be Omaha's first Black mayor after the incumbent, Jean Stothert, conceded the race.Nikos Frazier / Omaha World-Herald via AP

OMAHA, Neb. — Omaha’s first female mayor has conceded the mayoral race to a man who will likely be the community’s first Black mayor.

Voters in Omaha were making history Tuesday by either reelecting the city’s first female mayor to a rare fourth term or electing the community’s first Black mayor.

The race between Mayor Jean Stothert and challenger John Ewing primarily revolved around local issues like street repairs and garbage service, but in the final stretch the campaign touched on more national, hot-button issues such as President Donald Trump’s administration and transgender rights.

Stothert was trailing by nearly 5,000 votes in early returns Tuesday night. At her election night event, Stothert said she called Ewing and conceded in the race, KETV reported.

“I called John Ewing and I congratulated him,” Stothert said. “John Ewing is inheriting tonight a great city, and we leave a strong foundation for the city that we love. We are grateful and we are hopeful.”

The winner will lead Nebraska’s largest city, which makes up nearly a quarter of the state’s population.

In campaigning for a fourth term, Stothert has portrayed Omaha as a city on a hot streak with a revitalized riverfront, plans moving ahead on a streetcar line and progress repairing city streets.

“I have plans and can talk about them, and they are working,” Stothert told the Omaha World-Herald.

Stothert would have the longest tenure as mayor in more than a century if she had won.

Jean Stothert
Jean Stothert in Omaha in 2020. Nati Harnik / AP

Ewing, the county treasurer, said the mayor hadn’t focused enough attention on core issues like filling potholes, hiring more police officers and building more affordable housing.

“People just feel like she’s had her time, and it’s time for somebody new,” Ewing said.

Although the mayor’s office is nonpartisan, the candidates made it clear to voters that Stothert is a Republican and Ewing is a Democrat. Omaha is among the few spots in conservative Nebraska where Democrats have a reasonable chance of winning elected offices.

Despite a focus on bread-and-butter issues like city services, the candidates issued more partisan messages as the election neared.

A Stothert TV ad said, “Ewing stands with radicals who want to allow boys in girls’ sports.”

Ewing responded that he hadn’t dealt with such transgender issues as treasurer, and told KETV he wouldn’t respond to hypothetical questions.

Ewing aired ads that connected Stothert to the Trump administration, showing the mayor on a split screen with Trump and saying, "Let’s say no to the chaos and elect a mayor who will actually get things done.”

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