Bruce Harrell

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Bruce Harrell
Image of Bruce Harrell

Candidate, Mayor of Seattle

Mayor of Seattle
Tenure

2022 - Present

Term ends

2025

Years in position

3

Predecessor
Prior offices
Seattle City Council District 2
Successor: Tammy Morales

Acting Mayor of Seattle
Successor: Tim Burgess
Predecessor: Ed Murray

Elections and appointments
Last elected

November 2, 2021

Next election

November 4, 2025

Appointed

September 13, 2017

Education

High school

Garfield High School, 1976

Bachelor's

University of Washington, 1980

Law

University of Washington, 1984

Personal
Profession
Attorney
Contact

Bruce Harrell is the Mayor of Seattle in Washington. He assumed office on January 1, 2022. His current term ends on December 31, 2025.

Harrell is running for re-election for Mayor of Seattle in Washington. He declared candidacy for the general election scheduled on November 4, 2025.[source]

Harrell was born and raised in Seattle.[1] He received a bachelor’s degree and a J.D. from the University of Washington and a master’s degree from the City University of Seattle.[2] During his undergraduate education, Harrell played on the university’s football team as a linebacker.[3] Harrell said that his experience as a collegiate athlete influenced his approach to politics: “It demonstrates one thing: I don’t run away from contact. OK, I’ve never been a finesse player.”[4]

From 1988 to 1997, Harrell worked as counsel for the telecommunications company U.S. West.[2] In 1998, Harrell founded the firm Harrell, Connell, Cordova, Hunter & Pauley P.L.L.C. which focused on labor and employment law.[2] Regarding his work at the firm, Harrell said, “I chose to represent the little guy. I never defended big business. I was a plaintiff’s lawyer. I represented people who were aggrieved.”[5]

Harrell was elected to serve on a citywide seat on the Seattle City Council in 2007 by a margin of 20 percentage points and was re-elected in 2011 by 23 percentage points.[6][7] In 2015 after the city switched to district representation, Harrell was elected to represent District 2 by two percentage points. He also served as council president from 2015 to 2020.[2] In 2017, Harrell served as acting mayor after then-Mayor Ed Murray resigned from office.[8] After five days, Harrell declined to continue serving as mayor and the council elected Tim Burgess to serve the remainder of Murray’s term.[8]

According to Harrell’s official website, while serving on the council, he focused on “issues of racial equity, public safety reform, and economic and educational opportunity for all.”[1] The Seattle Times’ Daniel Beekman wrote that during Harrell’s tenure on the council he had “sometimes positioned himself to provide swing votes, occupying space between the council’s activist and moderate wings.”[9]

Harrell announced in January 2019 that he would not seek re-election to the city council.[9] Following his tenure on the council, he served as general counsel to the Rainier Valley Community Development Fund.[2] In July 2021, Harrell announced that he was running for mayor: “I saw nobody taking accountability and everybody blaming one another. And I said enough is enough. When I take office, you will see a decisiveness, you’ll see a sense of urgency. You will see someone tethered to a political agenda that is strictly focused on solving the problems.”[4] Harrell previously ran for mayor in 2013 but came in fourth place in the primary with 15% of the vote.[10]

Harrell defeated M. Lorena González in the 2021 general election 59% to 41%. According to The Seattle Times' Daniel Beekman, Harrell ran as a moderate and González ran as a progressive.[11] Harrell’s official website said his campaign was based on “a commitment to address the homelessness crisis with urgency and compassion, to ensure public safety for all communities, and to restore trust, hope, and unity in local government and civic life.”[1]

Biography

Bruce Harrell graduated from Garfield High School. Harrell earned a bachelor's degree and a J.D. from the University of Washington. His career experience includes working as chief legal advisor to the Rainier Valley Community Development Fund, First A.M.E. Church, and First A.M.E. Housing Corporation, and chief counsel to US West.[12] Harrell served on Seattle's COVID-19 Small Business Recovery Task Force.[13]

Elections

2025

See also: Mayoral election in Seattle, Washington (2025)

General election

The general election will occur on November 4, 2025.

General election for Mayor of Seattle

The following candidates are running in the general election for Mayor of Seattle on November 4, 2025.

Candidate
Image of Bruce Harrell
Bruce Harrell (Nonpartisan)
Image of Ry Armstrong
Ry Armstrong (Nonpartisan)
Alexander Barickman (Nonpartisan)
Joe Molloy (Nonpartisan)
Rachael Savage (Nonpartisan)
Thaddeus Whelan (Nonpartisan)
Katie Wilson (Nonpartisan)

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
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Endorsements

Ballotpedia is gathering information about candidate endorsements. To send us an endorsement, click here.

2021

See also: Mayoral election in Seattle, Washington (2021)

General election

General election for Mayor of Seattle

Bruce Harrell defeated M. Lorena Gonzalez in the general election for Mayor of Seattle on November 2, 2021.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Bruce Harrell
Bruce Harrell (Nonpartisan)
 
58.6
 
155,294
Image of M. Lorena Gonzalez
M. Lorena Gonzalez (Nonpartisan)
 
41.2
 
109,132
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.3
 
777

Total votes: 265,203
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for Mayor of Seattle

The following candidates ran in the primary for Mayor of Seattle on August 3, 2021.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of Bruce Harrell
Bruce Harrell (Nonpartisan)
 
34.0
 
69,612
Image of M. Lorena Gonzalez
M. Lorena Gonzalez (Nonpartisan)
 
32.1
 
65,750
Image of Colleen Echohawk
Colleen Echohawk (Nonpartisan)
 
10.3
 
21,042
Image of Jessyn Farrell
Jessyn Farrell (Nonpartisan)
 
7.3
 
14,931
Arthur Langlie (Nonpartisan)
 
5.6
 
11,372
Image of Casey Sixkiller
Casey Sixkiller (Nonpartisan)
 
3.4
 
6,918
Image of Andrew Grant Houston
Andrew Grant Houston (Nonpartisan)
 
2.7
 
5,485
James Donaldson (Nonpartisan)
 
1.6
 
3,219
Lance Randall (Nonpartisan)
 
1.4
 
2,804
Image of Clinton Bliss
Clinton Bliss (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
0.8
 
1,618
Omari Tahir-Garrett (Nonpartisan)
 
0.2
 
391
Bobby Tucker (Nonpartisan)
 
0.2
 
377
Image of Henry Dennison
Henry Dennison (Nonpartisan)
 
0.2
 
347
Image of Stan Lippmann
Stan Lippmann (Nonpartisan)
 
0.2
 
323
Image of Don Rivers
Don Rivers (Nonpartisan)
 
0.1
 
189
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.2
 
386

Total votes: 204,764
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

2019

See also: City elections in Seattle, Washington (2019)

Bruce Harrell did not file to run for re-election.

2015

See also: Seattle, Washington municipal elections, 2015

The city of Seattle, Washington, held elections for city council on November 3, 2015. A primary took place on August 4, 2015. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was May 15, 2015. All nine council seats were up for election.[14][15] In the Position 2 race, incumbent Bruce Harrell and Tammy Morales advanced past Joshua Farris in the primary election on August 4, 2015. Harrell defeated Morales in the general election.[16]

Seattle City Council Position 2, General election, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Bruce Harrell Incumbent 50.8% 9,532
Tammy Morales 49.0% 9,188
Write-in votes 0.25% 46
Total Votes 18,766
Source: King County, Washington, "City of Seattle Council District No. 2", accessed November 3, 2015.


Seattle City Council Position 2 Primary Election, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngBruce Harrell Incumbent 61.7% 8,066
Green check mark transparent.pngTammy Morales 24.7% 3,223
Joshua Farris 13.2% 1,725
Write-in 0.4% 55
Total Votes 13,069
Source: King County Elections, "Official primary election results," accessed August 12, 2015

Endorsements

In 2015, Harrell's endorsements included the following:[17]

  • The Municipal League of King County
  • King County Democrats
  • M.L. King County Labor Council
  • UFCW 21
  • UNITE HERE Local 8
  • Seattle Fire Fighters Union, Local 27
  • Cascade Bicycle Club
  • Washington Conservation Voters
  • King County Corrections Guild
  • King County Sheriff Marshal’s Guild
  • Seattle Building & Construction Trades Council
  • International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 46
  • Laborers Local 242
  • Professional and Technical Employees (PTE) Local 17
  • SEIU Healthcare 775NW
  • SEIU Healthcare 1199NW
  • SEIU Local 6
  • IBEW Local 77
  • International Union of Elevator Constructors Local Union No. 19
  • Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587
  • King County Young Democrats
  • 11th “Powerhouse” Legislative District Democrats
  • Civic Alliance for a Sound Economy (C.A.S.E.)
  • American Federation of Teachers – Local 1789
  • International Union of Painters & Allied Trades
  • International Union of Operating Engineers Local 286
  • International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 19
  • Seattle Mayor Ed Murray
  • Ron Sims (former King County Executive)
  • House Representative Sharon Tomiko Santos (37th Legislative District)
  • House Representative Eric Pettigrew (37th Legislative District)
  • State Senator Bob Hasegawa (11th Legislative District)
  • House Representative Steve Bergquist (11th Legislative District)
  • House Representative Zack Hudgins (11th Legislative District)
  • Speaker of the House Frank Chopp (WA State House of Representatives)
  • U.S. Congressman Adam Smith (Washington’s 9th congressional district)
  • King County Councilmember Larry Gossett
  • Seattle City Councilmember Sally Bagshaw
  • Seattle City Councilmember Tim Burgess
  • Seattle City Councilmember Sally Clark
  • Seattle City Councilmember Tom Rasmussen
  • Seattle City Attorney Peter S. Holmes
  • State Senator Cyrus Habib (48th Legislative District)
  • House Representative Cindy Ryu (32nd Legislative District)
  • Claudia Balducci (Mayor of Bellevue)
  • Marilyn Strickland (Mayor of Tacoma)
  • King County Assessor Lloyd Hara
  • Seattle Deputy Mayor Hyeok Kim
  • King County Councilmember Rod Dembowski
  • Betty Patu (Seattle School Board Member)
  • Stephan Blanford (Seattle School Board Member, District V)
  • Renton Councilmember and African American Commission Executive Director Ed Prince
  • Port of Seattle Commissioner Tom Albro
  • Congressman Mike Honda
  • State Senator Adam Kline (37th Leg. Dist. State Senator)
  • Velma Veloria, 11th Legislative District, Former State Representative
  • Former State Representative Dawn Mason (37th Leg. Dist.)
  • Former State Senator George Fleming (37th Leg. Dist.)
  • Former State Representative Jesse Wineberry
  • Tim Ceis (Former Seattle Deputy Mayor)
  • Oakland Deputy Mayor Desley Brooks
  • Former Seattle Councilmember David Della
  • Thurston County Assessor Steven J. Drew
  • Former State Senator Kathleen Drew
  • Former State Senator Rosa Franklin
  • Snohomish County Executive John Lovick
  • Everett Councilmember Ron Gipson
  • Former State Senator Claudia Kauffman
  • Former Seattle City Councilmember Paul Kraabel
  • Former Seattle School Board Member Jan Kumasaka
  • Former Seattle Municipal Judge Ron Mamiya
  • Charlotte Councilmember James E. Mitchell Jr.
  • Tukwila Councilmember De’Sean Quinn
  • Retired Justice Charles Z. Smith
  • Former Seattle Mayor Wes Uhlman
  • Tacoma School Board and Former Tacoma Mayor Karen Vialle
  • Former King County Councilmember Paul Barden
  • Former King County Prosecutor Christopher Bayley
  • Former KC Sheriff’s Office Chief Fabienne Brooks
  • Washington State Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles (36th District)
  • 36th Leg. Dist. State Representative Reuven Carlyle
  • School Board Member Sherry Carr
  • Former Seattle City Councilmember Richard Conlin
  • King County Executive Dow Constantine
  • Port Commissioner John Creighton
  • Former Port of Seattle Commissioner Pat Davis
  • Former School Board Member Michael DeBell
  • Former Seattle City Councilmember Jan Drago
  • Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson
  • Former Port of Seattle Commissioner Alec Fisken
  • Former Seattle School Board Member Darlene Flynn
  • Former Chief of Departmental Operations of Seattle John Franklin
  • State Senator David Frockt
  • Former Deputy Mayor of Seattle Phil Fujii
  • Seattle City Councilmember Jean Godden
  • Former Seattle School Board Member Suzanne Hittman
  • Former Port Commissioner Rob Holland
  • Governor Jay Inslee
  • Former State Representative Phyllis Gutierrez Kenney (46th Leg. Dist.)
  • U.S. House of Representatives Rick Larsen (Washington’s 2nd Congressional District)
  • Former Governor of Washington Michael “Mike” Lowry
  • Former State Senator Gene Lux
  • Former School Board Member Peter Maier
  • Former Seattle City Councilmember John Manning
  • School Board Member Harium Martin‐Morris
  • King County Councilmember Joe McDermott
  • Seattle City Councilmember Mike O’Brien
  • State Senator Jamie Pedersen (43rd Leg. Dist.)
  • King County Councilmember Larry Phillips
  • Former Mayor of Seattle Norm Rice
  • Former King County Executive Randy Revelle
  • Former Mayor of Seattle Charles Royer
  • Former Seattle City Councilmember Dolores Sibonga
  • Former Seattle City Attorney Mark Sidran
  • Former School Board Member Kay Smith‐Blum
  • Former Seattle School Board Member Alan Sugiyama
  • Former School Board Member Steve Sundquist
  • Former WA State Supreme Court Justice Philip Talmadge
  • State Rep. Gael Tarleton (36th Leg. Dist.)
  • Former State Senator Pat Thibaudeau (43rd Leg. District)
  • Former President of WA State Bar Association Ronald Ward
  • Former Seattle City Councilmember Tom Weeks
  • Former Seattle Councilmember Heidi Wills

Campaign themes

2025

Ballotpedia survey responses

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Candidate Connection

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2021

Bruce Harrell did not complete Ballotpedia's 2021 Candidate Connection survey.

Campaign website

Harrell's campaign website stated the following themes.

We Can Rebuild Our Economy Consistent With Our Progressive Values

Now is the time for big thinking and creative genius to put our city back on track and help reach our collective potential. I will bring together unions, business and civic leaders, community voices and advocates, environmental and health experts, leaders in the arts, education, and philanthropy, to create the Seattle we can all be proud of.

Seattle has always been an example for the nation – a progressive city where higher wages fueled greater equity and opportunity, where entrepreneurs were welcomed and nurtured, where investments in our parks, libraries, transit and affordable housing showed what a city can do when focused on a bright, inclusive future.

The pandemic disruption has turned back the clock for too many – widening inequalities in wealth, pushing vulnerable people out of housing and depriving access to needed support. These devastations have impacted a generation of students, young workers, and families struggling to make ends meet.

Here are some bold ideas for recovery and equitable growth that harnesses the best of Seattle:

  • Help Small and Minority Owned Businesses: Economic recovery will not happen overnight, and small businesses – especially those owned by women and BIPOC entrepreneurs, risk falling farther behind. We will protect short term, dedicated resources to help these businesses not only get back on their feet, but expand and take advantage of the opportunities ahead to create more jobs. The City of Seattle will establish new “business to business” partnerships to ensure that smaller businesses and BIPOC entrepreneurs enjoy the ancillary revenues and success of many larger businesses. I have direct expertise in developing these models.
  • Affordable Health Care for All: No one in our city should live without access to health care. Cities like San Francisco have developed basic coverage models that provide access to those at risk of falling through the cracks of a costly, cumbersome, and racially inequitable system. Employees of small businesses, gig economy workers, young people, and anyone experiencing homelessness or economic disruption all deserve quality care. Let’s come together and build a system that shows our commitment to what we may call “Healthy Seattle.” Where the Affordable Care Act and county health services fall short, particularly in the areas of preventative health and post-COVID trauma and mental isolation illnesses, “Healthy Seattle” may be critically important for the survival of our most vulnerable Seattle residents and lower wage workers.
  • A Smarter Approach to Invest in Better Neighborhoods: Seattle is divided into 7 Council districts, but we have yet to change our core neighborhood investment strategy. I will explore appropriating real resources – $10 million dollars would make an impact – in each of the 7 districts to provide Councilmembers with the opportunity to work directly with their communities to invest in specific localized priorities: small business recovery; homelessness solutions; parks and open space; cleanliness; pedestrian and public safety strategies or cultural facility preservation. Each district has unique needs, and each Councilmember will work collaboratively with City departments to meet those unique needs working closely with community.
  • A Seattle Jobs Center: Seattle must win the emerging jobs war. Using all available commercialized online job boards, state sponsored employment ads, executive search materials and every means to help employ every possible employee, and making sure we provide resources to re-tool and re-train job applicants seeking work, we will explore making sure Seattle is the facilitator of employing every available job applicant. Some employers have phenomenal programs for supporting returning military veterans or previously incarcerated residents. Seattle will provide a user-friendly infrastructure and be known as the city that values and promotes jobs, jobs and jobs. Our educational strategies will be closely aligned with our Seattle Jobs strategy.
  • Revitalize Arts, Culture and Nightlife: Few sectors of our economy have been as hard hit as our city’s dynamic – and critical – arts, music, food and nightlife economy. Let’s re-imagine how we support these critical nonprofits and businesses – from preservation of historic buildings and venues, to exploration of sustainable revenue to support organizations that advance equity, inspire and teach, and provide a stage for the next Quincy Jones, Macklemore, or countless other creative voices in our community.

As your Mayor I’ll be a strong – and consistent – voice for small businesses and working people, protecting and improving equity, wages, and work standards and building upon my 30-year career helping diversify businesses opportunities in our city.

We Will Plan – and Act – To End Homelessness

The homelessness crisis devastates not only the lives of those suffering on our streets and in our parks, but it affects the safety and peace of mind for too many Seattle families. It is a crisis that has divided our city and shaken our confidence as a compassionate, can-do city.

We need a Mayor who will take immediate and decisive action, a relentless leader who will take ownership of the problem. I will own it. My plan is to bring a new approach – one that will combine local and federal resources and work to coordinate with regional partners to ensure an ambitious plan – urgently getting people out of parks and streets and into stable housing with the on-site services they need.

To ensure coordination and accountable planning, I’ll work with local and regional partners to develop an accountable, ambitious plan with transparency and benchmarks to expand and provide housing and services on demand to every unsheltered neighbor. This plan will be online and accessible to the public with measurable outcomes and defined reporting, and establish progressive, dedicated revenue tied to meeting housing and cleanup goals, restoring public confidence.

This spring, I called for the City to use a majority of funding from the American Rescue Plan Act to immediately expand support services, while drawing on existing local dollars to fund the purchase, construction, and transition of hundreds of units of permanent housing through hotels, tiny homes, and other long-term, stable supportive housing options.

While the current Council fell short of the needed majority level funding, in 2022, we can and must go further, combining scheduled American Rescue Plan Act funding, local and state resources, and philanthropic support.

From my first year in office, we will treat the homelessness crisis appropriately as the greatest challenge facing our city. By uniting together on this shared mission, rather than pointing fingers, we will help restore lives, revitalize shared spaces and parks, and strengthen our communities and city.

My wife, a former United Way of King County CEO, and I have experience in raising significant, dedicated funding for health and human services. So many neighbors want to help solve the homelessness crisis, but don’t know what to do. What is their entry point? We are a compassionate city and people are tired of seeing stalled progress and continued in-fighting. Seattle will be nationally known for our collective effort and my job as Mayor will be to create and lead this effort.

With your vote, I will secure needed resources through a variety of existing sources, including:

  • Establish a minimum 12% of the City budget to address this housing crisis. This is both an increase in current funding and a sustainable level identified by a coalition of civic and housing services leaders for making a needed, immediate impact.
  • Dedicate a minimum 50% of 2022 American Rescue Plan Act to housing and services. The pandemic made the homelessness crisis worse, and one time funds are available to help. We cannot repeat the mistakes made this year with underfunding homelessness response and leaving people literally in the cold.
  • Leverage additional state and private resources through the Regional Homelessness Authority, the most effective way to make sure that Seattle is both doing a fair share to provide housing and services, and coordinate with other cities who must do their part as well.
  • Create a Dynamic Non-Profit Partnership, creating a model where every resident and business can make tax deductible donations that go directly to addressing homelessness and where they can participate in community clothing drives, food distribution lines, clean-up work parties, resume drafting sessions, drug and alcohol treatment conversations and other activities that provide direct support to those experiencing homelessness. Our children will learn from our collective ability to show compassion.

These interconnected one time and long range funding models will be set in motion to deliver real housing and needed services, including:

  • Identify 1,000 units of emergency, supportive shelter in the first 6 months of my administration, with another 1,000 by the end of year one. These levels are ambitious but attainable – and critically needed to help those suffering outdoors receive the stability they deserve. The County is hard at work identifying hotels and other indoor spaces to address this need – the city can and must be an active partner in making this a reality.
  • Bring accessible, culturally competent, and individualized service plans to scale, partnering with nonprofit providers and experts in outreach and recovery to ensure that when the city thoughtfully approaches an encampment with housing and services, everyone receives the care they need to transition not only into housing, but also recovery and support.
  • Identify and address factors that drive overrepresentation of Black, Indigenous and other People of Color among those experiencing chronic homelessness. We can and must tailor existing and new City programs and resources to address these underlying, ongoing inequities. I passed Seattle’s first Race and Social Justice Initiative to remove barriers for BIPOC advancement and success in our city programs, contracting, and employment – critical experience for tackling the structural issues that lead to unacceptably high rates of homelessness among minority communities.
  • Provide specific, dedicated support for LGBTQ+ youth and seniors. LGBTQ+ youth are four times more likely to end up homeless compared to non-LGBTQ+ counterparts. While addressing root causes of this challenge – often familial rejection, discrimination, missing economic opportunities, and lack of societal support structures – we must also work to provide tailored, culturally-appropriate housing, services, and outreach to those already experiencing homelessness, and where possible and appropriate, reunite families. Further, we need to create the conditions to give LGBTQ+ seniors the options to age in place in their long standing neighborhoods or with fellow members of the LGBTQ+ community where they can feel safe and comfortable.
  • Expand Emergency Rental Assistance programs using federal, state, and local funding. The best way to prevent homelessness is to make sure people on the margins, experiencing job loss or a financial emergency, or suffering a mental or physical health issue remain housed and supported. It is much more cost effective to keep people housed than to provide shelter and services later.
  • Build a non-law enforcement crisis/rapid response team focused on urgent response to behavioral health crises, non-violent public disruption, and other issues where a uniformed, armed officer is neither needed nor appropriate.
  • Fund low-barrier, rapid-access mental health and substance use disorder treatment services with a focus on those who are chronically homeless and face the greatest barriers to engagement and lasting success with these services.
  • Employ a rigorous “Housing First” strategy for encampment removal and mitigation. Dispersal only causes harm to individuals, and perpetuates the lack of public confidence in city response.
  • Ensure that City parks, playgrounds, sports fields, public spaces and sidewalks and streets remain open and clear of encampments. These sites not only lack essential sanitation and often create challenges for engagement and outreach by service providers, but create public health and safety conflicts with the intended use of these spaces. It is simply incompatible to have an encampment on or near school property, on a playfield or recreational trail, in a business district, or other similar spaces.
  • Fund Restoration of Parks and Public Spaces, linking progress in housing with restoration and activation of parks, sidewalks and green spaces—with immediate funding and City personnel dedicated to trash and debris cleanup, neighborhood response, and de-escalating conflict while we bring housing and services to scale.
  • Build Affordable Housing Faster. Critical, housing levy funded projects are too often needlessly bogged down in our own red tape. Persistent delays throughout our process can make a project wait far beyond a year before it receives a building permit. Further, these delays add to the overall cost of the project. We are in a crisis and this is a preventable situation. As Mayor, all affordable projects will get their approval within 12 months of submitting for a permit, or faster. We have an incredible city workforce and I will empower them to safely and efficiently evaluate and permit these desperately needed units. Delaying homes in a housing crisis is avoidable and unacceptable.

Our actions on these policies and more will be driven by our compassion as a city – not our anger and frustration at the problem. We will demand that every person be treated with dignity.

There are no quick fixes to this crisis, but we know strategies that provide immediate shelter, personalized case management, and long-term care and treatment work. Let’s do this, together.

We Can – and Must – Address Structural Racism and Police Bias, Ensuring Public Safety

Black Lives Matter is the most impactful civil rights movement in my adult life, and I stand in unity with those seeking justice and reform – as I have throughout my career in law and public service. This commitment is reinforced by my own experience growing up, and later raising two young Black men in our city and society. As an attorney, I would commonly ask potential jurors to recount their lived experiences when being interrogated by police officers, and I have seen tears in the eyes of many African Americans when reliving their trauma.

That is exactly why I was the sole drafter of Seattle’s unprecedented “Bias Free” policing law which requires our City to daylight the information as to who is stopped by law enforcement, and why.

With your support, we will start 2022 with a baseline that Seattle must be different than what has occurred and continues to occur to countless African Americans at the hands of police officers. Our own officers will work with community leaders to change OUR narrative.

  • Budgeting that Ensures Training, Proper Response, and Needed Staffing: We need to move beyond arbitrary and divisive public safety budget debates and align the needs of our entire community with the mandate of ending bias, improving response times, and reducing crime. We need the right kind of personnel to respond—like social workers and addiction specialists when an armed officer isn’t needed or appropriate. Accountability and training—and appropriate staffing for our growing city—require resources and reforms. We can do both.
  • Greater investment in proven upstream prevention and intervention programs, building up successful community-driven models that reduce gun violence, identify and mentor at-risk youth, assist crime victims and address trauma, and provide mental health support.
  • Expand “Safe Harbors” for individuals in crisis, including emergency supportive housing, sobriety centers, long term care and rehabilitation services, and other culturally and medically appropriate locations for people to begin the process of recovery and rebuilding lives.
  • Invest in existing – and build new – programs to increase recruitment and retention of fire fighters, police and other first responders from Seattle communities. Utilizing Running Start, Seattle Promise and other tools, Seattle can build training and coursework to match our values for first responders, prepare for the changing nature of this work, and reflect what fire fighters and police officers are encountering in the field. This includes skills related to Race and Social Justice Initiatives and implicit bias, but also conflict de-escalation and crisis communications. By providing onramps and certification opportunities that increase diversity and expanding opportunities for advancement among BIPOC responders, we build a public safety system that is representative of our city and restores a sense of pride and public trust in our police and fire departments.
  • Our Race and Data Initiative: With the assistance of experts in technology, the developer community, data mining and the use of test cases, for the first time in Seattle’s history we will daylight and organize behavioral data to address how Seattle can address institutional and historic racism. Under this initiative, we will better understand who are denied jobs; what level of housing discrimination exists; who are treated unfairly in our court systems; who is most likely to be the victim of violence. We will not be afraid to examine our City’s frailties as this will be a first step in healing as a city.
  • Beyond Training and Reform, A Pledge: In addition to state-mandated reforms in training, techniques, and conduct, I would like every sworn police officer in Seattle to watch the 8 minutes and 46 seconds of George Floyd’s murder in Minneapolis and voluntarily sign an open letter stating: The Inhumane Treatment of Fellow Human Beings Will Not Be Tolerated In Seattle. To further this mission, I will work to personally recruit officers looking to be internal change agents, heroes within the department to help coach, train, love and inspire our officers to be the department we all deserve.

The “us” vs “them” conversation is not working. We must start from the common baseline that every human being deserves respect and dignity.

We all deserve safe streets and communities. We know the difference between peaceful protest and criminal destruction of property. We need real talk. We need leadership.

As Mayor, I’ll never lose sight of the goal: a Seattle police department that is responsive to community needs, that protects all people and neighborhoods without bias.

Health Care for All Seattle Residents

No one in our city should live without access to health care. Cities like San Francisco have developed basic coverage models that provide access to those at risk of falling through the cracks of a costly, cumbersome, and racially inequitable system. Employees of small businesses, gig economy workers, young people, and anyone experiencing homelessness or economic disruption all deserve quality care. Let’s come together and build a system that shows our commitment to a healthy community.

  • Partner with providers and hospitals to allow affordable, point of service or ongoing care
  • Leverage additional foundation and private sector support to offset program costs
  • Work with small businesses to scale program access and cost
  • Make broader care and coverage an integral part of our plan to address homelessness; as we expand treatment and services, it is less expensive to offer comprehensive and preventative care than rely on emergency rooms and first responders.

Launching this type of program will require trust and collaboration, bringing all parties to the table with a common goal of providing coverage and support to all in our city. I’m excited to take on this important and overdue challenge.

Taking on the Climate Crisis – and Securing an Emerald City for Generations to Come

With temperatures rising year over year and less than a decade left to prevent the worst effects of climate change, Seattle must set the example as America’s leading climate-forward city – and we cannot leave anyone behind.

I will define a bold climate agenda guided by science that sets ambitious and necessary goals, so we can do our part. Every issue is connected to our environment – housing, transportation, the economy, racial and social justice. Climate action cannot be an afterthought or a secondary consideration.

Addressing the climate crisis with urgency – and agency – we will:

  • Develop a localized clean energy economy through new, green, union jobs in energy, transportation, and construction and retrofitting – with a just transition, strong labor standards, and apprenticeships that ensure workers thrive.
  • Establish truly 100% Clean Buildings – by ending the use of natural gas in new construction, supporting efforts to replace aging gas systems with clean electricity in existing homes and buildings, and expanding adoption and accessibility of rooftop solar.
  • Better connect our neighborhoods to each other and within, through strong transit networks, walkable and bikeable pathways, and by committing to thoughtful urban planning where jobs, schools, childcare, and other needs are proximate to dense and affordable housing.
  • Preserve and invest in Seattle’s world-class parks, protect p-patches and encourage community gardening, conserve and expand our tree canopy, and fight air and stormwater pollution with an emphasis on environmental justice.

We all have a stake in preventing climate catastrophe – and, more so, an obligation to our youth and future generations to live up to this moment.

From crisis rises opportunity – and as your Mayor, I will bring the city together around a shared vision to defeat climate change and ensure a healthy environment and a more equitable city for all.

A Robust Transportation Network and Infrastructure to Match

Access to affordable, reliable transportation opens new doors and a city full of possibilities. We need the kind of expansive and synergistic transit system that connects people to the places they want to go and lives up to this city’s innovative spirit.

Meanwhile, Seattle’s decaying infrastructure puts this potential at risk – ill-equipped to keep up with the city’s growth, creating long commutes and transportation headaches. We must solve existing issues and proactively respond to future challenges.

With your vote, I will act on critical transportation priorities to:

  • As we emerge from the pandemic, get transit back on track, by increasing frequency of service, broadening route options, and working with Metro to better connect different methods of transportation.
  • Increase e-bike usage and support electric cars by placing and constructing charging stations so they are widely available and conveniently located. As demand for gasoline decreases, work to clean up and repurpose valuable land for electric vehicles, affordable housing, retail, and community uses.
  • Accelerate repair and maintenance of aging facilities like the West Seattle Bridge, Magnolia Bridge, and other critical infrastructure needs that connect our neighborhoods and people.
  • Continue investing in safe sidewalks and bike lanes while implementing Vision Zero concepts that will help keep every commuter safe.
  • Listen to and act on the needs of transit and rideshare drivers – investing in solutions to ensure safety and wellbeing on the job, and furthering first-in-the-nation organizing protections.
  • Push the boundaries of transportation innovation, work to expedite Sound Transit 3 construction, explore groundbreaking potential proposals like Cascadia high speed rail, and work with the Biden administration to secure funding for new and existing projects.

As Mayor, I’ll look holistically at our transportation system, to improve service, make needed infrastructure investments, and committing to equitable, reliable service for every resident.

By doing so, we will lower emissions, reduce commute times, and boast a world-class transportation system that connects neighbors to jobs, schools, and each other.

Reducing Gun Violence in our City

Gun violence is a preventable public health crisis that disproportionately impacts BIPOC and lower income communities. It is a crisis that has grown in Seattle, where a full 50% of firearm homicides take the lives of Black residents, primarily young men, a number hugely disproportionate to the population as a whole.

This overall rise in gun violence is made worse by recent white supremacist action, creating the need to act on open carry and public intimidation and threat by those who come to our city seeking to do harm. As a community we will have zero tolerance for hate, and zero tolerance for armed intimidation.

We must take action to reduce gun violence in our city – and across the state and nation. While state preemption laws prevent Seattle from taking unilateral action to ban firearms and firearm use in our city, we can elect a Mayor who will be a strong advocate for responsible gun laws, and will work locally to to address gun crimes and health impacts including:

  • Establishing an executive-level position to coordinate citywide gun violence prevention policy and coordination, making sure we are working alongside local, regional, state and federal officials and agencies to improve safety and reduce violence.
  • Improving education and outreach, from making sure residents understand that we are all safer with fewer guns in our homes, to safe storage for those who do legally possess firearms.
  • Investing in community based response for people and places most impacted by gun violence.
  • Building and enhancing Seattle’s partnership with King County on firearm enforcement, making sure we employ the data gathering, public health leadership, and law enforcement strategies needed to reduce violence in our homes and communities.

As Mayor, I will prioritize a safe and welcoming city – regardless of where you live, work, express your faith, or go to school. We must reduce the threats of gun violence and give everyone a chance to live life to their fullest potential.[18]

—Bruce Harrell’s campaign website (2021)[19]

2015

Harrell's website highlighted the following campaign themes:

The world will step aside for a community that knows where it is going. In our district, we know that building a community starts with our preschoolers and extends to our college students. We recognize that our transportation systems and modes of travel affect where we live; our public safety affects how we live and the pursuit to improve ourselves and others reflects our purpose to live. We will define ourselves as a community that respects each other and are intolerant of menaces. We strive for a healthy community; thriving economic development; an active cultural community; a sustainable environmental community; and most of all, a community that loves.[20][18]

Personal

Note: Please contact us if the personal information below requires an update.
Harrell has a wife, Joanne.[12]

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Seattle.gov, "About Mayor Bruce Harrell," accessed September 9, 2024
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 LinkedIn, "Bruce Harrell," accessed September 9, 2024
  3. Bruce Harrell campaign website, "About," accessed September 9, 2024
  4. 4.0 4.1 The Seattle Times, "‘Enough is enough’: Bruce Harrell says Seattle’s fumbles prompted him to leave retirement, run for mayor," July 8, 2021
  5. The Seattle Times, "Legal careers: How Seattle mayoral candidates Bruce Harrell and M. Lorena González practiced law," October 3, 2021
  6. King County.gov, "King County Election Results," November 6, 2007
  7. King County.gov, "King County Election Results," November 8, 2011
  8. 8.0 8.1 The Seattle Times, "Seattle City Council picks Tim Burgess to replace Bruce Harrell as temporary mayor," September 18, 2017
  9. 9.0 9.1 The Seattle Times, "Bruce Harrell third incumbent who won’t seek re-election to Seattle City Council," April 4, 2019
  10. King County.gov, "King County Election Results," August 6, 2013
  11. The Seattle Times, "Bruce Harrell takes commanding lead over M. Lorena González in Seattle’s mayoral race," November 3, 2021
  12. 12.0 12.1 seattle.gov, "About Councilmember Bruce Harrell," accessed December 11, 2021
  13. Bruce Harrell for Seattle Mayor, "About Bruce," accessed December 11, 2021
  14. City of Seattle, "Law, Rules and Information for Filers," accessed September 19, 2014
  15. City of Seattle, "Seattle City Council Districts," accessed December 31, 2014
  16. King County Elections, "Official primary election results," accessed August 12, 2015
  17. electbruceharrell.com, "Endorsements and Supporters," accessed July 21, 2015
  18. 18.0 18.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  19. Bruce Harrell's 2021 campaign website, "Issues," accessed October 22, 2021
  20. electbruceharrell.com, "Official campaign website," accessed July 21, 2015

Political offices
Preceded by
Jenny Durkan
Mayor of Seattle
2022-Present
Succeeded by
-
Preceded by
Ed Murray (D)
Mayor of Seattle
2017-2017
Succeeded by
Tim Burgess
Preceded by
-
Seattle City Council District 2
2008-2020
Succeeded by
Tammy Morales