Photo: Nashville Mayor-elect Freddie O’Connell surrounded by his daughters at his victory party on Sept. 14, 2023. Photo Credit: John Partipilo
By Adam Friedman [Tennessee Lookout -CC BY-NC-ND 4.0] –
Metro Nashville Council member Freddie O’Connell will be the fourth straight mayor to ascend from the city’s legislative branch to the executive seat after winning Thursday night’s runoff election.
O’Connell grabbed 64% of the vote, while his opponent, former Republican strategist Alice Rolli, snagged 36%. A total of 114,103 people voted in runoff.
“We’re going to begin a transition process and it’s going focus on three important things that we’ve all talked about over past year,” O’Connell said to packed room at East Side Bowl in Nashville’s Madison neighborhood during his victory speech.
The 46-year-old mayor-elect is a Nashville native and tech entrepreneur who served as chair of Metro Nashville Transit before his first election to the Metro Council in 2015.
When O’Connell announced his campaign in April 2022, he initially expected to challenge Nashville Mayor John Cooper. He was soon joined in the field by former Metro official Matt Wiltshire and council member Sharon Hurt.
All signs pointed to Cooper running again, but six months before election day, he held a press conference announcing he would not seek a second term. The field expanded quickly, with state Sens. Jeff Yarbro and Heidi Campbell joining as well as businessman Jim Gingrich, property assessor Vivian Wilhoite, Rolli and several other candidates.
O’Connell received the most votes among the 12-person field in the August general election. Nashville’s elections are nonpartisan but require a candidate to win 50% plus one of the votes in an election to avoid a top-two runoff.
O’Connell’s general election campaign focused on his experience in government and anti-establishment streaks, often touted his “no” vote against a new Tennessee Titans stadium, and used slogans like “I want you to stay” and “More ‘Ville, Less Vegas.”
The campaign pivoted to a more partisan message in the runoff election, emphasizing O’Connell’s Democratic Party bona fides and attacking Rolli’s Republican ties and attendance at former President Donald Trump’s inauguration.
O’Connell also made overtures to Nashville’s business community in the runoff. The Nashville Banner reported he met with honky tonk owner Steve Smith, who briefly funded O’Connell attack advertisements in the general election but backed off in the runoff.
O’Connell raised nearly $1.2 million during the runoff from groups often on opposite sides of issues, including union-affiliated and business-affiliated political action committees.
The money followed O’Connell because he was heavily favored to win.
After securing herself a spot in the runoff, Rolli never managed to grab momentum in the race.
She tried to position herself as a moderate Republican candidate above party politics whose experience outside Nashville’s local government structures positioned her better to run it.
Rolli previously worked in Gov. Bill Haslam’s administration, as the campaign manager for U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander’s 2014 reelection bid and currently runs her own consulting firm.
One of the first challenges facing O’Connell will be the 19 new faces on the 40-member Metro Council. Council members can only serve two consecutive terms in their positions.
Four at-large Metro Council at-large seats and three council districts were also on the runoff ballot Thursday.
Burkley Allen, Quinn Evans-Segall, Olivia Hill and Delisha Porterfield won the four runoff at-large council members. Incumbent Zulfat Suara will be the other at-large council member after she won enough votes in the August general election to avoid the runoff.
Olivia Hill will make history as the first transgender person to be elected to office in Tennessee.
Mike Cortese won in district 4 and Tasha Ellis in district 29. As of Thursday at 9 p.m., Jeff Eslick led Eric Patton by 27 votes in district 11.
It will be a short transition for O’Connell, who will sworn in as mayor sometime before the Oct. 3 Metro Council meeting.
*Note: This article was edited for length and style by The Tennessee Conservative per The Tennessee Lookout’s republishing guidelines.
2 Responses
Amazing that only 114,103 people voted in the runoff. Did I actually read that correctly? This shows that the conservative vote did not show up. We have got to get out and vote people. Last I heard the population of Nashville was over 600,000 people and I would safely assume at least 60% of those are voting age and registered. Are we saying that only 41,077 people as republicans’/conservatives voted? This is our fault for not doing what we need to! This needs to be fixed or Nashville will continue to spiral into a California-ish landscape. Trust me, that’s why we escaped…
Recon city folk have gave up. “Voting” machines factor too.