Voters reelect Black Iowa mayor targeted by pro-police group
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Voters in Iowa’s eighth-largest city, Waterloo, reelected the city’s first Black mayor and chose three Black candidates for City Council, which will have its Black majority for the first time ever.
The historic outcome of Tuesday’s election followed a campaign marked by bitter debates over policing and race in the city, where less than 17% of roughly 67,300 people are Black.
Quentin Hart, who became Waterloo’s first Black mayor in 2015, won a fourth two-year term to lead the city by defeating a white challenger, Margaret Klein, who campaigned as a champion of the police.
The four City Council seats that were on the ballot were won by three Black newcomers — pharmacist Rob Nichols, music educator John Chiles and artist Nia Wilder — and a white incumbent, Ray Feuss. All four defeated candidates that were endorsed by Cedar Valley Backs the Blue, a political action committee that formed in May to oppose Hart’s reelection and support what it called “pro-law enforcement candidates.”