Mayor Freddie O'Connell is walking into the second half of his term on a tightrope. What he's saying: That dichotomy was front of mind during a recent interview with Axios. But O'Connell said his views ultimately mirror the growing optimism of the city he oversees. - "The more local and focused I stay, the happier I am about where things are," he told us. "It's a great thing to be in a growing city where crime is going down, schools are improving and finances are stable."
Why it matters: At the midway point in his term, O'Connell is fine-tuning the pitch for his reelection bid. Zoom in: His message is likely to include an emphasis on his signature transportation program Choose How You Move, which voters approved last year, and the city's new 10-year plan for boosting affordable housing. - "We've made sure that for a generation to come, we're making investments in transit and infrastructure that [seemed] literally impossible, and we did that in just one year," O'Connell says.
Yes, but: If O'Connell is optimistic, he is also clear-eyed about the headwinds his administration faces, especially from Republican elected officials ranging from President Trump to state lawmakers. The big picture: Inroads he'd made with state Republicans faltered this summer based on his response to Trump's immigration crackdown. A congressional investigation is ongoing. - Federal dynamics also flipped after Trump's victory. O'Connell says the city went from "direct, cabinet-level" collaboration with the Biden administration on issues like infrastructure funding, health policies and gun violence prevention to "direct opposition from the Trump-Vance administration."
The arrival of a new governor in 2027 will likely usher in another shift. The frontrunner in the race, U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, is a vocal critic. - "I absolutely think the nature of the partnership and collaboration we have had with the state government is likely to change as a result of the election," O'Connell says.
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