Seattle, this is the week that will decide what kind of city we are. Not in speeches or slogans, but in ballots cast, or not cast. The stakes are higher than any poll will tell you: whether we choose courage over fear, compassion over convenience, and hope over the slow decay of cynicism. If you’re tired of watching the same people make the same promises while your neighbors struggle to stay housed, fed, and heard, don’t sit this one out.
I’ve called this place home for nearly 80 years. I have seen this city through its seasons of promise and heartbreak, through booms that built towers and busts that broke families. I’ve watched too many mayors and executives come and go, each one pledging affordability, opportunity, and equity. Yet too often, those promises have gone unfulfilled, while the cost of living soared and our neighbors were pushed out, evicted, or became unhoused.
This election season has been especially hard to watch. Too much of the coverage flatters the powerful instead of challenging them. Too often, the debates focus on who seems “relatable” while the people who most need help are left unseen and unheard. Too many conversations treat the Black community like it begins and ends with Bruce Harrell, forgetting the Black women, mothers, and grandmothers who have carried this city on their backs while being pushed further to its margins. (Marcus Harrison Green, my son, sits on the Stranger’s Election Control Board.)
It pains me. How do we say we “believe women,” but dismiss the words of his niece Monisha Harrell, or the Black mothers who have lost their children to gun violence?
When I worked at what was then the West Hill Family Center (now renamed the Cynthia A. Green Family Center), my phone rang constantly with calls from people in crisis. Parents on the verge of eviction, seniors stretching one check to cover both food and medicine, young people trying to find work but without bus fare to get there. Folks doing everything they can to hold on. They were tired, scared, and desperate for help.
I am no longer at that job, but the calls never really stopped. People still reach out, neighbors, strangers, sometimes former clients, asking for rent assistance, for clothes, for hope. And when I can’t find them the help they need, I ask if they’d like to pray together. We pray that the rent money will come through, that they’ll keep their homes, that tomorrow will be gentler than today.
So when I hear people say they might not vote in our local election, because they’re afraid of what a progressive woman like Katie Wilson, or an immigrant man like Girmay Zahilay in leadership might mean under a Trump administration, I think about what a privilege it must be to let fear make your choices for you. What a privilege it is to choose cynicism over courage, comfort over compassion, and “good enough” over better. And I ask: Has fear ever saved us?
No. It has only kept us from moving forward.
If we can’t find the courage to vote, then when will we? When trans children lose access to healthcare? When immigrants parents continue to be torn away from their children? When our neighbors and friends who have fallen through the cracks and now live on downtown streets are swept away with little warning, their few belongings thrown out, and their dignity treated as disposable? When our teachers, librarians, artists, bus drivers, baristas, the very people who give Seattle its character and soul, are priced out of the city they built, forced to leave with no way back, will we show a spine then? If we can’t act now, when the choice is right in front of us, what makes us think we’ll act later, when the stakes are even higher?
Seattle has always been a place that fights for its better self. That’s why I believe this is still a time to hope—and a time to vote. Not for fear, but for faith. Not for the comfort of the few, but for the dignity of the many.
I was raised to believe that our worth is measured by how we treat those with the least power—by how we lift one another when times are hard, and by how we affirm the dignity of every person. True leadership looks like that. And I’ve seen that spirit in Katie Wilson and Girmay Zahilay, leaders who don’t just perform empathy, but practice it. They see the people I’ve spent my life hearing from—the ones on the edge of eviction, the families choosing between rent and groceries, the young people working two jobs and still falling behind.
Wilson has been out there organizing for higher minimum wages and stronger renter protections. Girmay has been working to lift families out of poverty with bold, innovative ideas like Universal Basic Income. They show up when the cameras aren’t rolling. They listen, they act, and they build coalitions that are multiracial, multigenerational, and rooted not in the love of power, but in the love of people and community. So it simply isn’t true to say they haven’t been present in the community. They’ve been here all along, seen, heard, and hard at work.
The question before us is simple: Who will govern for the most vulnerable among us? Because if government is not for them, it is not for any of us. And the truth is, there are more struggling people than there are hoarding millionaires.
What’s truly at risk is our capacity to hope. When we surrender that, when we stop believing we can do better, Seattle becomes something unrecognizable: a city of wealth without warmth, and glass towers without grace.
I’m old enough that this may be the last time I ever vote for mayor or executive. But I will not cast my vote in fear. I will cast it in faith. Because the values of care, courage, and community that built this city are not dead. They are waiting for us to choose them again.
We can choose despair. Or we can choose to hope, and act, together. Because hope is not naïve. Hope is work. Hope is resilience. Hope is how we keep going, even when the road feels long.
So to the young people who feel like their votes don’t matter: They do, because you matter. You are not just the future, but the key to changing the present. And to my fellow elders who feel tired: Don’t give up. We need you. We need each other. I ask both groups, have your needs been met in these last four years?
Because if not, this is our moment to make it known. We have until Tuesday to remind this city what it stands for. To show that hope still has strength, still has purpose, still has muscle.
Because no light worth following waits for permission to shine, not from City Hall, not from the other Washington. That light begins within us in the courage to speak truth, in the strength to stand together, and in the work of reaching for one another until we all share justice.
Seattle’s soul has always burned brightest in its ordinary people, daring to love this city enough to demand more of it. It’s time to dare again.
Cynthia Green is an eight-decade resident of Seattle who grew up in the Central District, and the namesake of the Cynthia A Green Family Center in Skyway.

My issue / concern with Katie is her lack of executive leadership – I’m sorry but mayor is not a job someone should learn on the fly. Katie has some good policy ideas (based on what she has written for TS), but that is simply not enough.
I really wish she was running for the council (so we could enact legislation) versus mayor (where she’ll be expected to deliver on what the council passes).
As for Girmay, I think he’s shown a good track record (legislatively) but he lacks some of Claudia’s myriad executive experience. I think this will be a tight race – happy to see folks won’t need to select the lesser of two evils.
There hasn’t been even one pro-Harrell guest rant. Can’t there be a semblance of fairness, after all both candidates are Democrats?
One can only wonder if any pro-Harrell pieces were submitted, or submitted but refused.
It’s stunning that so many lefties think an aimless, privileged woman with no full time job experience and a bucket of starry eyed proposals should be our next mayor. I get the disappointment with Harrell, but seriously? Take a minute and really examine any one of Wilson’s big “ideas.” They’re all “conversations” that lead to progressive revenue and some fuzzy result. Her supporters need to grow up and stop demanding that grownups give them hand outs.
Girmay has a blind spot for transit, which is a major component of the King County Exec’s job, and benefits EVERYBODY. Vote Balducci! (And Wilson).
@3: I think the plan is for her parents to make up Seattle’s revenue shortfalls with monthly checks. Just till we’re back on our feet of course.
Pete Hegseth is as inexperienced to be Defense Secretary as Katie Wilson is as inexperienced to be Seattle’s Mayor.
@3 If Harrell had been anything other than a constant failure of a Mayor, I would agree with you. But he hasn’t offered any meaningful leadership. Go back to Bellevue, Bruce.
@7: What leadership failure are you referring to? Can you provide an example?
@6 The same can be true for our actual president of the united states, head of our fbi and countless others in the federal goverment. They elected fucking Arnold and Jesse Ventura as governors as entire states. When did experience become something any of ya’ll fucking cared about?
If Katie Wilson wins, she’s going to go even more bald. Girmay is already bald. If you photoshopped them together and made the result even whiter than Katie Wilson already is, you’d have Ron Davis’ Nosferatu lookin ass.
“Too many conversations treat the Black community like it begins and ends with Bruce Harrell, forgetting the Black women, mothers, and grandmothers who have carried this city on their backs while being pushed further to its margins.” – So raise your sons and grandsons better.
Black black black black black. Only an idiot would want Seattle to become “more black”. As far as the “black community” goes, I deal with it 5 days a week while waiting for the bus downtown. It’s always funny when a fight breaks out between one black and another black, and then 3 or 4 other blacks jump in, and they all start fighting each other, and nobody involved is on anybody else’s side, maybe one black guy was helping another one fight that other black guy, and then they will both turn to fight each other once they get a chance. Comedy gold! The absolute best part is the scowls and even verbal scolds I get from white “progressive” “nonconformist” women, who always have septum piercings and multi-colored dyed hair when I pull out my phone to call the police.
The local crime news also has daily articles about the amazing vibrant never-ending benefits of the “black community”, which is “our greatest strength”.
“the Black mothers who have lost their children to gun violence?”
To other blacks, almost always. You left out that very important detail.
“And I ask: Has fear ever saved us?”
My “fear” of your “sons and grandsons” has saved me from being stabbed downtown more than once. Previously, before my “fear”, I once got randomly stabbed (4 times) for no reason by someone “who could have been Obama’s son”, that’s all it took. I got all my “progressivism” and “white guilt” stabbed out of me. It didn’t help my “progressivism” or “hippieness” that he called me a “white motherfucker” while he was stabbing me out of the blue.
“When trans children lose access to healthcare?”
Good
“Because hope is not naïve.”
Yes it absolutely is. Naivete is actually the main problem with “progressives”, especially the white ones.
@3 The grown-ups are the working class, Phil with your make-believe Hollywood photo of a guy you don’t resemble at all. They’re the ones giving you the hand-out, not the reverse.
I like Bruce as a person better than Katie, based on some things I’ve seen in her campaign, but the rent is too damn high and Bruce is taking too much real estate money, and we do indeed to tax the rich.
We’re paying a yet another hefty rent increase – and on the eve of this election – which I was notified about as soon as they passed rent control at the state level, and which has followed another hefty rent increase disguised as fees. And we’ve had other hefty rent increases under Bruce.
Plus we pay extraordinary electric bills which for years we haven’t been able get anyone to do anything about at the city level or with the proverbial landlords, and much of which has looked, frankly, quite illegal.
Plus the job market sucks in Seattle, as much as some pretend otherwise, and not everybody has the perfect shining resume either (like Bruce, for ex), meaning maybe some of us don’t identify with some of your criticism of Katie’s.
So, despite my earlier posted concerns about Katie, which still hold true, so does the old adage, “it’s complicated” … and … at the end of the day, this election is a class war so we’re voting with the working class for Katie Wilson.