NATIONAL NEWS

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens makes the case for reelection

Apr 29, 2025, 2:04 AM

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens poses for a photo, Friday, Feb. 21, 2025, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike St...

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens poses for a photo, Friday, Feb. 21, 2025, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

ATLANTA (AP) — After leading Atlanta out of the COVID-19 pandemic and a coinciding crime spike, Mayor Andre Dickens believes he deserves a second term as the city hosts its most high-profile event since the 1996 Olympics.

Dickens recently launched his reelection campaign with $1.4 million in the bank and support from Atlanta’s business and political elite including civil rights hero and former mayor Andrew Young and Jason Carter, Jimmy Carter’s grandson.

Atlanta’s next mayor will preside as visitors flood the city for eight matches of the 2026 World Cup. No prominent challengers have emerged for the fall election. If that holds through candidate qualifying in August, Dickens’ second mayoral bid could forgo the drama of 2021, when the then-city councilman won a surprise victory over two better-known rivals.

Dickens says he’s fulfilling promises to lower crime and boost affordable housing. And he shrugs off criticism from activists who say he’s alienated the city’s progressives — most notably for his support of a $115 million police and firefighter training center derided by opponents as “Cop City.”

“The city got stabilized during my term, unified during my term, and is on a path that everybody can want to come here to raise a family,” Dickens told The Associated Press in an interview.

Emory University law professor Fred Smith said Dickens has been an “energizing force,” adding he rallied support for building affordable housing and helped thwart efforts for Atlanta’s wealthiest neighborhood to break away from the city.

“In terms of where he has done less well, I think a lot of folks who pay close attention to Atlanta government don’t feel heard, especially on issues related to transit and the public training center,” Smith said.

Big days ahead

Atlanta is one of 16 cities in the U.S., Canada and Mexico hosting the World Cup, with a preview this summer when it hosts six matches of the FIFA Club World Cup, another international soccer tournament.

The games will bring more traffic to the increasingly packed city. Like recent mayors, Dickens has been slow to expand public transportation. He backed from plans to start building a light rail line along the city’s Beltline trail, announcing other projects expected to take years to complete. He argues the shift will help higher-need areas.

Regardless, Dickens insisted Atlanta will have a “very festive time” during the World Cup with repaved roads and upgraded lighting.

“I want people to leave knowing our culture, having supported our small businesses, having experienced Atlanta so that they might want to come back as a vacation or bring their business here, open an office here,” Dickens said.

Housing boosts

Dickens promised to build over 20,000 affordable housing units over two terms.

Over half or are under construction. Most are rentals and more than three-quarters are for people making 60% or less of the midpoint household income, which was $85,880 according to 2023 Census Bureau figures. Some are on government-owned land and part of mixed-income housing redevelopments.

Even as it builds, Atlanta is losing affordable units as wealthier people move in and push poorer, longtime residents out, a pattern accelerated after the Olympics.

“Is the need being met to the level that is there? Probably not,” said Vicki Lundy Wilbon, an executive with Integral Group, an Atlanta developer. “But the mayor is doing everything that he, as the mayor of the city, can do.”

Despite investing millions to reduce homelessness, Dickens’ administration was criticized in January when a man died after being crushed in his tent by a bulldozer clearing a homeless camp ahead of Martin Luther King Jr. holiday events.

Dickens called for rethinking how the city clears encampments, but said they are unsafe for people living there and neighbors.

Crime and controversy

Another priority for Dickens was reducing crime, which spiked in Atlanta and other U.S. cities during the pandemic and later fell. In 2024, Atlant’s violent crime fell by 46% and youth crime fell by 23%, law enforcement officials said at a recent press conference with Dickens.

Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum credited Dickens with raising officers’ pay and letting them take home patrol cars, saying the moves retained more officers and halved 911 response times. Dickens also launched sports and job programs for thousands of young people to take a “holistic” approach to crime.

Then there’s “Cop City.”

Dickens has supported the training center since he was a council member, saying Atlanta would benefit from better-trained police.

But the project became a flashpoint for progressive activists who argued it would further militarize police and damage the environment of an adjacent Black neighborhood. Tensions rose when a protester was killed by police who argued he had shot at them.

Efforts to “diminish and vilify” the training center’s critics have created a “deep, deep, deep mistrust between people who could have been this mayor’s greatest allies” and Dickens’ office, said Rohit Malhotra of the Center for Civic Innovation, a progressive group that sought a voter referendum to reject the training center.

Water woes and an oversight fight

Last May, a burst pipe deprived many Atlantans of water for days and Dickens was slammed for poor communication. He now says plans are underway to fix the city’s aging water and sewer system.

The city’s inspector general resigned in February following a long-running feud with Dickens. She accused him of trying to thwart her oversight of City Hall. He said her methods broke the law.

Dickens said he hopes to mend relationships with his critics.

“The unifier in me is going to use the power of being a second-term mayor to bring everybody into the group project,” Dickens said.

___

Kramon is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Kramon on X: .

National News

Associated Press

Authorities believe crash through Illinois after-school building that killed 4 wasn’t targeted

CHATHAM, Ill. (AP) — Authorities said Tuesday they believe a crash through an Illinois after-school building that killed three kids and one teenager wasn’t targeted. The car smashed through a building Monday afternoon, injuring several others in the small city outside of Springfield, Illinois, police said. Officers responded at about 3:20 p.m. to calls about […]

25 minutes ago

President Donald Trump speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Thursday, ...

Associated Press

Numbers that matter from the first 100 days of Trump’s second term

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s first 100 days back in the White House have been a demolition job — and that’s a point of pride for his administration. For the Republican administration, the raw numbers on executive actions, deportations, reductions in the federal workforce, increased tariff rates and other issues point toward a renewed […]

31 minutes ago

Protesters march outside a federal court, Thursday, April 3, 2025, where a hearing took place for a...

Associated Press

Appeals court pauses Tufts student’s transfer to Vermont in immigration detention case

A federal appeals court has paused a judge’s order to bring a Turkish Tufts University student from a Louisiana immigration detention center back to New England this week so it can consider an emergency motion filed by the government. The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New York, ruled Monday that a three-judge […]

36 minutes ago

President Donald Trump speaks as he welcomes the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles NFL footba...

Associated Press

Trump marks his first 100 days in office with a rally in Michigan, a state rocked by his tariffs

WARREN, Mich. (AP) — President Donald Trump is holding a rally in Michigan on Tuesday to mark the first 100 days of his second term, staging his largest public event since returning to the White House in a state that has been especially rocked by his steep trade tariffs and combative attitude toward Canada. Trump […]

56 minutes ago

File - Vehicles move along the 2023 Chevrolet Bolt EV and EUV assembly line at the General Motors O...

Associated Press

GM posts strong Q1 results, but will reassess expectations for 2025 due to auto tariffs

General Motors posted strong financial results for its first quarter Tuesday, but says it will reassess its expectations for 2025 due to auto tariffs. The automaker is pushing back its conference call to discuss its guidance and quarterly results until Thursday, so that it can assess potential tariff changes. Late Monday The Wall Street Journal […]

1 hour ago

FILE - Elon Musk flashes his T-shirt that reads "DOGE" to the media as he walks on South Lawn of th...

Associated Press

Trump’s team has disrupted some $430B in federal funds, top Democrats say, often against the law

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration has frozen, stalled or otherwise disrupted some $430 billion in federal funds — from disease research to Head Start for children to disaster aid — in what top Democrats say is an “unprecedented and dangerous” assault on programs used by countless Americans. Sen. Patty Murray of Washington and Rep. […]

2 hours ago

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens makes the case for reelection