Nashville Councilman Freddie O’Connell Announces Plan to Run for Mayor in 2023

Metro Nashville Councilman for District 19 Freddie O’Connell announced, according to The Tennessean on Thursday, that he plans to run as Nashville’s next mayor in 2023.

O’Connell has been a councilmember since 2015, serving the downtown and Germantown area of Nashville.

In 2015, O’Connell took 54.3 percent of the vote in the four-way nonpartisan race, so a run-off was not required. In 2019, the incumbent O’Connell ran unopposed and, in accordance with the Charter of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, would be term-limited in 2023 from his district seat on the council.

Since moving there in 2007, O’Connell has been very active in his Salemtown neighborhood and engaged in the issue of transportation, having served on the board of directors of Nashville MTA (Metropolitan Transit Authority) and as a member of the Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee, according to his website. O’Connell has consistently expressed concern over the affordable housing and homelessness situation in Nashville, and was critical on social media of how the mayor’s office has been handling aspects of the crisis.

O’Connell supported and voted for the $9 billion transit plan called Let’s Move Nashville, originally introduced by Mayor Megan Barry – who left office in disgrace and was then supported by her successor, Vice Mayor David Briley.

At the time, O’Connell told Nashville Scene there were things in the plan to be critical of, but it was an “easy yes” for him when weighing the $9 billion plan to the status quo, pointing to the prospects of increasing the number of affordable housing units.

In a personal Facebook post on April 18, 2018, which the Transit Alliance of Middle Tennessee shared with his permission, O’Connell explained his yes vote on the transit plan to address what he called “our mobility crisis,” and warned against a “better plan.”

The transit plan went before the voters, as required in the legislature’s 2017 passage of the IMPROVE Act which – in addition to increasing gas and fuel taxes during a year the state had $1 billion in surplus revenues – enabled a way to implement mass transit planning and funding.

The voters of Nashville and Davidson County delivered a crushing defeat to the transit plan in the May 1, 2018, referendum by a margin of 64 to 36 percent, The Tennessee Star reported.

O’Connell also voted for the 34 and 37 percent property tax increases for the USD and GSD, respectively, on June 16, 2020.  The huge property tax increase came during the financial crisis associated with the COVID-19 pandemic that was exacerbated by Mayor John Cooper’s restrictions on Nashville’s economic engine of entertainment and tourism. The passage of the tax increase prompted a citizen-led recall effort of the council members and Mayor John Cooper.

Following the violent riot in downtown Nashville on May 30, 2020, during which the courthouse was set on fire, there was damage to numerous buildings and police vehicles, and warrants were issued against three people. The warrants were subsequently recalled, but in the meantime, O’Connell asked the mayor to request the resignation of then Metro Nashville Police Chief Steve Anderson.

In 2021, O’Connell tweeted that he invested in a project, Moving Nashville Forward, that would provide the city’s first guaranteed basic income pilot.

As for Cooper, who is serving his first term as mayor of Nashville, he has not made a formal announcement about his plans for the 2023 election.

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Laura Baigert is a senior reporter at The Star News Network, where she covers stories for The Tennessee Star.
Photo “Freddie O’Connell ” by Freddie O’Connell.

 

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7 Thoughts to “Nashville Councilman Freddie O’Connell Announces Plan to Run for Mayor in 2023”

  1. Mary

    Dear God, please don’t vote for this dood, people.

  2. Wolf Woman

    Freddie is a progressive Peter Pan wannabe. One of his top 3 priorities is:
    Equity (equality of outcome, not equality of opportunity) and inclusion (all “intersectional” minorities come first) in economic development. Poor baby didn’t get to go to the World’s Fair in Knoxville and never got over it.

    He looks up to and follows the example of Elizabeth Warren so maybe he’s going to claim to be part Cherokee and use his minority status as a race card in the election. https://ballotpedia.org/Freddie_O%27Connell

  3. Mark Knofler

    He’s like Steve Cohen, afraid of water (that’s a bad hygiene reference for the liberals in attendance). The local media keeps elevating this moron, since the only news in Nashville has to come from the dregs of east Nashville.

    Between this clown and the Soros Circus running for DA, Nashville will quickly devolve into SF or Austin. Killing the tourism golden goose. You can’t walk down Broadway with being acousted by drug addled homeless person. And the city as a whole is filthy, which makes since, as Public Works was given a raise to stay home.

  4. mikey whipwreck

    this woke joke will fit right in

    he is tons worse than cooper and that says a lot!

  5. LM

    Voted for the property tax increase?? Nope.

  6. Trevor

    I hope the state and local gop party will start fielding candidates for mayor and local races. The one party liberal rule has not turned out very well for Nashville. Hey GOP you did the right thing splitting up the congressional districts, there are a lot of conservatives that live In Davidson county. If we field a candidate that cuts property taxes and demands that metro government become a lot more efficient they will win. Metro has become an employment agency for the liberals.

  7. ArKayne

    So, apparently Ol’ Freddie here doesn’t think Cooper is shoving Nashville down the hole of leftist financial and social ruin fast enough. Good to know.

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