Yemi Mobolade Will Become Colorado Springs’ First Elected Black Mayor

BY: Walker

Published 2 years ago

The city of Colorado Springs made history this week by electing a Black mayor for the first time ever.

via: CNN

“We stand on a mountain of a new era in our city’s history,” Mobolade said in a speech Tuesday night. “Colorado Springs will become an inclusive, culturally rich, economically prosperous safe and vibrant city on a hill that shines brightly.

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Mobolade, an independent, will succeed Mayor John Suthers. Suthers, the state’s former attorney general, had endorsed Williams.

Mobolade will become the first non-Republican to hold the office since Colorado Springs started electing mayors, according to The Gazette. The mayoral election is nonpartisan, but the city – the second-largest in Colorado – is considered a conservative stronghold.

Mobolade campaigned on crime and safety, improving the city’s infrastructure and housing and building a business-friendly city. His opponent, Williams, previously served as a Colorado Springs city councilman after working as a county commissioner and an El Paso County clerk.

Born in Nigeria, Mobolade began a career in quality control manufacturing. He later cofounded the cafe restaurants Good Neighbors Meeting House and The Wild Goose Meeting House, as well as Niche Coaching and Consulting.

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Mobolade served as the city’s small business development administrator and the vice president of business retention and expansion for the Colorado Springs Chamber & Economic Development Corporation.

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