Mohammad Faraj stands at a microphone at the Happy Dog
Ward 7 Cleveland City Council candidate Mohammad Faraj talks to voters at a Democratic event for local candidates at the Happy Dog. Credit: Nick Castele / Signal Cleveland

Ward 7 Cleveland City Council candidate Mohammad Faraj is second only to Council President Blaine Griffin in campaign fundraising this year. 

Faraj brought in nearly $72,000 in the first six months of the year, unaudited campaign filings show. Griffin raised $78,000. After passing on a run for mayor, heโ€™s unopposed in Ward 6 on the East Side. 

Ward 7 covers Tremont, Ohio City and parts of Detroit-Shoreway and downtown. The seat is up for grabs with no incumbent in the mix. 

Faraj tapped many donors in Clevelandโ€™s western suburbs, where he grew up. He also raised money from the city proper and other states. He has spent about half of his haul, reporting $35,400 on hand as of June 30. 

Austin Davis, another Ward 7 hopeful, was the third-highest fundraiser among council candidates citywide who filed disclosures. He raised almost $43,000 and had just less than $30,300 on hand. Davisโ€™ donors were based in Cleveland, the suburbs and other cities around the country.

Together, the two candidates raised almost $115,000. That makes Ward 7 the highest-dollar council race in the city so far โ€” at least measured by 2025 fundraising. 

In an era of multibillion-dollar presidential brawls, a local race in the low six figures may as well be funded with couch cushion money. But shirts, yard signs and mailers donโ€™t pay for themselves. 

The third candidate in the race, Mike Rogalski, did not file a semiannual report. Local candidates donโ€™t have to file semiannuals if they raise less than $10,000. 

The filings capture raising and spending only through June 30. Candidates have been holding fundraisers and spending money since then. The Cuyahoga County Board of Elections hasnโ€™t audited these reports for math errors or other discrepancies. 

Here are the top 10 fundraisers among Cleveland City Council candidates in the first half of 2025:

  1. $78,605 โ€” Blaine Griffin, Ward 6
  2. $71,993 โ€” Mohammad Faraj, Ward 7 
  3. $42,658 โ€” Austin Davis, Ward 7
  4. $39,230 โ€” Danny Kelly, Ward 12
  5. $35,175 โ€” Anthony Hairston, Ward 10
  6. $27,356 โ€” Richard Starr, Ward 5
  7. $24,771 โ€” Jasmin Santana, Ward 14
  8. $24,287 โ€” Stephanie Howse-Jones, Ward 8
  9. $22,009 โ€” Rebecca Maurer, Ward 5
  10. $19,759 โ€” Tanmay Shah, Ward 12

Weโ€™ll get our next look at candidatesโ€™ pocketbooks Aug. 28, the last filing deadline before the Sept. 9 primary. 

Government Reporter
I follow how decisions made at Cleveland City Hall and Cuyahoga County headquarters ripple into the neighborhoods. I keep an eye on the power brokers and political organizers who shape our government. I am a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and have covered politics and government in Northeast Ohio since 2012.