In a media gaggle after his State of the City Speech, Mayor Justin Bibb was asked to reflect on the good week he had been having. The jersey barriers were gone from Public Square, a large police cadet class started training and City Council passed his TIF district legislation.
The mayor made a smooth-as-butter pivot to hint about a second term.
โIโm looking forward to the next two years of my first term to continue building on the promises I made when I was running for mayor in 2021,โ he said. โI inherited a long to-do list, and that list wonโt be complete in four years.โ
But a month later, Bibbโs toast is falling buttered-side-down. City Council members have taken notice.
First came the story, broken by News 5โs Sarah Buduson, that Bibbโs new public safety advisor, Phillip McHugh, was accused in a lawsuit of violating an elderly Black coupleโs civil rights when he worked as a police officer in Washington, D.C. And whatโs more, Buduson reported that McHugh was a college roommate of Bibbโs at American University.
The mayorโs office has defended the hire, saying McHugh brings a โunique set of experience, knowledge and new ideas,โ and that the now-settled lawsuit did not result in a finding of liability against him.
Ward 5 Council Member Richard Starr delivered an 11-minute broadside Monday night calling on McHugh to resign โ all while wearing a t-shirt emblazoned with the phrase, โWhoโs getting fired.โ Members Anthony Hairston and Kevin Conwell joined him.
โThis administration is telling us who they are as well as who they value and respect, and weโd be fools not to believe them,โ Starr said. Then, riffing on Bibbโs campaign slogan, he added, โFour years ago, we were told, โCleveland Canโt Wait.โ Look at our city. Weโre still waiting.โ
Then there was the news that the price of Bibbโs lakefront development plan is rising. This week the administration sought approval for $260,000 in cost overruns, plus another $140,000 for new work. Lurking just beneath the surface of the conversation was the question of whether the Browns will remain on the lakefront or ditch the city for Brook Park.
Council President Blaine Griffin called in to WTAMโs David Blomquist โ known on the air as Bloomdaddy โ to explain why he isnโt giving Bibb the money yet. Griffin said council would not be a rubber stamp for the mayor.
โCleveland City Council should never be surprised and we should always be in the loop,โ the council president said. โAnd quite frankly, we just got something that we want more explanation of.โ
Griffin hasnโt yet said whether heโll run against Bibb in 2025, and itโs fairly early for a candidate to jump into the race.
But the McHugh hire and lakefront uncertainty are exactly the sorts of things Bibb can expect his future opponent โ whoever that might be โ to harp on a year from now.

