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      • Phoenix has a form of government called the council-manager plan. The council-manager plan has three main positions - mayor, council member and city manager.
      www.phoenix.gov › citymanager › how-city-organized
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  2. Barton is the Chief Administrative Officer for the City of Phoenix and oversees the largest council-manager form of government in the United States, with 14,500 city employees, including seven employee unions and associations, and a $3.4 billion annual budget.

    • Mayor Kate Gallego
    • Phoenix Council District 1: Ann O'Brien
    • Phoenix Council District 2: Jim Waring
    • Phoenix Council District 3: Debra Stark
    • Phoenix Council District 4: Laura Pastor
    • Phoenix Council District 5: Betty Guardado
    • Phoenix Council District 6: Kevin Robinson
    • Phoenix Council District 7: Carlos Galindo-Elvira
    • Phoenix Council District 8: Kesha Hodge Washington
    • When Are Elections? Are Council Members Term-Limited?

    Kate Gallego, a Democrat, became the mayor of Phoenix in 2019 and is up for reelection in 2024. She was elected to the City Council in 2013 as the council representative for District 8, part of downtown and south Phoenix. She drew support by campaigning for a more environmentally friendly and urban city and enhanced public transportation. Gallego w...

    A moderate Republican first elected in November 2020, Ann O'Brien is known for her steadfast support for the Phoenix police. She was formerly a member of the Deer Valley Unified School District governing board and the Arizona School Board Association board of directors. Her next election is in November 2024.

    Jim Waring is a Republican first elected in 2011 and re-elected in 2013, 2017 and 2022. He is known for his fiscal conservatism. Waring was formerly a state senator. He ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. House of Representatives in 2010 before joining the City Council. He is serving his last term.

    Debra Stark is a moderate Democrat elected in 2017 and reelected in 2021. Prior to joining the City Council, Stark worked as a planner for the city and Maricopa County. She has a passion for making transportation infrastructure safer. Her next election is in November 2024.

    Laura Pastor is a Democrat elected in 2013 and reelected in 2017 and 2022. She is serving her last term. Pastor chairs Phoenix's economic development subcommittee and the Valley Metro Regional Public Transit Authority. The daughter of the late Congressman Ed Pastor, she is mulling a run for the seat her father held in the U.S. House of Representati...

    Betty Guardado is a Democrat elected in 2019. She was formerly a representative for the local hotel workers union, Unite Here Local 11. Guardado chairs Phoenix's Community and Cultural Investment Subcommittee and has said she's focused on bringing more affordable housing, grocers and businesses to west Phoenix. Her next election is in November 2024...

    Kevin Robinson is an independent elected in 2023 to replace Sal DiCiccio, who was term-limited. Robinson formerly worked for the Phoenix police department for 36 years ending as an assistant police chief. He is also a criminal justice professor at Arizona State University's Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions. Robinson sits on t...

    Carlos Galindo-Elvira is a Democrat who was appointed to the seat in April 2024 to fill the vacancy left by former Councilwoman Yassamin Ansari. Galindo-Elviras has committed to running for the special vacancy election Nov. 5, but not the regular election in which someone runs for the four-year term. If he wins the special vacancy election, he woul...

    Kesha Hodge Washington, a Democrat, is the first black woman elected to Phoenix City Council. She was sworn in April 17, 2023. An attorney from Laveen, Hodge Washington defeated incumbent Councilman Carlos Garcia in a runoff election in March. She contrasted herself to Garcia, a former immigrants' rights activist, by proposing targeted problem solv...

    Phoenix's leaders serve four-year terms and are elected on a rotating basis in even-numbered years. For example, the mayor and odd-numbered districts are up for election in 2024, while the even-numbered districts will see their next election in 2026. Council members are term-limited after three consecutive terms. The mayor is limited to two consecu...

    • Taylor Seely
    • Phoenix City Hall Reporter
  3. See also: Council-manager government. The city of Phoenix uses a council-manager system. In this form of municipal government, an elected city council including the mayor, serves as the city's primary legislative body and appoints a chief executive called a city manager to oversee day-to-day municipal operations and implement the council's ...

  4. Phoenix operates under a council-manager form of government. The Phoenix City Council is comprised of the mayor and eight council members, who serve as the legislative and policymaking body of the municipal government. The city manager works closely with the mayor and council members to assist them in formulating policies and programs.

  5. Sep 1, 2021 · Phoenix is the largest U.S. city with a council-manager form of government where the manager oversees day-to-day operations and the position reports directly to the council.

  6. The City of Phoenix, Arizona, generally believed to be the largest U.S. city with the council-manager form of government, was also one of the first in the nation to adopt the system. It was included as part of the city charter approved by voters by a margin of nearly two-to-one in October 1913.

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