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Wikipedia

Ted Wheeler

Edward Tevis Wheeler (born August 31, 1962)[1] is an American politician who has served as the mayor of Portland, Oregon since 2017. He was Oregon State Treasurer from 2010 to 2016.

Ted Wheeler
53rd Mayor of Portland, Oregon
Assumed office
January 1, 2017
Preceded byCharlie Hales
28th Treasurer of Oregon
In office
March 11, 2010 – January 1, 2017
GovernorTed Kulongoski
John Kitzhaber
Kate Brown
Preceded byBen Westlund
Succeeded byTobias Read
Chair of the Multnomah County Commission
In office
January 1, 2007 – March 11, 2010
Preceded byDiane Linn
Succeeded byJeff Cogen
Personal details
Born
Edward Tevis Wheeler

(1962-08-31) August 31, 1962 (age 61)
Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic (2001–present)
Other political
affiliations
Republican (before 2001)
Spouse
Katrina Maley
(m. 2005; div. 2020)
Children1
EducationStanford University (BA)
Columbia University (MBA)
Harvard University (MPP)
Signature
WebsiteGovernment website

Wheeler was elected in the 2016 Portland mayoral election and reelected in 2020. Formerly a registered Republican,[2] he has been described as a moderate Democrat.[3][4]

Early life and education edit

A sixth-generation Oregonian, Wheeler was born in Portland to a family with roots and wealth in the Oregon timber industry. His father, Sam Wheeler, was executive vice president at Willamette Industries,[5] a Fortune 500 lumber company formed in 1967 by mergers and acquisitions of timber companies (Sam Wheeler sold Wheeler Lumber Company, incorporated in 1900 by Wheeler's great-grandfather, Coleman Wheeler, in Wheeler, Tillamook County, Oregon.[6][7]) Sam Wheeler divorced Ted's mother, Leslie, in 1972; Wheeler was 10 years old at the time. He later discussed his father's alcoholism.[8][9]

Ted Wheeler attended Portland Public Schools, graduating from Lincoln High School.[10] He received a bachelor's degree in economics from Stanford University in 1985. He also earned an MBA from Columbia University in 1989 and a master's in public policy from Harvard University.[11][12] Wheeler worked for several financial services companies, including the Bank of America and Copper Mountain Trust.[13]

Political career edit

Wheeler's political career began with a campaign for the Boston City Council. He finished 11th in a field of 12 candidates in the 1993 Boston City Council election.[14] Wheeler was registered as a Republican until 2001 and described as "the wealthy heir to a timber fortune controlled by social and fiscal conservatives".[15][2] In 2006, he defeated incumbent Multnomah County chair Diane Linn to become chair of the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners,[16] taking office in January 2007.

Multnomah County Commissioner edit

Shortly after his election as chair of the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners, Wheeler worked with his colleagues to balance a county budget that had called for $22.3 million in cuts in 2009.[17] Wheeler also fought to preserve social safety net programs[18] and to eliminate hidden fees from state-issued debit cards.[19]

Following the loss of nearly $16 million in Oregon Common School Fund and Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund investments, Wheeler co-filed a class-action lawsuit with Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum to recover the money after firms misled investors.[20]

Building, preserving and updating public space and infrastructure was a focus during Wheeler's time as County Commissioner. He led efforts to construct new libraries in Kenton[21] and Troutdale[22] and to construct the new East County Courthouse in Multnomah County.[23] Wheeler also fought to fund repairs for the crumbling Sellwood Bridge.[24]

Under Wheeler Portland became Oregon's first municipality to "Ban the Box", which reduces employment discrimination against residents with a criminal record by removing the criminal history check box on forms.[25]

State treasurer edit

 
Wheeler at the 2010 Pendleton Round-Up parade

On March 7, 2010, incumbent Oregon State Treasurer Ben Westlund died of lung cancer. Two days later Governor Ted Kulongoski appointed Wheeler to the office.[13] Wheeler defeated fellow Democrat Rick Metsger in the Democratic primary election on May 18, 2010,[26] and defeated Republican Chris Telfer, Progressive Walt Brown and Michael Marsh of the Constitution Party in the November special election for the rest of Westlund's term, which ended in 2013.[27] He was elected to a second full term in the Oregon state elections, 2012.

Wheeler practiced aggressive financial management, achieving more than $172 million in cash flow savings since 2013. He promoted environmental stewardship, committing to double Oregon's investments in renewable energy resources by January 2020, and double them again by 2030. Wheeler also pledged not to pursue new investments in coal.[28] He promoted the use of ESG (Environmental Social Governance) for all state investments to improve long-term performance, and urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to institute tougher reviews of carbon asset risk disclosures from 45 major corporations.[29]

Wheeler was chair of the Oregon Retirement Savings Task Force, which developed what became the OregonSaves program to assist state residents in saving for retirement.[30] It grew Oregon's pension fund to more than $72 billion, one of the country's five strongest state pension funds.[31]

Portland mayoral campaign edit

 
Wheeler's campaign logo
 
Wheeler speaks to supporters at a campaign event (2015)

Wheeler launched a run for mayor on October 14, 2015.[31][32] He campaigned on addressing income inequality and ensuring government accountability. During his speech, Wheeler promised to build a government that worked "for every person."[33]

Taking care of those in need. Taking responsibility for protecting our environment. Taking action right now to close the gap between our wealthiest and poorest residents by providing economic opportunity for lower-income and middle-income families. Equal access to our government for every person. Understanding that every dollar we spend came from a taxpayer and we need show our respect for how hard that taxpayer worked to earn those dollars by spending them wisely. These are the authentic values of Portland. And these are my values.

— Ted Wheeler

In October 2015, former Portland mayors Vera Katz, Tom Potter, and Sam Adams endorsed Wheeler.[34][35] Gresham Mayor Shane Bemis also endorsed him, as did State Representatives Lew Frederick and Tobias Read, former State Senators Ron Cease, Jane Cease, and Avel Gordly, and 2012 mayoral candidate Eileen Brady.[36][37] Wheeler was also endorsed by Basic Rights Oregon, the Portland Business Alliance, and the Columbia Pacific Building Trades Council.[37]

On May 17 Wheeler was elected mayor by winning the first round with 54% of the vote.[38][39]

Mayoral tenure edit

Wheeler was sworn in on December 30, 2016, and his term began on January 1, 2017.[40][41] One of his first actions was to make initial assignments of city departments (known as bureaus) to the five commissioners, of which the mayor is one. He assigned to himself the Portland Police Bureau, the Portland Development Commission, and the Portland Housing Bureau,[42] among others. He said he intended to reconsider the initial assignments during the annual budget process in April.[43]

In July 2018 The Oregonian newspaper reported that half of arrests in Portland were of people who were homeless. Wheeler, who oversaw the police department, said he saw this as a problem and that it would influence his budgeting decisions.[44] In September 2018, Portland residents who found Wheeler's response to the growth of homeless encampments inadequate petitioned his office and other local agencies to take stronger action.[45]

In September 2020, Wheeler announced his intention to withdraw the city from the Joint Office of Homeless Services partnership with the Multnomah County in a push to get campers on downtown streets into shelters.[46] In 2018, the city auditor found that the city regularly ignored citizen complaints about transient camps. The Oregonian reported the city's lack of response was inconsistent with crackdown on illegal camps instituted earlier in Wheeler's term.[47]

Far-right protests and counterprotests edit

In 2017, after white supremacist Jeremy Joseph Christian murdered two people on a Portland train, Wheeler called for a halt to far-right rallies in Portland. He declined to grant a city permit for an event to be staged by far-right provocateur Joey Gibson, and called on the federal government to revoke a rally permit granted to far-right groups in the federally owned Terry Schrunk Plaza.[48] In asking the federal government to revoke that permit, Wheeler incorrectly stated that "hate speech is not protected by the First Amendment."[49][50] The U.S. General Services Administration declined to revoke the permit.[51] In that rally and subsequent ones in Portland in 2017 and 2018, violence erupted as far-right activists (including Patriot Prayer and the Proud Boys) repeatedly brawled with antifa and other left-wing counter-demonstrators on Portland streets.[52][53][54] In October 2018, Wheeler sought greater power to regulate protests, proposing an ordinance that would give him (in his role as police commissioner) greater powers to control the location, duration, timing, and size of protests in Portland and to keep opposing groups physically separated.[53][54][55] Wheeler described the measure as an attempt to stop people from "beating the bejesus out of each other on the streets of our city."[53][54] He described the proposal as a valid time, place, and manner restriction, but the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) opposed it, arguing that it would impinge on constitutional rights to freedom of speech and assembly, and indicating that it would legally challenge the ordinance if adopted.[53][54][55] In November 2018, the council voted down Wheeler's proposal, 3–2.[54][55] In August 2019, Wheeler requested that Governor Kate Brown keep the National Guard ready to respond in anticipation of a potentially explosive standoff between far-right groups and antifa demonstrators. Brown and state adjutant general Michael E. Stencel denied the request.[56]

George Floyd protests edit

 
Protest sign complaining about Wheeler during the protests
 
A projection calls Wheeler to resign.

On May 30, 2020, Wheeler imposed a curfew on Portland during the Black Lives Matter protests (sparked by the murder of George Floyd, the fatal police shooting of Breonna Taylor, and the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, earlier in the year). Critics of the curfew argued that police officers would have an incentive to restrict free speech and incite violence on peaceful protesting using crowd-control methods such as tear gas and stun grenades, both of which were deployed on crowds of demonstrators in Portland and nationwide.[57] This earned him the nickname Tear Gas Teddy.[58] On June 2, Wheeler lifted the curfew due to his perception of a "significant [peaceful] shift in the tenor."[59] Wheeler also requested the deployment of the Oregon National Guard to Portland in response to protests following the murder of George Floyd, but Governor Kate Brown refused.[60]

In response to the Portland Police Bureau's use of tear gas on protesters, Portland organization Don't Shoot PDX filed a class-action lawsuit against the city on June 5, 2020.[61] On June 6, Wheeler said that he supported nonviolent demonstrations for "meaningful reform and restorative justice" and had "serious concerns about the use of CS gas for crowd management"; he said he would not ban police from using tear gas, but that he had "directed Portland Police Chief Jami Resch that gas should not be used unless there is a serious and immediate threat to life safety, and there is no other viable alternative for dispersal."[62]

On June 15, Wheeler called for an overhaul of Portland's police oversight system, which he said doesn't have "any real teeth."[63]

Nightly protests at the federal courthouse in Portland were followed by the deployment of federal agents to the city in July 2020, and there were episodes of violent confrontations between demonstrators and law enforcement.[64][65][66] After videos showed masked, camouflaged federal agents without identification arresting protesters, Wheeler said, "This is not the America we want. This is not the Portland we want. We're demanding that the President remove these additional troops that he sent to our city. It is not helping to contain or deescalate the situation. It's obviously having exactly the opposite impact."[65] Oregon Governor Brown, and U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley, also called the federal deployment an authoritarian abuse of power; the U.S. Attorney for Oregon, Billy J. Williams, called for an investigation, and Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum filed a federal lawsuit against DHS.[65]

On July 22, Wheeler addressed nightly protesters, but was booed by them for his actions as Portland Police Commissioner and the Portland Police's own response to the protests. The crowd chanted "Fuck Ted Wheeler" and "Quit Your Job" as he spoke. After speaking, Wheeler and at least five security guards went to the front of the protest area. Wheeler was caught in tear gas released by federal agents.[67] Wheeler left after the first round of tear gas, after which Portland police declared a riot.[68][69][70][71][72][73]

At the end of July, in accordance with a deal made between Governor Kate Brown and the federal government, federal agents withdrew from Portland and calm was largely restored in the city, with largely peaceful protests.[74][75] On August 6 and 7, there were a number of peaceful rallies in the city, but—despite Wheeler urging demonstrators to stay off the street—also renewed violence from demonstrators, including attacks on local police precincts (such as an attempt to set it ablaze); there were also two reports of assaults against elderly women.[66][76] Police arrested 13 people.[66] Police in Portland used tear gas for the first time since federal forces withdrew from the city.[76][66] Directly addressing those who had committed violent acts, Wheeler said, "You are not demonstrating, you are attempting to commit murder. Don't think for a moment that you are if you are participating in this activity, you are not being a prop for the reelection campaign of Donald Trump—because you absolutely are. You are creating the B-roll film that will be used in ads nationally to help Donald Trump during this campaign."[76][66]

 
Protesters light a fire in front of Mayor Ted Wheeler's condo on August 31, 2020.

On August 31, protesters gathered outside Wheeler's condo, demanding that he resign. Police responded after the group lit fires, broke windows, and set a small fire in a nearby business. Police declared the assembly a riot after a fire was lit in the street.[77] 19 protesters were arrested, mainly for disorderly conduct and interfering with a peace officer.[78] On September 2 Wheeler said he was leaving his apartment building due to safety concerns posed by the ongoing protests; he apologized to fellow building residents "for the damage to our home and the fear that you are experiencing due to my position".[79]

Throughout the protests, local activists called for Wheeler's resignation, for various reasons. Some believed that he had not spoke up strongly enough against excessive use of force against protesters; others were frustrated he hasn't done more to end the nightly demonstrations and the property damage, small fires and provocations of police that usually accompany them; and some felt that he had not sufficiently handled issues such as the COVID-19 pandemic and related recession, homelessness, a lack of affordable housing, a spike in gun crime, race relations, and economic inequality.[80] The Oregonian reported: "Critics and observers largely fault Wheeler not for what he's said or done as much as the tepid manner in which he's addressed key issues and the steps and stands he hasn't taken."[80]

During the Portland foreclosure protest, Wheeler said, "There will be no autonomous zone in Portland."[81]

By the end of 2020, the number of protest actions had dwindled, but those who remained were radicalized.[82] On New Year's Day 2021, Wheeler—angered by repeated vandalism of downtown shops as well as violence on New Year's Eve (in which a few dozen shot fireworks at the Multnomah County Justice Center and smashed windows in downtown Portland)—vowed zero tolerance for criminal behavior by "violent antifa and anarchists ... rampaging through Portland" and called upon the Oregon Legislature to impose harsher sentencings for repeat offenses of vandalism and destruction.[82] Wheeler said that his "good-faith efforts at deescalation have been met with scorn by antifa and anarchists bent on destruction"; said that the acts of those responsible were "height of selfishness"; and pledged that he would "push back harder" against violent agitators.[82][83]

In March 2021, after marchers started to smash windows at night in the Pearl District, Portland police used kettling tactics to herd about 100 people onto a single, enclosed city block, and detained the crowd, stating that they were doing so due to suspicion of criminal conduct. Police ordered those detained to sit on the ground, required each one to identify themselves, and took photographs of each person. Police arrested those who refused to cooperate, and charges were brought against 13 people on various charges.[84][85] Police reported seizing crowbars, knives, hammers, bear spray, and firearms from those detained.[84] Wheeler strongly supported the police tactic as appropriate and lawful,[85] and many Pearl District residents and business owners supported it.[86] Conversely, the tactic was condemned by the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups as "aggressive and indiscriminate."[84][85] In a heated exchange at an subsequent event, Wheeler rejected an attendee's defense of the vandalism as "protest" and rejected the attendee's demand for police defunding and Wheeler's resignation. Wheeler said, "I was elected through a democratic process and I still believe in democracy. I don’t believe in anarchy."[86]

2020 reelection edit

In the 2020 election, Wheeler won a second term, defeating Sarah Iannarone and various write-in candidates, including Teressa Raiford. It was the first time since 2000 that a Portland mayor had been reelected.[87] Iannarone, an urban policy consultant[87] and Portland State University employee,[88] ran to Wheeler's left.[88] Despite appearing politically vulnerable in the lead-up to the election, Wheeler won the support of the Portland Business Alliance, labor unions, and conservationist groups.[87] He received 46.07% of the vote, Iannarone 40.76%, and various write-in candidates collectively 13.17%.[89]

2024 election edit

In September 2023, Wheeler announced he would not be seeking reelection in 2024.[90][91]

Political positions edit

Education edit

As treasurer, Wheeler relaunched the Oregon College Savings Program, which reached a record $2.3 billion in January 2015. The 529 savings plan allows money saved for college to grow tax-free and gives the donor a deduction on their taxable income.[92] As mayor, Wheeler supported dissolving ACCESS Academy, an alternative program for gifted children not served by their neighborhood school due to disabilities or other challenges that prevented their learning.[93]

Environmental issues edit

Wheeler is a proponent of increasing Oregon's investments in renewable energy funds. He commissioned a study to determine whether Oregon can replace fossil fuel companies in its fixed income portfolio. Wheeler does not support new coal investments.[94] He supported the City of Portland's ban on expanding fossil fuel infrastructure.[95]

In 2018, Wheeler opposed an initiative that would impose a 1% gross receipts tax on retailers with U.S. revenue over $1 billion and Portland revenue over $500,000, with an exemption for grocery and medicine companies, to provide revenue for a Clean Energy Fund.[96][97] Wheeler argued that the proposal would be redundant to the statewide Energy Trust of Oregon.[96] The measure passed by a wide margin.[97]

Gun control edit

 
Wheeler with Jennifer Williamson at the Portland Orange Walk for victims of gun violence at Peninsula Park (2016)

Wheeler advocates for increased gun control and supports requiring rigorous background checks for people attempting to buy guns.[98] On March 14, 2018, he released a letter in support of The National School Walkout against gun violence.[99] On April 20, Wheeler told hundreds of students outside Portland city hall that he would work on a ban of assault-style weapons in Portland.[100]

LGBT rights edit

 
Wheeler and family at PRISM Pride Parade (2008)

Wheeler and his ex-wife Katrina are involved with Basic Rights Oregon. Wheeler won the group's Fighting Spirit Award in 2008 following his executive order in 2007 enacting full healthcare benefits for transgender workers, and has been endorsed by the organization.[101] He supports same-sex marriage and signed and supported the 2013 Oregon United for Marriage initiative, which advocated the legalization of same-sex marriage in Oregon.[102]

Public safety edit

During his first three years as Mayor of Portland, Wheeler oversaw an increase of the police budget from $215 million to $242 million.[103] He allows police to cover their name badges at protests.[103] He supports abolition of a provision in the Portland Police Association's contract known as the "48-hour rule", which gives officers who have employed deadly force a 48-hour buffer before they have to answer questions.[104]

Homelessness and housing edit

In November 2017, Wheeler met with other city leaders and local business owners several times to discuss shared security concerns. The meetings were by invitation only and moderated by the Portland Business Alliance. They resulted in Wheeler advocating "no sit zones" in downtown Portland, which was criticized by the Oregon ACLU and other social justice advocates and praised by the Portland Business Alliance.[105] Protesters organized a sit-in to oppose the city policy with signs that read "Mayor for Sale".[106][107]

In 2024, Wheeler announced a draft plan to address homelessness[108] and said he would try to ban daytime homeless camping.[109]

Personal life edit

 
Wheeler at Arch Cape's Polar Plunge on New Year's Day (2016)

Wheeler lived in Southwest Portland with his wife and daughter. After his divorce, he moved into an apartment in Northwest Portland. An Eagle Scout and avid outdoorsman,[110] he summited Mount Everest in 2002.[111]

Wheeler is Episcopalian and occasionally attends services at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral.[112]

On January 24, 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Wheeler pepper-sprayed a man who confronted him and former mayor Sam Adams as they left a bar in Southwest Portland. The man, identified by police as Cary Cadonau, a Alpenrose Dairy heir and Portland lawyer, was not wearing a mask and shouted at the mayor from less than 2 feet (0.61 m) away; after he refused to back off when asked to do so, Wheeler pepper-sprayed him.[113]

Electoral history edit

Oregon Treasurer Special Democratic Primary Election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ted Wheeler (incumbent) 216,214 64.91
Democratic Rick Metsger 114,597 34.40
Democratic Write-ins 2,273 0.68
Oregon Treasurer Special Election, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ted Wheeler (incumbent) 721,795 52.94
Republican Chris Telfer 571,105 41.89
Progressive Walter "Walt" Brown 38,316 2.81
Constitution Michael Marsh 30,489 2.24
Write-ins Write-ins 1,738 0.13
Oregon Treasurer Election, 2012
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ted Wheeler (incumbent) 955,213 57.84
Republican Tom Cox 609,989 36.93
Progressive Cameron Whitten 38,762 2.35
Libertarian John Mahler 30,002 1.82
Constitution Michael Paul Marsh 15,415 0.93
Write-ins Write-ins 2,181 0.13
Portland, Oregon Mayoral Primary Election, 2016[114]
Candidate Votes %
Ted Wheeler 105,562 54.67
Jules Bailey 31,955 16.55
Sarah Iannarone 22,831 11.82
Bruce Broussard 7,465 3.69
Sean Davis 5,217 2.70
David Schor 5,083 2.63
Jessie Sponberg 3,235 1.68
Bim Ditson 2,467 1.28
Patty Burkett 2,346 1.22
David Ackerman 2,255 1.17
Deborah Harris 1,636 0.85
Lew Humble 748 0.39
Trevor Manning 480 0.25
Steven J. Entwisle Sr. 405 0.21
Eric Calhoun 358 0.19
Write-ins 1,040 0.54

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of Oregon
2010–2017
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mayor of Portland
2017–present
Incumbent

wheeler, olympic, athlete, athlete, edward, tevis, wheeler, born, august, 1962, american, politician, served, mayor, portland, oregon, since, 2017, oregon, state, treasurer, from, 2010, 2016, 53rd, mayor, portland, oregonincumbentassumed, office, january, 2017. For the Olympic athlete see Ted Wheeler athlete Edward Tevis Wheeler born August 31 1962 1 is an American politician who has served as the mayor of Portland Oregon since 2017 He was Oregon State Treasurer from 2010 to 2016 Ted Wheeler53rd Mayor of Portland OregonIncumbentAssumed office January 1 2017Preceded byCharlie Hales28th Treasurer of OregonIn office March 11 2010 January 1 2017GovernorTed KulongoskiJohn KitzhaberKate BrownPreceded byBen WestlundSucceeded byTobias ReadChair of the Multnomah County CommissionIn office January 1 2007 March 11 2010Preceded byDiane LinnSucceeded byJeff CogenPersonal detailsBornEdward Tevis Wheeler 1962 08 31 August 31 1962 age 61 Portland Oregon U S Political partyDemocratic 2001 present Other politicalaffiliationsRepublican before 2001 SpouseKatrina Maley m 2005 div 2020 wbr Children1EducationStanford University BA Columbia University MBA Harvard University MPP SignatureWebsiteGovernment websiteWheeler was elected in the 2016 Portland mayoral election and reelected in 2020 Formerly a registered Republican 2 he has been described as a moderate Democrat 3 4 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political career 2 1 Multnomah County Commissioner 2 2 State treasurer 2 3 Portland mayoral campaign 2 4 Mayoral tenure 2 4 1 Far right protests and counterprotests 2 4 2 George Floyd protests 2 4 3 2020 reelection 2 4 4 2024 election 3 Political positions 3 1 Education 3 2 Environmental issues 3 3 Gun control 3 4 LGBT rights 3 5 Public safety 3 6 Homelessness and housing 4 Personal life 5 Electoral history 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education editA sixth generation Oregonian Wheeler was born in Portland to a family with roots and wealth in the Oregon timber industry His father Sam Wheeler was executive vice president at Willamette Industries 5 a Fortune 500 lumber company formed in 1967 by mergers and acquisitions of timber companies Sam Wheeler sold Wheeler Lumber Company incorporated in 1900 by Wheeler s great grandfather Coleman Wheeler in Wheeler Tillamook County Oregon 6 7 Sam Wheeler divorced Ted s mother Leslie in 1972 Wheeler was 10 years old at the time He later discussed his father s alcoholism 8 9 Ted Wheeler attended Portland Public Schools graduating from Lincoln High School 10 He received a bachelor s degree in economics from Stanford University in 1985 He also earned an MBA from Columbia University in 1989 and a master s in public policy from Harvard University 11 12 Wheeler worked for several financial services companies including the Bank of America and Copper Mountain Trust 13 Political career editWheeler s political career began with a campaign for the Boston City Council He finished 11th in a field of 12 candidates in the 1993 Boston City Council election 14 Wheeler was registered as a Republican until 2001 and described as the wealthy heir to a timber fortune controlled by social and fiscal conservatives 15 2 In 2006 he defeated incumbent Multnomah County chair Diane Linn to become chair of the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners 16 taking office in January 2007 Multnomah County Commissioner edit Shortly after his election as chair of the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners Wheeler worked with his colleagues to balance a county budget that had called for 22 3 million in cuts in 2009 17 Wheeler also fought to preserve social safety net programs 18 and to eliminate hidden fees from state issued debit cards 19 Following the loss of nearly 16 million in Oregon Common School Fund and Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund investments Wheeler co filed a class action lawsuit with Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum to recover the money after firms misled investors 20 Building preserving and updating public space and infrastructure was a focus during Wheeler s time as County Commissioner He led efforts to construct new libraries in Kenton 21 and Troutdale 22 and to construct the new East County Courthouse in Multnomah County 23 Wheeler also fought to fund repairs for the crumbling Sellwood Bridge 24 Under Wheeler Portland became Oregon s first municipality to Ban the Box which reduces employment discrimination against residents with a criminal record by removing the criminal history check box on forms 25 State treasurer edit nbsp Wheeler at the 2010 Pendleton Round Up paradeOn March 7 2010 incumbent Oregon State Treasurer Ben Westlund died of lung cancer Two days later Governor Ted Kulongoski appointed Wheeler to the office 13 Wheeler defeated fellow Democrat Rick Metsger in the Democratic primary election on May 18 2010 26 and defeated Republican Chris Telfer Progressive Walt Brown and Michael Marsh of the Constitution Party in the November special election for the rest of Westlund s term which ended in 2013 27 He was elected to a second full term in the Oregon state elections 2012 Wheeler practiced aggressive financial management achieving more than 172 million in cash flow savings since 2013 He promoted environmental stewardship committing to double Oregon s investments in renewable energy resources by January 2020 and double them again by 2030 Wheeler also pledged not to pursue new investments in coal 28 He promoted the use of ESG Environmental Social Governance for all state investments to improve long term performance and urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to institute tougher reviews of carbon asset risk disclosures from 45 major corporations 29 Wheeler was chair of the Oregon Retirement Savings Task Force which developed what became the OregonSaves program to assist state residents in saving for retirement 30 It grew Oregon s pension fund to more than 72 billion one of the country s five strongest state pension funds 31 Portland mayoral campaign edit nbsp Wheeler s campaign logo nbsp Wheeler speaks to supporters at a campaign event 2015 Wheeler launched a run for mayor on October 14 2015 31 32 He campaigned on addressing income inequality and ensuring government accountability During his speech Wheeler promised to build a government that worked for every person 33 Taking care of those in need Taking responsibility for protecting our environment Taking action right now to close the gap between our wealthiest and poorest residents by providing economic opportunity for lower income and middle income families Equal access to our government for every person Understanding that every dollar we spend came from a taxpayer and we need show our respect for how hard that taxpayer worked to earn those dollars by spending them wisely These are the authentic values of Portland And these are my values Ted Wheeler In October 2015 former Portland mayors Vera Katz Tom Potter and Sam Adams endorsed Wheeler 34 35 Gresham Mayor Shane Bemis also endorsed him as did State Representatives Lew Frederick and Tobias Read former State Senators Ron Cease Jane Cease and Avel Gordly and 2012 mayoral candidate Eileen Brady 36 37 Wheeler was also endorsed by Basic Rights Oregon the Portland Business Alliance and the Columbia Pacific Building Trades Council 37 On May 17 Wheeler was elected mayor by winning the first round with 54 of the vote 38 39 Mayoral tenure edit Wheeler was sworn in on December 30 2016 and his term began on January 1 2017 40 41 One of his first actions was to make initial assignments of city departments known as bureaus to the five commissioners of which the mayor is one He assigned to himself the Portland Police Bureau the Portland Development Commission and the Portland Housing Bureau 42 among others He said he intended to reconsider the initial assignments during the annual budget process in April 43 In July 2018 The Oregonian newspaper reported that half of arrests in Portland were of people who were homeless Wheeler who oversaw the police department said he saw this as a problem and that it would influence his budgeting decisions 44 In September 2018 Portland residents who found Wheeler s response to the growth of homeless encampments inadequate petitioned his office and other local agencies to take stronger action 45 In September 2020 Wheeler announced his intention to withdraw the city from the Joint Office of Homeless Services partnership with the Multnomah County in a push to get campers on downtown streets into shelters 46 In 2018 the city auditor found that the city regularly ignored citizen complaints about transient camps The Oregonian reported the city s lack of response was inconsistent with crackdown on illegal camps instituted earlier in Wheeler s term 47 Far right protests and counterprotests edit In 2017 after white supremacist Jeremy Joseph Christian murdered two people on a Portland train Wheeler called for a halt to far right rallies in Portland He declined to grant a city permit for an event to be staged by far right provocateur Joey Gibson and called on the federal government to revoke a rally permit granted to far right groups in the federally owned Terry Schrunk Plaza 48 In asking the federal government to revoke that permit Wheeler incorrectly stated that hate speech is not protected by the First Amendment 49 50 The U S General Services Administration declined to revoke the permit 51 In that rally and subsequent ones in Portland in 2017 and 2018 violence erupted as far right activists including Patriot Prayer and the Proud Boys repeatedly brawled with antifa and other left wing counter demonstrators on Portland streets 52 53 54 In October 2018 Wheeler sought greater power to regulate protests proposing an ordinance that would give him in his role as police commissioner greater powers to control the location duration timing and size of protests in Portland and to keep opposing groups physically separated 53 54 55 Wheeler described the measure as an attempt to stop people from beating the bejesus out of each other on the streets of our city 53 54 He described the proposal as a valid time place and manner restriction but the American Civil Liberties Union ACLU opposed it arguing that it would impinge on constitutional rights to freedom of speech and assembly and indicating that it would legally challenge the ordinance if adopted 53 54 55 In November 2018 the council voted down Wheeler s proposal 3 2 54 55 In August 2019 Wheeler requested that Governor Kate Brown keep the National Guard ready to respond in anticipation of a potentially explosive standoff between far right groups and antifa demonstrators Brown and state adjutant general Michael E Stencel denied the request 56 George Floyd protests edit Main article George Floyd protests in Portland Oregon nbsp Protest sign complaining about Wheeler during the protests nbsp A projection calls Wheeler to resign On May 30 2020 Wheeler imposed a curfew on Portland during the Black Lives Matter protests sparked by the murder of George Floyd the fatal police shooting of Breonna Taylor and the murder of Ahmaud Arbery earlier in the year Critics of the curfew argued that police officers would have an incentive to restrict free speech and incite violence on peaceful protesting using crowd control methods such as tear gas and stun grenades both of which were deployed on crowds of demonstrators in Portland and nationwide 57 This earned him the nickname Tear Gas Teddy 58 On June 2 Wheeler lifted the curfew due to his perception of a significant peaceful shift in the tenor 59 Wheeler also requested the deployment of the Oregon National Guard to Portland in response to protests following the murder of George Floyd but Governor Kate Brown refused 60 In response to the Portland Police Bureau s use of tear gas on protesters Portland organization Don t Shoot PDX filed a class action lawsuit against the city on June 5 2020 61 On June 6 Wheeler said that he supported nonviolent demonstrations for meaningful reform and restorative justice and had serious concerns about the use of CS gas for crowd management he said he would not ban police from using tear gas but that he had directed Portland Police Chief Jami Resch that gas should not be used unless there is a serious and immediate threat to life safety and there is no other viable alternative for dispersal 62 On June 15 Wheeler called for an overhaul of Portland s police oversight system which he said doesn t have any real teeth 63 Nightly protests at the federal courthouse in Portland were followed by the deployment of federal agents to the city in July 2020 and there were episodes of violent confrontations between demonstrators and law enforcement 64 65 66 After videos showed masked camouflaged federal agents without identification arresting protesters Wheeler said This is not the America we want This is not the Portland we want We re demanding that the President remove these additional troops that he sent to our city It is not helping to contain or deescalate the situation It s obviously having exactly the opposite impact 65 Oregon Governor Brown and U S Senator Jeff Merkley also called the federal deployment an authoritarian abuse of power the U S Attorney for Oregon Billy J Williams called for an investigation and Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum filed a federal lawsuit against DHS 65 On July 22 Wheeler addressed nightly protesters but was booed by them for his actions as Portland Police Commissioner and the Portland Police s own response to the protests The crowd chanted Fuck Ted Wheeler and Quit Your Job as he spoke After speaking Wheeler and at least five security guards went to the front of the protest area Wheeler was caught in tear gas released by federal agents 67 Wheeler left after the first round of tear gas after which Portland police declared a riot 68 69 70 71 72 73 At the end of July in accordance with a deal made between Governor Kate Brown and the federal government federal agents withdrew from Portland and calm was largely restored in the city with largely peaceful protests 74 75 On August 6 and 7 there were a number of peaceful rallies in the city but despite Wheeler urging demonstrators to stay off the street also renewed violence from demonstrators including attacks on local police precincts such as an attempt to set it ablaze there were also two reports of assaults against elderly women 66 76 Police arrested 13 people 66 Police in Portland used tear gas for the first time since federal forces withdrew from the city 76 66 Directly addressing those who had committed violent acts Wheeler said You are not demonstrating you are attempting to commit murder Don t think for a moment that you are if you are participating in this activity you are not being a prop for the reelection campaign of Donald Trump because you absolutely are You are creating the B roll film that will be used in ads nationally to help Donald Trump during this campaign 76 66 nbsp Protesters light a fire in front of Mayor Ted Wheeler s condo on August 31 2020 On August 31 protesters gathered outside Wheeler s condo demanding that he resign Police responded after the group lit fires broke windows and set a small fire in a nearby business Police declared the assembly a riot after a fire was lit in the street 77 19 protesters were arrested mainly for disorderly conduct and interfering with a peace officer 78 On September 2 Wheeler said he was leaving his apartment building due to safety concerns posed by the ongoing protests he apologized to fellow building residents for the damage to our home and the fear that you are experiencing due to my position 79 Throughout the protests local activists called for Wheeler s resignation for various reasons Some believed that he had not spoke up strongly enough against excessive use of force against protesters others were frustrated he hasn t done more to end the nightly demonstrations and the property damage small fires and provocations of police that usually accompany them and some felt that he had not sufficiently handled issues such as the COVID 19 pandemic and related recession homelessness a lack of affordable housing a spike in gun crime race relations and economic inequality 80 The Oregonian reported Critics and observers largely fault Wheeler not for what he s said or done as much as the tepid manner in which he s addressed key issues and the steps and stands he hasn t taken 80 During the Portland foreclosure protest Wheeler said There will be no autonomous zone in Portland 81 By the end of 2020 the number of protest actions had dwindled but those who remained were radicalized 82 On New Year s Day 2021 Wheeler angered by repeated vandalism of downtown shops as well as violence on New Year s Eve in which a few dozen shot fireworks at the Multnomah County Justice Center and smashed windows in downtown Portland vowed zero tolerance for criminal behavior by violent antifa and anarchists rampaging through Portland and called upon the Oregon Legislature to impose harsher sentencings for repeat offenses of vandalism and destruction 82 Wheeler said that his good faith efforts at deescalation have been met with scorn by antifa and anarchists bent on destruction said that the acts of those responsible were height of selfishness and pledged that he would push back harder against violent agitators 82 83 In March 2021 after marchers started to smash windows at night in the Pearl District Portland police used kettling tactics to herd about 100 people onto a single enclosed city block and detained the crowd stating that they were doing so due to suspicion of criminal conduct Police ordered those detained to sit on the ground required each one to identify themselves and took photographs of each person Police arrested those who refused to cooperate and charges were brought against 13 people on various charges 84 85 Police reported seizing crowbars knives hammers bear spray and firearms from those detained 84 Wheeler strongly supported the police tactic as appropriate and lawful 85 and many Pearl District residents and business owners supported it 86 Conversely the tactic was condemned by the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups as aggressive and indiscriminate 84 85 In a heated exchange at an subsequent event Wheeler rejected an attendee s defense of the vandalism as protest and rejected the attendee s demand for police defunding and Wheeler s resignation Wheeler said I was elected through a democratic process and I still believe in democracy I don t believe in anarchy 86 2020 reelection edit In the 2020 election Wheeler won a second term defeating Sarah Iannarone and various write in candidates including Teressa Raiford It was the first time since 2000 that a Portland mayor had been reelected 87 Iannarone an urban policy consultant 87 and Portland State University employee 88 ran to Wheeler s left 88 Despite appearing politically vulnerable in the lead up to the election Wheeler won the support of the Portland Business Alliance labor unions and conservationist groups 87 He received 46 07 of the vote Iannarone 40 76 and various write in candidates collectively 13 17 89 2024 election edit In September 2023 Wheeler announced he would not be seeking reelection in 2024 90 91 Political positions editEducation edit As treasurer Wheeler relaunched the Oregon College Savings Program which reached a record 2 3 billion in January 2015 The 529 savings plan allows money saved for college to grow tax free and gives the donor a deduction on their taxable income 92 As mayor Wheeler supported dissolving ACCESS Academy an alternative program for gifted children not served by their neighborhood school due to disabilities or other challenges that prevented their learning 93 Environmental issues edit Wheeler is a proponent of increasing Oregon s investments in renewable energy funds He commissioned a study to determine whether Oregon can replace fossil fuel companies in its fixed income portfolio Wheeler does not support new coal investments 94 He supported the City of Portland s ban on expanding fossil fuel infrastructure 95 In 2018 Wheeler opposed an initiative that would impose a 1 gross receipts tax on retailers with U S revenue over 1 billion and Portland revenue over 500 000 with an exemption for grocery and medicine companies to provide revenue for a Clean Energy Fund 96 97 Wheeler argued that the proposal would be redundant to the statewide Energy Trust of Oregon 96 The measure passed by a wide margin 97 Gun control edit nbsp Wheeler with Jennifer Williamson at the Portland Orange Walk for victims of gun violence at Peninsula Park 2016 Wheeler advocates for increased gun control and supports requiring rigorous background checks for people attempting to buy guns 98 On March 14 2018 he released a letter in support of The National School Walkout against gun violence 99 On April 20 Wheeler told hundreds of students outside Portland city hall that he would work on a ban of assault style weapons in Portland 100 LGBT rights edit nbsp Wheeler and family at PRISM Pride Parade 2008 Wheeler and his ex wife Katrina are involved with Basic Rights Oregon Wheeler won the group s Fighting Spirit Award in 2008 following his executive order in 2007 enacting full healthcare benefits for transgender workers and has been endorsed by the organization 101 He supports same sex marriage and signed and supported the 2013 Oregon United for Marriage initiative which advocated the legalization of same sex marriage in Oregon 102 Public safety edit During his first three years as Mayor of Portland Wheeler oversaw an increase of the police budget from 215 million to 242 million 103 He allows police to cover their name badges at protests 103 He supports abolition of a provision in the Portland Police Association s contract known as the 48 hour rule which gives officers who have employed deadly force a 48 hour buffer before they have to answer questions 104 Homelessness and housing edit In November 2017 Wheeler met with other city leaders and local business owners several times to discuss shared security concerns The meetings were by invitation only and moderated by the Portland Business Alliance They resulted in Wheeler advocating no sit zones in downtown Portland which was criticized by the Oregon ACLU and other social justice advocates and praised by the Portland Business Alliance 105 Protesters organized a sit in to oppose the city policy with signs that read Mayor for Sale 106 107 In 2024 Wheeler announced a draft plan to address homelessness 108 and said he would try to ban daytime homeless camping 109 Personal life edit nbsp Wheeler at Arch Cape s Polar Plunge on New Year s Day 2016 Wheeler lived in Southwest Portland with his wife and daughter After his divorce he moved into an apartment in Northwest Portland An Eagle Scout and avid outdoorsman 110 he summited Mount Everest in 2002 111 Wheeler is Episcopalian and occasionally attends services at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral 112 On January 24 2021 during the COVID 19 pandemic Wheeler pepper sprayed a man who confronted him and former mayor Sam Adams as they left a bar in Southwest Portland The man identified by police as Cary Cadonau a Alpenrose Dairy heir and Portland lawyer was not wearing a mask and shouted at the mayor from less than 2 feet 0 61 m away after he refused to back off when asked to do so Wheeler pepper sprayed him 113 Electoral history editOregon Treasurer Special Democratic Primary Election 2010Party Candidate Votes Democratic Ted Wheeler incumbent 216 214 64 91Democratic Rick Metsger 114 597 34 40Democratic Write ins 2 273 0 68Oregon Treasurer Special Election 2010Party Candidate Votes Democratic Ted Wheeler incumbent 721 795 52 94Republican Chris Telfer 571 105 41 89Progressive Walter Walt Brown 38 316 2 81Constitution Michael Marsh 30 489 2 24Write ins Write ins 1 738 0 13Oregon Treasurer Election 2012Party Candidate Votes Democratic Ted Wheeler incumbent 955 213 57 84Republican Tom Cox 609 989 36 93Progressive Cameron Whitten 38 762 2 35Libertarian John Mahler 30 002 1 82Constitution Michael Paul Marsh 15 415 0 93Write ins Write ins 2 181 0 13Portland Oregon Mayoral Primary Election 2016 114 Candidate Votes Ted Wheeler 105 562 54 67Jules Bailey 31 955 16 55Sarah Iannarone 22 831 11 82Bruce Broussard 7 465 3 69Sean Davis 5 217 2 70David Schor 5 083 2 63Jessie Sponberg 3 235 1 68Bim Ditson 2 467 1 28Patty Burkett 2 346 1 22David Ackerman 2 255 1 17Deborah Harris 1 636 0 85Lew Humble 748 0 39Trevor Manning 480 0 25Steven J Entwisle Sr 405 0 21Eric Calhoun 358 0 19Write ins 1 040 0 54See also editList of mayors of the 50 largest cities in the United StatesReferences edit Ted Wheeler s Path to Politics Willamette Week Archived from the original on October 22 2021 Retrieved July 19 2022 a b Dan Tilkin January 3 2017 Portland s new mayor used to be Republican like Hales KOIN com Archived from the original on September 27 2020 Retrieved September 2 2020 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler finds himself politically squeezed by months of protests Oregon Public Broadcasting September 2 2020 Ted Wheeler Wins Mayoral Race Against Iannarone Portland Mercury November 4 2020 The life of Sam Wheeler Oregon Live May 27 2011 Archived from the original on February 14 2021 Retrieved May 21 2019 McArthur Lewis A McArthur Lewis L 1992 1928 Oregon Geographic Names 6th ed Portland Oregon Oregon Historical Society Press p 898 ISBN 978 0875952369 The Wheeler Inheritance Riches and Recovery Willamette Week Archived from the original on July 13 2018 Retrieved May 21 2019 Brad Schmidt May 6 2016 Ted Wheeler s biggest challenge in mayoral race his own to do list oregonlive Archived from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved December 29 2020 Introducing Ted Wheeler Just Out December 2 2005 p 14 Archived from the original on February 13 2022 Retrieved December 29 2020 as the child of a recovering alcoholic About Ted TedWheeler com Archived from the original on October 31 2012 Retrieved March 9 2010 Ted Wheeler VoteSmart org Archived from the original on September 30 2010 Retrieved March 9 2010 Bordonaro Agatha How to Get Elected Ideas amp Insights Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved July 24 2020 a b Mapes Jeff March 9 2010 Governor Ted Kulongoski names Ted Wheeler as next Oregon treasurer The Oregonian Archived from the original on March 11 2010 Retrieved March 9 2010 Ted Wheeler Ran for Boston City Council in 1993 He Lost Badly Willamette Week April 1 2016 Archived from the original on May 13 2021 Retrieved May 13 2021 Who You Will Vote For 2006 Portland Mercury May 4 2006 Archived from the original on February 26 2021 Retrieved September 2 2020 Wilson Kimberly A C May 18 2006 Day after rout new Multnomah County chairman back on trail The Oregonian p D1 Wheeler files for re election Portland Business Journal January 18 2010 Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Retrieved June 7 2020 Staff July 23 2009 Balancing act Ted Wheeler wants to talk urban renewal areas Here s why you should listen news streetroots org Archived from the original on February 22 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Hammers Scott November 29 2011 Controversial fees for unemployment benefit cards to end The Bulletin Archived from the original on August 13 2018 Retrieved June 7 2020 Oregon seeks to lead securities lawsuit against Bank of New York Mellon and recover 15 7 million in losses triggered by foreign currency trading scandal Press release Office of the Attorney General February 14 2012 Retrieved December 11 2015 Public meeting scheduled on May 29 for siting of new Kenton Library multcolib org Multnomah County Library May 14 2008 Archived from the original on October 20 2019 Retrieved June 7 2020 Hannah Jones Nikole April 3 2009 County picks Cherry Park Market for new Troutdale library oregonlive com Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved June 7 2020 East County Courthouse celebrates grand opening on April 10 Multnomah County April 2 2012 Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved June 7 2020 Rivera Dylan March 4 2009 Wheeler asks Portland to help pay for Sellwood Bridge oregonlive Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved June 7 2020 Schmidt Brad December 25 2015 10 questions Wheeler vs Bailey on lower income residents oregonlive Archived from the original on November 11 2016 Retrieved June 7 2020 Kitzhaber Dudley win primaries Portland Business Journal May 18 2010 Archived from the original on May 22 2010 Retrieved October 12 2013 Oregon Secretary of State November 2010 Voters Pamphlet Oregon Secretary of State Archived from the original on February 23 2022 Retrieved October 6 2020 Treasurer Wheeler Announces Steps to Increase Oregon s Investments in Renewable Energy Oregon Treasury July 9 2015 Archived from the original on April 6 2016 Retrieved June 7 2020 via Cascade Business News Oregon Treasurer asks energy companies How prepared are you for climate change Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Kullgren Ian K June 10 2015 Oregon House approves state retirement savings plan OregonLive com Archived from the original on March 14 2016 Retrieved March 25 2016 a b Record of Making Progress tedwheeler com Archived from the original on June 4 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Priorities for Portland Ted Wheeler for Portland Mayor tedwheeler com Archived from the original on October 30 2015 Retrieved June 7 2020 Schmidt Brad September 9 2015 Ted Wheeler I m running for mayor of Portland oregonlive Archived from the original on June 15 2017 Retrieved June 7 2020 Redden Jim October 14 2015 Katz Potter and Adams endorse Wheeler for Portland mayor Portland Tribune Portland Oregon Archived from the original on January 6 2016 Retrieved December 27 2015 Schmidt Brad October 14 2015 Ted Wheeler lands endorsements from Katz Adams Potter oregonlive Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Schmidt Brad September 9 2015 Ted Wheeler s campaign kickoff pitches progressiveness The Oregonian Oregonlive com Portland Oregon Archived from the original on November 1 2015 Retrieved January 1 2016 a b Endorsements Ted Wheeler for Portland Mayor tedwheeler com Archived from the original on May 3 2010 Retrieved January 1 2016 TEGNA Ted Wheeler elected next mayor of Portland KGW Archived from the original on May 19 2016 Retrieved May 18 2016 Staff KOIN 6 News May 17 2016 Bailey concedes Ted Wheeler to become Portland mayor KOIN 6 Archived from the original on May 18 2016 Retrieved May 18 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Wheeler sworn in as mayor during private event will hold public inauguration next week KATU December 30 2016 Archived from the original on January 4 2017 Retrieved January 4 2017 Wheeler takes oath of office in private Portland Tribune December 30 2016 Archived from the original on January 4 2017 Retrieved January 4 2017 Templeton Amelia January 3 2017 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler Dishes Out Bureau Assignment OPB Archived from the original on January 4 2017 Retrieved January 4 2017 Floum Jessica January 3 2017 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler Dishes Out Bureau Assignment The Oregonian Archived from the original on July 1 2017 Retrieved January 4 2017 Woolington Rebecca July 14 2018 Half the arrests in Portland last year were of homeless people Mayor Ted Wheeler says that s a problem oregonlive com Archived from the original on April 17 2019 Retrieved August 18 2019 Portland petition pushes city to do more to tackle homeless camps OregonLive com Archived from the original on September 20 2018 Retrieved September 20 2018 Frustrated over tents downtown mayor threatens to pull Portland from housing partnership with county kgw com September 24 2020 Archived from the original on October 2 2020 Retrieved September 30 2020 Friedman Gordon Harbarger Molly March 20 2019 Portland homeless camps clean up program needs improving auditors say oregonlive Archived from the original on September 19 2020 Retrieved September 29 2020 Mayor Ted Wheeler Asks Feds to Help Him Block Alt Right Free Speech Rallies from Portland in Wake of Hate Slaying Archived May 6 2021 at the Wayback Machine Willamette Week May 29 2017 Phillips Kristine May 30 2017 Hate speech is not protected by the First Amendment Portland mayor says He s wrong Washington Post Archived from the original on July 21 2018 Retrieved June 2 2017 subscription required Volokh Eugene May 29 2017 Portland mayor urges federal government to revoke permit for alt right demonstration on the theory that hate speech is not protected Washington Post Archived from the original on May 30 2017 Retrieved June 2 2017 subscription required Elise Herron Feds Reject Portland Mayor s Pleas to Revoke Permit So Alt Right Rally Will Proceed in a Shaken City Archived April 17 2021 at the Wayback Machine Willamette Week May 31 2017 Derek Hawkins Antifa far right protesters clash again in Portland disrupting peaceful rallies Archived March 3 2021 at the Wayback Machine Washington Post September 11 2017 a b c d Amelia Templeton Portland Mayor Wants More Power To Regulate Protests And Needs Just 1 More Vote To Get It Archived April 23 2021 at the Wayback Machine Oregon Public Broadcasting October 8 2018 a b c d e Mayor Wheeler s protest restricting ordinance fails in city council vote Archived May 8 2021 at the Wayback Machine KGW November 14 2018 a b c Portland Mayor s Controversial Protest Ordinance Fails In City Council Archived May 27 2021 at the Wayback Machine Oregon Public Broadcasting November 14 2018 VanderHart Dirk Portland Requested National Guard Troops For An August Rally It Was Denied OPB Archived from the original on May 30 2020 Retrieved June 2 2020 Jun 6 Wm Steven Humphrey Pm 2020 at 3 11 Mayor Wheeler Will Not Ban Police Use of Tear Gas During Protests Portland Mercury Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Baker Mike July 23 2020 Federal Agents Envelop Portland Protest and City s Mayor in Tear Gas The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 6 2021 Retrieved August 21 2020 Ellis Rebecca Portland Mayor Halts Curfew Amid Significant Shift in Tenor Of Protests www opb org Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Governor Kate Brown press conference remarks PDF June 1 2020 Archived from the original on June 17 2020 Retrieved June 2 2020 via drive google com Tebor Celina June 5 2020 Don t Shoot PDX others sue Portland to end use of tear gas The Oregonian Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Humphrey Wm Steven June 6 2020 Mayor Wheeler Will Not Ban Police Use of Tear Gas During Protests Portland Mercury Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Bernstein Maxine June 15 2020 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler calls for overhaul of police oversight system what public has sought for decades The Oregonian Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 James Crump Trump Jr retweets post saying DOJ is dropping the hammer as 74 face federal charges over Portland protests Archived September 3 2020 at the Wayback Machine The Independent August 28 2020 a b c Amir Vera Konstantin Toropin and Josh Campbell US attorney requests DHS investigation after video shows masked camouflaged federal authorities arresting protesters in Portland CNN Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 a b c d e Gillian Flaccus Portland protesters cause mayhem again police officer hurt Archived December 25 2020 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press August 7 2020 Portland mayor tear gassed by federal agents at protest CBS News Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved July 24 2020 Raymond Adam K July 23 2020 Portland Mayor Jeered by Protesters Teargassed by Federal Agents Intelligencer Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 Baker Mike July 23 2020 Federal Officers Hit Portland Mayor With Tear Gas The New York Times Archived from the original on November 6 2021 Retrieved July 23 2020 Portland mayor is booed by crowd teargassed by agents as he tries to join protest news yahoo com Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 Portland protests Federal officers unleash tear gas on Mayor Ted Wheeler demonstrators oregonlive July 23 2020 Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 Tess Riski Karina Brown July 23 2020 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler Gets Tear Gassed Amid a Skeptical Crowd of Protesters Willamette Week Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 Ellis Anna Griffin Dirk VanderHart Rebecca July 23 2020 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler faces boos calls to resign and tear gas opb org Archived from the original on July 23 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 Chants of Fuck Ted Wheeler were interspersed all night with Black Lives Matters cheers Many of his remarks delivered in the same stiff cadence he uses at City Council meetings were drowned out by boos and insults As Wheeler answered questions from protest leaders someone dumped munitions used by police against the crowds at his feet A list of demands projected on the wall above his head as he spoke concluded with a call for him to resign Mike Baker amp Zolan Kanno Youngs Federal Agencies Agree to Withdraw From Portland With Conditions Archived March 13 2021 at the Wayback Machine New York Times July 29 2020 Adam Taylor Nick Miroff amp David A Fahrenthold Calm returns to Portland as federal agents withdraw Archived August 1 2020 at the Wayback Machine Washington Post July 31 2020 a b c Gillian Flaccus Portland mayor decries violent protesters as props for Trump Archived January 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press August 6 2020 KATU Staff September 1 2020 Police declare riot as demonstrators celebrate Wheeler s birthday outside home KATU TV KGW Staff September 1 2020 Police declare riot outside Portland mayor s apartment complex make 19 arrests KGW KGW8 Archived from the original on December 26 2020 Retrieved September 2 2020 Portland mayor to leave home targeted by protesters Reuters Archived from the original on April 14 2021 a b Everton Bailey Jr September 6 2020 Portland mayor facing resignation calls questioned leadership as election looms Oregonian OregonLive Archived from the original on September 6 2020 Retrieved September 7 2020 There will be no autonomous zone in Portland Wheeler says encampment at Red House must end December 8 2020 Archived from the original on December 10 2020 Retrieved December 10 2020 a b c Aaron Mesh Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler Demands Harsher Criminal Penalties for Property Destruction Archived March 21 2021 at the Wayback Machine Willamette Week January 1 2021 Maggie Vespa After vowing to crack down on protest violence Portland mayor says change will take some time Archived February 3 2021 at the Wayback Machine KGW January 11 2021 a b c Portland police Detained protesters had bear spray hammers Archived March 17 2021 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press March 13 2021 a b c Tess Riski Mayor Ted Wheeler Says He Supports Portland Police s Mass Detainment of Protesters Known as Kettling Archived March 21 2021 at the Wayback Machine Willamette Week March 15 2021 a b Jennifer Dowling Wheeler rejects vandalism anarchy during heated Town Hall Archived March 19 2021 at the Wayback Machine KOIN March 18 2021 a b c Bailey Jr Everton November 4 2020 Ted Wheeler elected to 2nd term as Portland mayor The Oregonian Archived from the original on November 5 2020 Retrieved November 5 2020 a b Nigel Jaquiss Portland Voters Are Fed Up With Ted Wheeler But Are They Ready for Sarah Iannarone Archived April 20 2021 at the Wayback Machine Willamette Week September 16 2020 November 3 2020 Election Results Multnomah County Archived January 22 2021 at the Wayback Machine Peel Sophie Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler Will Not Seek a Third Term Willamette Week Retrieved September 15 2023 Portland mayor Ted Wheeler will not seek third term opb Retrieved March 13 2024 Oregon Treasurer Ted Wheeler State s college savings plan is popular and growing The Register Guard Retrieved March 25 2016 permanent dead link Manning Rob Mayor Ted Wheeler Urges Portland Schools To Let Charter School Stay Put www opb org Archived from the original on August 18 2019 Retrieved August 18 2019 Oregon Treasurer Wheeler Announces Steps to Increase Oregon s Investments in Renewable Energy Cascade Business News July 9 2015 Archived from the original on April 6 2016 Retrieved March 25 2016 Historic Resolution City of Portland Bans New Fossil Fuel Infrastructure Audubon Society of Portland audubonportland org Archived from the original on April 5 2016 Retrieved March 25 2016 a b Moore Shasta Kearns Mayor sorry to see clean energy fund on ballot Portland Tribune Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved June 13 2020 a b Pete Danko Election 2018 Portland tax on large retailers to fund clean energy winning big Archived August 9 2020 at the Wayback Machine Portland Business Journal November 6 2018 Wheeler Ted December 13 2015 Ted Wheeler Issues Statement on Gun Violence tedwheeler com Archived from the original on December 18 2015 Retrieved January 1 2016 A Letter from Mayor Ted Wheeler to the Students of Portland March 14 2008 Archived from the original on June 7 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 via KGW8 My daughter was in kindergarten the same year as the shooting at Sandy Hook Wheeler wrote Now that she is 11 she will be looking to you as leaders and role models It is you students who are leading the way to real national change I applaud you Azar Keellee April 20 2018 Portland mayor says he ll work on city ban of assault style weapons KATU Archived from the original on June 15 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 EqualityPAC 2016 Basic Rights Oregon Basic Rights Oregon Archived from the original on April 7 2016 Retrieved March 25 2016 Oregon United for Marriage kicks off initiative campaign Proud Queer PQ Monthly Daily Online Archived from the original on April 6 2016 Retrieved March 25 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Dickinson Tim July 17 2020 RS Reports Progressive City Brutal Police Rolling Stone Portland Mayoral Candidates Differ on 48 Hour Rule for Cops Willamette Week Archived from the original on April 2 2016 Retrieved March 25 2016 Thomas Keaton November 29 2017 Mayor Wheeler calling for more no sit zones in downtown Portland Katu Archived from the original on April 19 2021 Retrieved April 19 2021 Guevarra Ericka Critics Say Portland No Sit Zone Unfairly Punishes Homeless opb Oregon Public Broadcasting Archived from the original on April 19 2021 Retrieved April 19 2021 Shepherd Katie Protesters Plan to Sit In the Designated No Sit Zone in Front of Columbia Sportswear in Downtown Portland willamette week Archived from the original on August 6 2023 Retrieved April 19 2021 sources KTVZ news March 12 2024 Portland mayor Multnomah County chair release details of joint plan to get more homeless off the streets KTVZ Retrieved March 13 2024 Oregonian OregonLive Shane Dixon Kavanaugh The March 11 2024 Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler takes aim at judge says city will attempt to redo homeless daytime camping ban oregonlive Retrieved March 13 2024 About Ted Multnomah County Oregon Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved March 9 2010 Fought Tim March 9 2010 Ted Wheeler jumps to State Treasurer slot KATU Associated Press Archived from the original on March 12 2010 Retrieved March 14 2010 Slovic Beth February 24 2016 Jules for Jesus Willamette Week Archived from the original on June 6 2020 Retrieved June 7 2020 Andrea Salcedo Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler pepper sprayed a maskless man who accused him of disregarding coronavirus measures Archived January 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine Washington Post January 26 2021 Shane Dixon Kavanaugh Portland man pepper sprayed by Mayor Ted Wheeler is law partner Alpenrose Dairy heir police say Archived January 27 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Oregonian OregonLive January 26 2021 May 17 2016 Primary Election Results Multnomah County Oregon All Precincts Multnomah All Contests Update 12 PDF Multnomah County Elections Division June 3 2016 pp 13 14 Archived from the original on June 14 2016 Retrieved November 19 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ted Wheeler nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ted Wheeler Mayor Ted Wheeler permanent dead link on City of Portland website Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byBen Westlund Treasurer of Oregon2010 2017 Succeeded byTobias ReadPreceded byCharlie Hales Mayor of Portland2017 present Incumbent The template below Oregon cities and mayors of 100 000 population is being considered for deletion See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ted Wheeler amp oldid 1213437948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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