OMAHA, Neb. — Omaha's first female mayor has conceded the mayoral race to a man who will likely become the community's first Black mayor.
Voters in Omaha were making history Tuesday by either reelecting the city's first female mayor to a rare fourth term or electing the community's first Black mayor.
The race between Mayor Jean Stothert and challenger John Ewing primarily revolved around local issues like street repairs and garbage service, but in the final stretch the campaign touched on more national, hot-button issues such as President Donald Trump's administration and transgender rights.
Stothert was trailing by nearly 5,000 votes in early returns Tuesday night. At her election night event, Stothert said she called Ewing and conceded in the race, KETV reported.
''I called John Ewing and I congratulated him,'' Stothert said. ''John Ewing is inheriting tonight a great city, and we leave a strong foundation for the city that we love. We are grateful and we are hopeful.''
The winner will lead Nebraska's largest city, which makes up nearly a quarter of the state's population.
In campaigning for a fourth term, Stothert has portrayed Omaha as a city on a hot streak with a revitalized riverfront, plans moving ahead on a streetcar line and progress repairing city streets.
''I have plans and can talk about them, and they are working,'' Stothert told the Omaha World-Herald.