Pittsburgh mayor won’t run again
PITTSBURGH – Luke Ravenstahl, Pittsburgh’s youngest mayor, won’t seek re-election after deciding the burdens of the job were too much to bear for himself, his family and friends.
Ravenstahl, who became mayor at 26, said Friday he would serve out his term, but blamed the “grueling demands” of the job as he discounted suspicions that an ongoing federal investigation of the police force played a role.
Instead, he said that he had accomplished a dream and was ready to move on.
“I’ve done nothing wrong, and that will be proven over time,” he said, sounding relieved, calm and confident of his decision.
Ravenstahl took dozens of questions from reporters, but had no answer for one: Exactly what caused him to withdraw from the race just 10 days after he declared his candidacy?
Ravenstahl said his doubts began two years ago. His seven-year marriage to a high school sweetheart ended in 2011, and at the time, Ravenstahl said his wife was uncomfortable with his political career and the limelight.
He also is in the midst of a federal investigation of city police business that led him to ask for the resignation of the city’s police chief.
Ravenstahl said he’s not a target of the FBI probe, which is believed to center on a fund the police bureau kept for fees that bars and other businesses paid the city for using its off-duty police officers as security guards. That money was then spent on city activities, including expense accounts for the mayor’s bodyguards.
The rigors of denying wrongdoing in the wake of such reports, he said, also played a role in his decision because he and his staff were “spending more time doing things or responding to things that are simply false, that are harmful and hurtful,” than on city business.
“It’s something that is the nature of the business, but something that, you know, clearly is what I guess I enjoy the least about the business,” Ravenstahl said.
The mayor also said reports that his mother’s health led to his decision were untrue, gesturing to his left where she stood without detailing those problems.
“Also as you can see, my mom is great, she looks amazing. … She does have some medical issues that she is dealing with, but I am confident that she will overcome and defeat them,” he said.
A number of supporters expressed surprise and regret.
“It’s shocking to a lot of people,” said Darrin Kelly, a trustee of the city firefighters union. “At the end of the day, if he feels that’s the best thing for him, we wish him the best of luck. I truly believe that he’s done amazing things for this city.”
Ravenstahl said party leaders didn’t pressure him.
“It was, in fact, quite the opposite,” Ravenstahl said. “I’ve had to tell a lot of people ‘no’ the last few days.”
Ravenstahl became the city’s youngest-ever mayor in 2006 because he was City Council president when Mayor Bob O’Connor died, and won a special election in 2007 to finish that term and was re-elected to a full four-year term in 2009.
City Councilman Bill Peduto and Controller Michael Lamb are the remaining candidates for the Democratic primary in May, and former City Council president and former state Auditor General Jack Wagner is said to be mulling an independent candidacy.
Ravenstahl said there is a candidate he’d like to support for mayor, but didn’t say whom – and suggested it wasn’t Peduto or Lamb.
Peduto and Lamb issued statements, but Wagner didn’t immediately comment on Ravenstahl’s decision.
“I understand how difficult of a decision this was and would like to extend our sincere best wishes to Luke Ravenstahl and his family. My campaign will continue to focus on taking Pittsburgh in a better direction and making the city the most livable for all of our residents,” Peduto said.
“I understand this was a difficult decision for Mayor Ravenstahl to make today. I respect the choice he has made, and wish the best for the Ravenstahl family,” Lamb said.