In the world of local politics, where name recognition, grassroots energy, and resources often collide, Topeka's 2025 mayoral race between Spencer Duncan and Henry McClure stands out as one of the most decisive in recent memory. Duncan, the experienced city councilman with deep civic ties, won handily on November 4, 2025, pulling in about 75% of the vote (around 12,723 ballots) to McClure's roughly 25% (about 4,111). It marked the most lopsided mayoral outcome in Topeka in over four decades—a blowout that left little doubt about voter preference in a low-turnout election (typically 15-20% for off-year locals).
The financial disparity was stark and played a significant role in shaping the contest. Duncan raised and spent substantially more—reports show he collected over $42,000 pre-primary and another $35,000+ leading into the general, pushing his total haul well north of $95,000 with support from the Greater Topeka Chamber PAC, labor unions, police and fire groups, and local businesses. That funding fueled a polished, visible campaign: widespread yard signs, TV and radio ads, mailers, and events that reached voters across the city.
McClure, by contrast, ran a lean operation. He filed an affidavit of exemption before the primary, signaling he wouldn't raise or spend over $1,000 in that phase. Later reports (filed after a brief delay due to a family illness) showed he brought in about $4,400 between July and October, with key contributions from individuals like Terry Iles and Mark Klein (each $1,000), and spent around $3,925—mostly on marketing materials. The gap was massive, closer to 20-to-1 or more in effective spending power when factoring in Duncan's broader backing.
But the money tells only part of the story. Duncan entered as the clear frontrunner: a lifelong Topekan (Topeka West High grad, KU alum), former journalist turned lobbyist and councilman since 2019, with roles like deputy mayor and committee chair giving him strong name recognition and a track record of collaboration on city issues. His platform focused on practical priorities—public safety, property tax relief, infrastructure fixes, affordable housing, homelessness solutions, and transparent governance—that appealed to voters seeking stability after outgoing Mayor Mike Padilla opted not to run. Duncan announced early, secured endorsements from firefighters, police unions, the chamber, and others, and dominated the August primary with nearly 60% while McClure advanced with just 14%.
McClure positioned himself as the outsider voice for real change—a real estate developer frustrated with city bureaucracy, pushing for deregulation, tougher code enforcement, and addressing stagnation in growth and taxes. He tapped into genuine resident frustrations and ran on a shoestring budget that highlighted the uneven playing field: no big institutional support, no flood of ads, just social media, public forums, and direct outreach. In hindsight, he has reflected that he wishes he hadn't collected even a nickel in donations, viewing the lopsided resources as proof of how the establishment rallied behind the insider while he aimed to shake things up and prove a grassroots, low-money campaign could compete on ideas alone.
The race had its share of sparks too. McClure pressed Duncan on issues like the Hotel Topeka sale and alleged insider deals, while Duncan countered with lighter jabs (like questioning McClure's use of AI in a questionnaire). McClure's social media history—defending certain extreme posts as "entertainment"—drew scrutiny and likely turned off moderates in a city that often favors pragmatism over polarization in local contests.
Ultimately, the result reflected a mix of factors: Duncan's experience and endorsements gave him a built-in edge, amplified by superior funding that let him dominate visibility and messaging. McClure's campaign, though under-resourced, brought attention to bureaucracy and change—earning credit for running as a true challenger without the backing of the usual power players. In a place where voters often reward the known quantity amid economic pressures and state-level debates, stability won out.
Duncan now governs with a strong mandate, while McClure's effort underscored the challenges outsiders face in breaking through. Local races like this remind us that elections hinge on trust, track records, and resources—not always in equal measure. If you're reflecting on it from the inside (and as the candidate who ran the race), it's clear you highlighted real issues and demonstrated resilience on a tight budget. Thoughts on what you'd do differently, or how the conversation has evolved since?
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