Skip to main content
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Marvin/Waxhaw, NC|Independent Local News
Strolling Firethorne

Always Last... To Breaking News!

Sections
Person

Vi Lyles

Mayor, City of Charlotte

MayorResigning June 30, 2026

Vi Lyles

Mayor of Charlotte · Final Term (2025–2027) · Last Day: Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Vi Lyles announced on May 8, 2026 that she will resign as Charlotte mayor effective June 30, 2026, ending a tenure that began in 2017. By her last day she will be the city’s second-longest-serving mayor. She was elected to a fifth two-year term in November 2025 and is stepping down with roughly 18 months remaining in that term.

Under her leadership, Charlotte passed the November 2025 transit referendum, formed the Mecklenburg-Pineville Transit Authority, and began the FY2027 budget process with PAVE Act revenue adding roughly $100 million per year for transportation. Lyles also navigated the city through a transit safety crisis following the killing of Iryna Zarutska on the Blue Line, a housing bond debate where council rejected staff’s $50 million proposal, and a CMPD staffing discussion that produced a National Guard request from the police union.

The Charlotte City Council will appoint an interim mayor to fill the seat between July 1, 2026 and the November 2027 election. The process has not yet been scheduled. Mayor Pro Tem James “Smuggie” Mitchell Jr. told WBTV he wants the seat filled by July 1. Two outside names — former Mayor Jennifer Roberts and 2025 Democratic mayoral primary runner-up Brendan K. Maginnis — have publicly volunteered for the appointment.

In The Mercury

Charlotte residents packed City Hall to fight data centers. The council will vote June 8.

May 27, 2026 · 150-day moratorium hearing · June 8 vote · Vi Lyles presides

The I-77 South Toll Lane Project Is Effectively Dead

May 23, 2026 · CRTPO rescinds toll lane project during Lyles’ final weeks

Vi Lyles Chaired the May Zoning Meeting. It Was Her First This Year and Her Last.

May 19, 2026 · Final zoning meeting as mayor

Vi Lyles Will Resign as Charlotte Mayor on June 30. The Race to Replace Her Already Started.

May 9, 2026 · Resignation announcement · Succession dynamics

Brendan Maginnis Offers to Serve as Interim Mayor

May 16, 2026 · 2025 primary runner-up volunteers for the appointment

Charlotte's $4.5 Billion Budget Drew More Than 30 Speakers Monday Night. Nearly All of Them Asked for More.

May 14, 2026 · FY27 budget public hearing

Charlotte City Council 2026: Budget Pressures, Toll Lane Fights, and the Topics That Actually Matter

Q1 2026 recap · Council leadership overview

What You Need to Know About Charlotte's New Transit Authority

MPTA formation and $20 billion projected impact

← Back to City Council

Coverage (2 articles)

What the I-77 Toll Lane Reversal Means for the Region

Jack Beckett·

CRTPO withdrew support for the I-77 South toll lanes on May 20, ending a $3.2 billion expansion, sending an estimated $700 million in state funding elsewhere, and leaving no funded replacement.

Other coverage in the Mercury Local network

Manor Theater Redevelopment Approved

The Charlotte Mercury·

Charlotte City Council on Monday unanimously approved a partial rezoning of the Manor Theater site on Providence Road, clearing the way for SLRH Acquisitions to redevelop the long-closed Eastover landmark into 120 to 130 residential units and roughly 35,000 square feet of ground-floor retail. Three council members — Kimberly Owens, Danté Anderson, and J.D. Mazuera Arias — walked the room through their first memories of the building before the vote.

On Data Centers, Mecklenburg County Wants a Voice It Mostly Doesn't Have

The Charlotte Mercury·

Mecklenburg commissioners got a deliberately neutral briefing on data centers at their May 19 meeting and signaled they want a position on the fast-growing industry. The catch: under North Carolina law, nearly all the zoning power belongs to the cities, not the county.

Charlotte politics shake‑up

The Charlotte Mercury·

Five chaotic days shut a violent bar, cleared two town ballots, unleashed a Senate shake‑up, and let lawmakers spike your power bill—all before Charlotte finished its second latte.

Vi Lyles Will Resign as Charlotte Mayor on June 30. The Race to Replace Her Already Started.

The Charlotte Mercury·

Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles announced Thursday that she will resign on June 30, ending a tenure that began in 2017. Under North Carolina law, the City Council will appoint a Democrat to serve the remainder of her term — and the field is already organizing in public, with former Mayor Jennifer Roberts offering to fill the vacancy and Council Member Dante Anderson breaking for the outsider option. The vote that decides who fills the seat has not been scheduled.

Lyles Is Stepping Down. Here's What That Means for South Charlotte.

Strolling Ballantyne·

Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles will resign June 30. The Charlotte Mercury has the full appointment-process story; this is the south-Charlotte read — five decisions the next mayor inherits that touch this corner of the city directly, from Driggs as the working chair to the November 2026 transportation-and-housing bond.

Related