I don’t have live access to current feeds right now, but I can share what’s been reported recently about Seattle’s mayoral situation based on the latest widely covered sources up to now.
Direct answer
- As of the latest widely reported updates in early 2026, Seattle’s mayor is Katie Wilson, who took office in January 2026. She has been focused on homelessness, public safety, and housing affordability, and she has begun outlining executive actions and staffing plans to address these issues.[1][5]
Context and recent developments
- Executive actions and priorities: Wilson publicly announced early executive actions aimed at accelerating homelessness responses (including shelter expansion and housing options) and at improving transit efficiency with new bus lanes, signaling a dual focus on humanitarian and mobility challenges in the city.[5]
- Public safety and governance: Coverage from Seattle outlets indicates ongoing attention to public safety policy and conversations about police-related governance as part of the broader city management under her administration. This has included interviews and public statements outlining prioritization of safety and city operations in her first year.[8][1]
- Public discourse and scrutiny: As with many new mayoral administrations, Wilson’s tenure has drawn national attention at moments, including clips and analyses of comments or decisions that drew broader media focus. This is typical for a high-profile mayor in a major city during a transition period.[8]
What this means for Seattle
- If you’re tracking policy directions, watch for: housing and shelter initiatives, shelter-permitting workflows on city-owned land, and concrete timelines for establishing at least one bus lane on a congested corridor like Denny Way, all of which appear to be among the early signals of her agenda.[1][5]
- For public safety, expect ongoing updates on how the administration collaborates with the Seattle Police Department and related governance structures, as these areas tend to evolve as the new team settles in.[3][8]
Would you like a short digest of the most recent public statements or a quick timeline of Wilson’s first 3–6 months in office? I can pull together a concise snapshot if you specify whether you want focus on housing, transportation, or public safety.