The Metro: This Madison Heights mayoral candidate leads with care, collaboration and community
Sam Corey, The Metro October 16, 2025If elected, Quinn Wright would be Madison Heights’ first Black mayor.
Quinn Wright, courtesy of Quinn Wright
While much of the media’s attention on November’s elections has been on Detroit’s mayoral race, there are many other political contests happening outside the city.
One of them is in Madison Heights. That’s where a one-term city council member is running for mayor against the current Eastpointe police chief.
If elected, the council member would be the city’s first Black mayor. But what’s also interesting about this race is that he — not the police chief — won the endorsement of the Michigan Fraternal Order of Police.
How did City Councilor Quinn Wright do it? And, why does he want to be mayor?
Last week, Producer Sam Corey spoke with Wright about that and more.
The Metro reached out multiple times to Wright’s opponent, Chief Corey Haines. We still have not heard back from him.
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Authors
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Sam Corey is a producer for 101.9 WDET, which includes finding and preparing interesting stories for the daily news, arts and culture program, The Metro. Sam joined WDET after a year and a half at The Union, a small newspaper in California, and stints at a variety of local Michigan outlets, including WUOM and the Metro Times. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago. -


