Annapolis Ward 1 Alderman Harry Huntley vies for an elected term on council
When Ward 1 Alderman Eleanor Tierney stepped down from the Annapolis City Council in 2024, Harry Huntley was serving on the city’s Democratic Central Committee as recruitment chair. Huntley wasn’t planning on stepping into the race, he said, but met with Tierney to ask who the committee should nudge to apply for the position.
“I wanted to have good representation, and I went out and tried to find it. I did not want it to be me,” Huntley said in an interview with the Capital Gazette. “When I looked at the field of other people who were applying, I felt like … no one had either the temperament or the competencies, or the right policy prescriptions to actually move the ward forward.”
Tierney, Huntley said, encouraged him to apply and wrote a letter to the central committee supporting his appointment.
In the year since Huntley, who will be 27 on Election Day, won the appointment from the central committee to the Annapolis City Council, he says he has made a name for himself pushing for improved city sidewalk management — dubbing himself the “sidewalks guy.” He has also advocated for making more areas of the city eligible for duplex construction and switching to ranked choice voting for city elections.
Huntley serves as the chair of the Finance Committee, which he led during the city budgeting process this year.
“Harry has been a really sharp, optimistic young guy with a lot of positive energy,” Ward 5 Alderman Brooks Schandelmeier said. “He comes to the table looking for solutions. … We don’t always agree 100% of the time, but he always is trying to look for how to reach a good deal with folks.”
Despite having four challengers in the Sept. 16 Democratic primary, Huntley earned 51% of votes in Ward 1. He’s now gearing up for a general election race against unaffiliated candidate Tom Krieck, a business executive.
Huntley has garnered endorsements from local Democratic politicians, including U.S. Rep. Sarah Elfreth, Annapolis Democratic mayoral nominee Jared Littmann and Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman.
His campaign’s top issues going into the general election cycle, Huntley said, include getting the City Dock Resiliency Project done, protecting neighborhoods from short-term rentals and lowering the property tax rate.
Huntley has proposed a bill that would prevent additional short-term rental licenses from being issued once a city block has 10% of units designated as short-term rentals.
Unlike his competitor, Huntley does not support the proposed 2% assessment rate cap but backs a tax rate cut to benefit all homeowners, not just those whose assessments are increasing. To lower the tax rate in a way that doesn’t harm the property tax-reliant city budget, Huntley said the city should renegotiate payments in lieu of taxes for non-property-taxpaying entities in the city, improve the city procurement process, and have smarter, denser land use across the city.
Huntley, who grew up in Baltimore, said he had always planned on helping other people get elected, but never thought he would jump in himself. His family was always interested in leaving the world a better place, he said, and he recalls tagging along with his mom door-knocking for a Barack Obama presidential campaign.
He studied agricultural science at the University of Maryland, wanting to become a farmer after becoming infatuated with the community while working at a farmers market. Huntley then decided to spend his career helping farmers deal with environmental challenges, working for the Maryland-based nonprofit Environmental Policy Innovation Center since 2021 in agriculture policy.
“I’ve really just have always been somebody trying to do my part,” Huntley said.
He moved to Annapolis with his now-wife shortly after he graduated from college in 2020, he said. Huntley said he got involved with city politics when he was sent a notice in 2021 that no one was running for a position on the Annapolis Democratic Central Committee. He volunteered, became treasurer and eventually was named recruitment chair, where he served as the committee doubled its membership, he said, from eight to 16 members.
Huntley said the biggest differences he sees between himself and his competitor Krieck is that he listens to the community and has policy ideas that he could work collaboratively to get passed.
Krieck, the unaffiliated candidate, said he sees Huntley as a politician, and wouldn’t use the same descriptor on himself, and believes that he has more experience looking at the details in business and budgeting decisions than Huntley does.
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As of the most recent campaign filings, Huntley had raised $32,890.
The current alderman salary is about $18,500. The current City Council is considering a raise to alderman salaries to $32,000, starting for the next council.
As he moves forward to the general election, Huntley said his campaign will put more work into combating misinformation about his work on the council and reaching out to his primary competitors.
“I really do want to go forward in unity and recognize that within the Democratic primary there was a heck of a lot more that united us than the divided us,” Huntley said.
Source: https://www.capitalgazette.com/2025/09/28/harry-huntley-annapolis-ward1/?share=cet200lcenacisd8d0y9