Challenger Vanessa Nordyke leads incumbent Julie Hoy for Salem mayor in early returns

By Natalie Pate (OPB)
May 20, 2026 5:59 a.m. Updated: May 20, 2026 6:04 a.m.

Nordyke took a notable lead, particularly in Marion County, in the race to run Oregon’s capital city Tuesday.

Julie Hoy, left, has served as Salem's mayor since 2024. Hoy is challenged by Vanessa Nordyke, a Salem city councilor and lawyer who previously worked for the Oregon Department of Justice.

Julie Hoy, left, has served as Salem's mayor since 2024. Hoy is challenged by Vanessa Nordyke, a Salem city councilor and lawyer who previously worked for the Oregon Department of Justice.

Courtesy of the candidates

Salem voters are deciding who they want to lead Oregon’s capital and second-largest city.

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Early returns Tuesday night show Vanessa Nordyke, a current city councilor and former lawyer at the Oregon Department of Justice, in the lead, roughly 14 percentage points ahead in Marion County and seven points ahead across the Willamette River in Polk County.

She’s competing against incumbent Julie Hoy, a restaurant owner who previously served on the Salem City Council.

Hoy’s campaign team, after the 8 p.m. returns, told OPB “the night isn’t over,” as they waited to see where things would land.

Following the 10 p.m. updates, Nordyke said, “This campaign is proof that grassroots candidates can beat big money.”

Hoy promised voters safer neighborhoods, cleaner public spaces, more housing and homelessness services, and no new taxes without voter approval, among her campaign priorities.

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Meanwhile, Nordyke promised to expand mental health services, open a sobering center, push for affordable housing options, and support library funding and youth-friendly programs.

That’s just one race in a busy election night in the capital.

Four of Salem’s eight city council positions are up for election.

Preliminary results showed two incumbents leading, including Linda Nishioka with the largest lead of any of the council races — about 30 percentage points — against Manny Martinez for Ward 2 in central Salem.

Micki Varney was narrowly ahead, holding on against challenger Chris Cummings for Ward 8 in West Salem.

Incumbents were losing in races for two other council seats. Dave Inbody was leading against incumbent Deanna Gwyn for Ward 4 in South Salem. And for Northeast Salem’s Ward 6, Betsy Vega took a roughly six-point lead against incumbent Mai Vang.

As for Marion County commissioners, incumbent Republican Kevin Cameron and Democrat Sara Duncan are the two candidates for Position 1.

Incumbent Republican Colm Willis and Democrat Maria Hinojos Pressey are running for Position 2.

Each ran unopposed in their party for the May primary. As reported by the Statesman Journal, a Democrat hasn’t won an election to the Marion County board since 1979.

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