
We have some political news from our neighbors to the north. Noblesville Mayor Chris Jensen announced Monday that he will seek a third term in 2027, telling supporters that serving as mayor “has been the greatest honor of my life” and that he’s “not done yet.”
With that, the natural question for those of us south of the county seat: what about Fishers Mayor Scott Fadness?
There has been no official announcement, but let’s keep two important things in mind at this stage.
First, follow the money. The Fadness for Fishers political committee reported just under $543,000 in cash on hand as of December 31, 2025, according to the committee’s most recent annual campaign finance report. The committee raised more than $279,000 in 2025 — a non-election year — while spending about $134,000, growing its war chest by roughly $145,000. The mayor has continued holding fundraising events this year, so expect that number to climb in 2026. Politicians do not typically build bankrolls like that to retire on.
Second, even though there has been nothing official, I have had plenty of off-the-record comments from people who would be in a position to know, all pointing in the same direction: our mayor is planning to run for another term. Again, nothing official, but that is the word I am getting.
Scott Fadness is the only mayor Fishers has ever known. After voters approved city status by a wide margin in a 2012 referendum, state lawmakers provided for an initial election in 2014, with the new city’s first officials serving one-year terms once Fishers officially became a city on January 1, 2015.
No Democrat filed in that first election, so the May 2014 Republican primary decided the office — and six candidates ran. The two front-runners were Walt Kelly, the former Fishers Town Council president, and Fadness, the town manager at the time. It was a close race between those two. Fadness won with 4,274 votes (46.5 percent) to Kelly’s 3,881 (42.2 percent) — a margin of just 393 votes, in a primary that drew only about 15 percent of registered voters.
Since then, Fadness has faced exactly one opponent in any mayoral election: Logan Day, in the 2019 Republican primary. That one was not close. Fadness took 6,057 votes to Day’s 2,941, winning better than two-to-one with over 67 percent. No Democrat has ever appeared on a Fishers mayoral ballot — Fadness ran unopposed in the general elections of 2014, 2015 and 2019, and drew no opposition at all, primary or general, in 2023.
We have plenty of time before the May primary and November general election of 2027. Will Scott Fadness make it official, and if so, when? If he runs, will anyone step up to challenge him in the Republican primary? And will any Democrat choose to become the first ever to contest a Fishers mayoral race?
We should have answers to these questions as time moves along. Stay tuned.







