Lawrence had a 30-year career with the
United States Postal Service, advancing to work in human resources. She retired in 2008. In the early-1990s, as an active member of the
Parent-Teacher Association at her children's school, she sought and earned a seat on the Southfield Public Schools
Board of Education. She served as president, vice president, and secretary of the board. Lawrence's husband was a
United Auto Workers member from
Ford Motor Company.
Southfield politics Lawrence got more deeply involved in local affairs. In 1997, she was elected to serve on Southfield's City Council, and in 1999 she was elected council president. becoming the city's first African-American and first female mayor. As mayor, she was invited by the
United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform in 2008 to represent United States mayors in testimony about the mortgage crisis and its effect on American communities. She returned to Washington later that year to lobby Congress for a bridge loan for the
American auto industry. Lawrence served as a Michigan delegate to the
2004 Democratic National Convention. As a
superdelegate at the
2008 Democratic National Convention, she endorsed
U.S. Senator Barack Obama for president in June 2008. She successfully sought a third term as mayor in 2009, defeating former Councilwoman Sylvia Jordan with nearly 80 percent of the vote. She was reelected to a fourth term unopposed in 2013.
Later campaigns 2008 Oakland County Executive election In May 2008, Lawrence announced her candidacy for Oakland County Executive. She was unopposed for the Democratic nomination to unseat the longtime
Republican incumbent,
L. Brooks Patterson. Patterson won reelection 58% to 42%. Lawrence's challenge to the polarizing Patterson was identified as the strongest challenge he faced in his six elections for County Executive.
2010 gubernatorial election Lansing Mayor
Virg Bernero named Lawrence as his running mate in his bid for
governor of Michigan. She was formally nominated as the Democratic candidate for
lieutenant governor at the
Michigan Democratic Party convention in August 2010. They campaigned around the state promoting a "Main Street Agenda" with emphasis on their shared backgrounds as mayors. As with the national election results, the 2010 general election in Michigan saw strong turnout and enthusiasm by Republican voters. Political pundits attributed the losses by Democrats, in part, to voter reaction to President Obama and term-limited Democratic Governor
Jennifer Granholm. The Democratic gubernatorial ticket lost to Republican nominees
Rick Snyder, a businessman, and
Brian Calley, a State Representative, 58% to 40%. No statewide Democratic candidates were successful in 2010.
2012 congressional election In late 2011, Lawrence announced she would be running in the newly redrawn
14th congressional district. The district had previously been the 13th, represented by freshman Democrat
Hansen Clarke. It was redrawn to take in a large slice of Oakland County, including Southfield. Clarke's home in Detroit was drawn into the neighboring 13th district, but he opted to follow most of his constituents into the 14th. In the Democratic primary, the real contest in this heavily Democratic, black-majority district, Lawrence faced incumbent representatives Clarke and
Gary Peters, both of whom lived outside the district, and former State Representative Mary D. Waters. Peters won with 47%, to Clarke's 35%, Lawrence's 13%, and Waters's 3%. Peters went on to win the general election.
2014 congressional election In May 2013, Peters announced that he would not be running for reelection in 2014. He instead
ran for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by retiring Democrat
Carl Levin. On January 23, 2014, Lawrence announced that she would run for the 14th district for the second time. Lawrence was the first candidate to submit signatures to the state in order to be on the August primary ballot, doing so in March. Other candidates that filed for the Democratic nomination were former Congressman Hansen Clarke of Detroit, State Representative Rudy Hobbs of Southfield and teacher Burgess D. Foster of Detroit. During the course of the campaign's contribution reporting, Hobbs raised a total of $607,806, Lawrence $383,649 and Clarke $173,124; Burgess reported no contributions to the Federal Election Commission, indicating that he raised or spent less than $5,000. Michigan Congressman Sander Levin's Political Action Committee, GOALPAC, also spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to help elect Hobbs, who was previously employed on Levin's congressional staff. Lawrence won the Democratic Party nomination on August 5, 2014, with 36% of the vote to Hobbs's 32%, Clarke's 31% and Foster's 1%. She took the most votes in Oakland County, carrying Southfield, Pontiac and Oak Park, as well as Royal Oak Township. Although it was expected that Clarke would convincingly win the portion of Detroit within the district, where he lives and had previously held public office, Lawrence was competitive in the city and won more votes than all other candidates from voters who cast their ballot on Election Day in Detroit. As the Democratic nominee for Congress, she faced Republican nominee Christina Conyers of Detroit in the November general election. But Conyers withdrew from the race and Christina Barr of Pontiac was chosen as the Republican nominee. The district has a history of voting heavily for Democratic candidates. Also facing off against Lawrence in the November election was Libertarian Party nominee Leonard Schwartz of Oak Park and Green Party nominee Stephen Boyle of Detroit. Lawrence won with 78% of the vote, Barr took 20%, Schwartz 1% and Boyle 1%. ==U.S. House of Representatives==