Election On January 25, 2021, Seren announced his candidacy in the City of Cleveland Heights' first mayoral election, which was to be held later that year. In the September 14, 2021, primary election, Seren placed second out of three candidates, receiving 2,587 votes (37.62%) behind Barbara Danforth, who led with 3,158 votes (45.92%). Danforth and Seren both advanced to the general election. On November 2, 2021, Seren won the general election for Mayor of Cleveland Heights with 6,899 votes (60.51%) to Danforth's 4,502 votes (39.49%).
2024 In June 2024, multiple formal complaints were filed against Cain Park General Manager Ian Hinz, alleging a pattern of verbal abuse, intimidation, and retaliatory behavior toward staff. A city-commissioned investigation found that Hinz had violated city policies by creating a hostile work environment, including yelling at employees, pounding his fists during meetings, and removing office doors. The final report concluded that Hinz's behavior posed a risk of "morale issues, disruption, and potential liability if unaddressed". City staff recommended a suspension, anger management training, performance improvement plan, and demotion or reassignment to another role. In March 2025, Seren approved some of the disciplinary actions but declined to demote or reassign Hinz. The event was not addressed publicly at the time; the event was later referenced in internal complaints and contributed to allegations of a hostile work environment involving McDaniel. Later that month, City Council passed a temporary three-month budget for the first quarter of 2025—an unprecedented move in Cleveland Heights. Councilmembers cited the absence of a permanent finance director, missing salary and labor cost data, and a lack of key documentation in the administration's proposed budget.
2025 In March 2025, City Administrator
Dan Horrigan resigned after less than three months in office. In emails and interviews, Horrigan cited the conduct of Seren's wife, Natalie McDaniel, as contributing to an "untenable, improper, and unethical" work environment. Horrigan's resignation followed a March 13 incident involving McDaniel and Andrea Heim, the city's human resources organizational performance manager. In emails to human resources and Seren, Heim alleged that McDaniel had repeatedly disrupted the workplace with profane outbursts and created an unsafe environment. Seren placed Heim on leave and Heim resigned soon after. In April 2025, City Council began formally evaluating the workplace climate by interviewing human resources consultants. Council President Tony Cuda and others raised questions about whether McDaniel had an office, directed staff, or accessed public systems using shared credentials. Legislation was introduced to limit keycard access to city buildings to official employees and vetted contractors. Also in April, media reporting highlighted that at least a dozen senior staff had departed during Seren's tenure, including three city administrators, multiple finance and recreation directors, and other department heads. In May 2025, an EEOC complaint was filed by a former employee - Seren's former assistant - documenting extensive antisemitic comments from Seren's wife to other city employees about Jewish city employees, appointees, and constituents. The complaint became public in
the Plain Dealer. After not commenting for almost a week, Seren released a 15 minute rambling video he filmed in his house denying the antisemitic comments and refusing to apologize for his wife's conduct. Cleveland.com reported that the Seren administration had contacted the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor's Office to ask whether a Cleveland Heights police officer could be charged with a felony for recording the December 6, 2024 incident involving McDaniel and an on-duty police officer inside City Hall. In June 2025, City Council passed a "no-confidence" resolution and the
Cuyahoga County Board of Elections ruled that Seren had failed to submit the required number of valid petition signatures, disqualifying him from the 2025 mayoral ballot. Seren had filed 492 signatures but the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections ruled on June 16, 2025 that only 303 were valid—short of the 342 required—thereby removing his name from the September primary.
2025 recall effort A recall effort gathered a total of 3,845 verified signatures from registered voters in Cleveland Heights and the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections validated the recall petition on June 25th and put in on the September 9th ballot. On July 22nd, 2025 Seren attempted to veto his own recall, which the city law director found untimely and unlawful. On September 30, 2025, in the final days of his tenure, Seren fired Law Director William Hanna and named Deputy Law Director Christopher Heltzel acting law director. Seren was officially removed from office on October 1, 2025, following certification of the recall results; Council President Tony Cuda was sworn in as interim mayor that day. == References ==