Steve Adler

The very tentative field of Austin mayoral candidates shrunk abruptly this week, as two prominent candidates who had recently declared themselves with some fanfare abruptly announced they would not be running. Philanthropist Patsy Woods Martin and Family Eldercare official Bill McLellan both announced they were ending their brief campaigns.

In an email to supporters, Woods Martin said that while she still believes she would make a good mayor, she has found herself “spending way too much time bogged down in a process that appears to have little to do with public service.” Accordingly, she wrote, “before we invite more folks to join us, I believe it’s time to pull the plug.”

And in a more formal press release, McLel­lan discussed his willingness to serve but said, “recent personal and family circumstances will not allow me the focus needed to devote full attention to the mayoral bid and the important issues our city faces.” Among those McLellan included the proposed “Innovation Corridor” near the planned UT medical school, transportation, and campaign finance reform.

In ending his own campaign, McLellan endorsed attorney Stephen Adler of Barron & Adler. “When my good friend Steve Adler recently declared his candidacy, I knew that it was unnecessary for me to remain in the race,” McLellan wrote. “Steve and I share a similar vision for Austin, and from working with him on various civic issues I know he has the intelligence, character, and drive to make an outstanding mayor.”

At least one version of the backstory has Adler locking up so much early monied support that Woods Martin and McLellan decided to run for cover. In any case, these announcements leave Adler and Council Mem­ber Mike Martinez as the only effectively declared candidates currently in the race, with Mayor Pro Tem Sheryl Cole and Council Member Laura Morrison still considering their options. Former AISD board chair Mark Williams told the Statesman last week that he is no longer considering a run, since there were already sufficient “qualified candidates” in the mix. (With the field suddenly shrinking, perhaps Williams will have second or third thoughts.)

For the full and regularly updated slate of potential mayoral and City Council candidates, see “The Pols Just Keep on Coming” on the Chronicle election page.

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Contributing writer and former news editor Michael King has reported on city and state politics for the Chronicle since 2000. He was educated at Indiana University and Yale, and from 1977 to 1985 taught at UT-Austin. He has been the editor of the Houston Press and The Texas Observer, and has reported and written widely on education, politics, and cultural subjects.