Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert, still weighing a bid for an unprecedented fourth term, is scheduled to deliver her annual State of the City Address tomorrow.

Likely topics include a streetcar costing upwards of $300 million and the final leg of the city’s downtown riverfront development.

Despite some grumblings in town, not to mention Warren Buffet’s assessment that the streetcar is a bad deal, from day one Stothert has stood behind it insisting she has a firm financial plan.

And while Buffet opposes it all four previous mayors—Republicans PJ Morgan and Hal Daub along with Democrats Mike Fahey and Jim Suttle—are on Stothert’s side; and Suttle lost to Stothert.

An unlikely topic would be Stothert’s political plans for 2025.

If she runs, she will be 71 years old.

At the end of another four year term, the city’s first woman mayor, would be 75.

This is what she told NCN’s Joe Jordan the day before her 2021 landslide victory.

Joe Jordan, NCN: "Mayor if you win will you be a lame duck?"

Mayor Jean Stothert: “Well, I would hope I’m never considered a lame duck because if I win and I’m in my third term I’m not saying that’s it for me either.”

At least one Democrat is strongly considering a run for mayor in 2025: State Sen. Mike McDonnell, the former Omaha Fire Chief known for, among other things, his run-ins with Stothert.

Take a look at NCN’s original reporting on McDonnell’s possible bid for mayor and recent controversial positions he’s taken in the Legislature.