Moreno served as an at-large member of the New Orleans City Council from 2017 until her inauguration as mayor, as well as its president from 2019 to 2023.
On October 8, 2024, Moreno filed paperwork to run for mayor of New Orleans in the 2025 election.[3] Moreno avoided a runoff and was elected mayor of New Orleans in October 2025 with 55% of the vote.
Early life and education
Helena Nancy Moreno was born on September 30, 1977, in Xalapa, Mexico, the first child of oil executive Felix Moreno and academic Nancy Pearson.[4][5][6] Her family later moved to Houston, Texas, where she graduated from Episcopal High School in 1995.[citation needed] In 1999, she earned a bachelor of arts degree in mass communications from Southern Methodist University in Dallas. While at SMU, she wrote for the Daily Campus newspaper[7] and became an exchange student at American University in Washington, D.C., where she interned at the White House for First LadyHillary Clinton.[4] Moreno is fluent in English and Spanish, and spent six months studying in Madrid as an undergraduate.
Career
Journalism
Moreno completed internships with KTRK-TV and KHOU-TV in Houston during her undergraduate years at SMU.[citation needed] After graduation, she worked as a reporter for WTOC-TV in Savannah, Georgia.[citation needed] In 2001, she was recruited by the Hearst-Argyle Broadcasting Corporation to work at WDSU-TV in New Orleans.[8] There, she became anchor for the morning news. Moreno received a Broadcaster of the Year award from the Louisiana Federation of Teachers for her reporting on Hurricane Katrina in 2005.[citation needed] She was also voted best television reporter by Gambit readers for four years and won a local Emmy Award for her Hurricane Katrina coverage.[citation needed]
Moreno left her career in broadcasting in 2008 to pursue public service.[9]
In 2010, after the election of Karen Carter Peterson to the Louisiana State Senate, Moreno became a candidate for Peterson's vacated District 93 seat in the Louisiana House of Representatives.[13] The special electionprimary took place on May 1, 2010,[14] with Moreno obtaining 27% of the vote and entering a runoff election with James Perry, who had garnered 38%.[15] Her runoff campaign was overshadowed by personal controversies, including an allegation of a major traffic violation, which became a central focus.[16] However, the Perry campaign's questionable handling of the allegation two weeks before the runoff led the New Orleans Times-Picayune to withdraw its endorsement of Perry. (The newspaper endorsed neither candidate in the race.)[17] Moreno won the election on May 29, 2010[18] and was unopposed for reelection in 2011.
On October 14, 2017, Moreno won the Division 1 at-large seat on the New Orleans City Council, defeating two opponents by nearly a 2-to-1 margin and avoiding a runoff.[19][1] She served as city council president from 2019 to 2023, after which she became vice president.[20]
Mayor of New Orleans
On October 8, 2024, Moreno filed paperwork to run for mayor of New Orleans.[3] On October 11, 2025, she was elected mayor, avoiding a runoff by winning 55% of the vote over Royce Duplessis and Oliver Thomas who came second and third respectively.[21] On January 12, 2026, Moreno was sworn into office by former U.S. Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris.[22][23]
Personal life
Moreno is also a realtor with Talbot Realty Group in New Orleans and resides in Uptown, New Orleans with her husband, Chris Meeks.[24]
Involvement in fatal car crash
On October 14, 2002, a Jeep Grand Cherokee driven by Moreno was struck by a car that had run a red light at Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Carondelet Street, according to a police report. A passenger in the other car died. According to the report, Moreno admitted to driving 35 in a 25mph zone, and the investigator determined that the other car ran the red light. The police report notes that Moreno was taken to the Ochsner Foundation Hospital by police officers before investigators arrived. At the hospital, she answered authorities' questions and submitted to blood and urine tests. The report states that Moreno "did not display any signs of impairment ... or the odor of alcoholic beverages on her breath," and concludes that if the driver of the other vehicle had "not disregarded the traffic signal, the crash may not have occurred."[25]
In 2010, her involvement in the fatal traffic accident was publicly scrutinized, with opponents raising allegations of negligent homicide and preferential treatment by law enforcement.[26]
↑LA-02 Democratic runoff election map.Archived February 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Louisiana generally requires a runoff election between the two candidates obtaining the highest number of total votes if no candidate received a majority in the general election.
↑Moreno wins seat in the state House in Times-Picayune, May 30, 2010, Metro Edition, p. B1 (accessed May 30, 2010) James Perry in a special electionrunoff. She received 56% (1,274 votes) to Perry's 44% (1,011 votes); voter turnout in the election was 8.8% (Election returnsArchived February 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine from the Louisiana Secretary of State, May 29, 2010) Retrieved June 1, 2010.