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2021 Plano municipal elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Municipal Election

Plano municipal election, 2021

← 2019
May 1, 2021 (first round), June 5, 2021 (runoff)
2023 →
Turnout20.20%Increase
 
CandidateJohn MunsLily Bao
Popular vote18,48215,119
Percentage52.86%43.24%

Muns:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%
Bao:     40–50%     50–60%
Tie:     40–50%

Mayor before election

Harry LaRosiliere

Elected mayor

John Muns

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The2021 Plano municipal elections took place on May 1, 2021. In addition to the mayoral election (Place 6), seats were contested for Places 2, 4, and 8, as well as a special election for Place 7.[1] No candidate received a majority of the total vote in Places 2 and 7, so the two top vote-earners advanced to arunoff election.[2] This election took place on June 5, 2021.[3] Due toterm limits, incumbent mayorHarry LaRosiliere was ineligible to run for a third term.[4]

Council seats

[edit]
Place 2 precinct results by margin of victory
Lavine
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Ricciardelli
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%

Place 2

[edit]

The incumbent, Anthony Ricciardelli, won re-election to a second term. Steve Lavine challenged him.[2]

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[5][6]
Anthony Ricciardelli17,47752.83%
Steve Lavine15,60647.17%
Place 4 precinct results by margin of victory
Prince
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Adcock
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Parveen
  >15.00%

Place 4

[edit]

The incumbent, Kayci Prince, ran for re-election to a second term. Justin Adcock, Nassat Parveen, and Vidal Quintanilla also contested this race.

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[5][6]
Justin Adcock13,80742.55%
Kayci Prince12,49438.51%
Nassat Parveen4,59414.16%
Vidal Quintanilla1,5134.78%
Place 4 runoff precinct results by margin of victory
Prince
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Adcock
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Tie
  

Runoff

[edit]

No candidate received 50% of the vote, so a runoff was held between Prince and Adcock on June 5, 2021.[2] Prince won the runoff, retaining her seat on the council.[7]

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[8][9]
Kayci Prince12,30455.77%
Justin Adcock9,75744.23%
Place 6 precinct results by margin of victory
Muns
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Bao
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Tie
  

Place 6 (Mayor)

[edit]

The incumbent mayor, Harry LaRosiliere, was ineligible to run for a third term due to term limits.[4] John Muns won the open seat, defeating challengers Lily Bao and Lydia Ortega.[2]

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[5][6]
John Muns18,48252.86%
Lily Bao15,11943.24%
Lydia Ortega1,3623.90%
Place 7 precinct results by margin of victory
Holmer
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Robertson
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Smith
  >5.00%

Place 7 (special election)

[edit]

The incumbent, Lily Bao, resigned from her seat in order to run for mayor. A special election was called to determine who will serve the remainder of her term, which expires in 2023. Bao held her seat on the council until after the certification of the election's results.[10] Julie Holmer, Bill Lisle III, Chris Robertson, David M. Smith, and Sandeep Srivastava ran for the open seat.[11]

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[5][6]
Julie Holmer10,91033.82%
Chris Robertson10,51632.60%
David M. Smith4,59514.24%
Sandeep Srivastava3,77911.72%
Bill Lisle III2,4557.61%
Place 7 runoff precinct results by margin of victory
Holmer
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Robertson
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Tie
  

Runoff

[edit]

No candidate received 50% of the vote, so a runoff was held between Holmer and Robertson on June 5, 2021.[2] Holmer won the runoff, filling Bao's seat until her term expires in 2023.[12]

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[8][9]
Julie Holmer11,75653.36%
Chris Robertson10,27546.64%
Place 8 precinct results by margin of victory
Klein
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%
Smith
  <1.00%
  >1.00%
  >5.00%
  >15.00%

Place 8

[edit]

The incumbent, Rick Smith, won re-election to a second term. Elisa Klein challenged him.[2]

CandidateVote numberVote percentage[5][6]
Rick Smith17,08452.95%
Elisa Klein15,18047.05%

Propositions

[edit]

Proposition A

[edit]

The following question appeared on the ballot:

The issuance of $231,000,000 general obligation bonds for street improvements and the imposition of a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on the bonds.[13]

Vote numberVote percentage[5][6]
For25,57576.27%
Against7,95623.73%

Proposition B

[edit]

The following question appeared on the ballot:

The issuance of $81,935,000 general obligation bonds for park and recreational facilities and the imposition of a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on the bonds.

Vote numberVote percentage[5][6]
For23,47370.16%
Against9,98329.84%

Proposition C

[edit]

The following question appeared on the ballot:

The issuance of $15,900,000 general obligation bonds for improvements to the Tom Muehlenbeck Recreation Centerand the imposition of a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on the bonds.

Vote numberVote percentage[5][6]
For18,18555.16%
Against14,78244.84%

Proposition D

[edit]

The following question appeared on the ballot:

The issuance of $27,140,000 general obligation bonds for public safety facilities and the imposition of a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on the bonds.

Vote numberVote percentage[5][6]
For23,65571.65%
Against9,36128.35%

Proposition E

[edit]

The following question appeared on the ballot:

The issuance of $5,500,000 general obligation bonds for improvements to existing municipal facilitiesand the imposition of a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on the bonds.

Vote numberVote percentage[5][6]
For19,78360.66%
Against12,83239.34%

Proposition F

[edit]

The following question appeared on the ballot:

The issuance of $2,490,000 general obligation bonds for the city's library facilities and the imposition of a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on the bonds.

Vote numberVote percentage[5][6]
For23,76172.00%
Against9,23928.00%

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Elections | Plano, TX - Official Website".plano.gov. RetrievedMarch 20, 2021.
  2. ^abcdefGravley, Garrett."John Muns defeats Lily Bao in Plano mayoral race, two runoff elections triggered".Star Local. RetrievedMay 3, 2021.
  3. ^"Election Information".www.collincountytx.gov. RetrievedMarch 20, 2021.
  4. ^ab"Here are the candidates running for Plano mayor and city council in the May election".Dallas News. February 17, 2021. RetrievedMarch 20, 2021.
  5. ^abcdefghijk"Election Results".www.collincountytx.gov. RetrievedJuly 25, 2021.
  6. ^abcdefghijk"Election Night Reporting".results.enr.clarityelections.com. RetrievedJuly 25, 2021.
  7. ^Pirayesh, Erick (June 5, 2021)."Kayci Prince wins re-election in Plano City Council runoff over Justin Adcock".impact. RetrievedJune 7, 2021.
  8. ^ab"Elections | Plano, TX - Official Website".www.plano.gov. RetrievedJune 7, 2021.
  9. ^ab"Election Results".www.collincountytx.gov. RetrievedJuly 25, 2021.
  10. ^"Plano to hold special election to fill Place 7 council seat".Dallas News. February 10, 2021. RetrievedMarch 20, 2021.
  11. ^Powers, Liesbeth (March 1, 2021)."Place 7 candidates finalized for Plano City Council special election".impact. RetrievedMarch 20, 2021.
  12. ^Pirayesh, Erick (June 5, 2021)."Julie Holmer wins runoff election race for Plano City Council Place 7".impact. RetrievedJune 7, 2021.
  13. ^"RESOLUTION NO. 2021-2-12(R)".Archived from the original on May 18, 2021.
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