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1983 San Diego mayoral special election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1983 San Diego mayoral special election

← 1979May 3, 1983 (1983-05-03)1984 →
 
NomineeRoger HedgecockMaureen O'Connor
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Popular vote105,38596,238
Percentage52.3%47.7%

Mayor before election

Bill Cleator (acting)
Republican

Elected mayor

Roger Hedgecock
Republican

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The1983 San Diego mayoral special election was held on May 3, 1983, to elect themayor forSan Diego. The special election was necessary due to former mayorPete Wilson's resignation to take a seat in theUnited States Senate.

Municipal elections inCalifornia are officially non-partisan, though some candidates do receive funding and support from various political parties.[1] The non-partisan primary was held March 15, 1983.Maureen O'Connor andRoger Hedgecock received the most votes and advanced to the May runoff. Hedgecock received a majority of the votes in the May election, and was elected mayor for the remainder of Wilson's term.

Pete Wilson resignation

[edit]

In November 1982, San Diego MayorPete Wilson was elected to theUnited States Senate representing California. On January 3, 1983, Wilson resigned as mayor of San Diego to be sworn in as a senator. Deputy MayorBill Cleator served as acting mayor until an election could be held to fill the office for the remainder of Wilson's third term.[2]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Roger Hedgecock, San Diego County supervisor[3]
  • Maureen O'Connor, former member of theSan Diego City Council[3]
  • Bill Cleator, member of the San Diego City Council and acting mayor[3]
  • Bill Mitchell, member of the San Diego City Council[3]
  • Rich Riel, businessman[4]
  • Joe Jaffe, college student[4]
  • Don Parker, businessman[4]
  • Rosalyn, retired teacher andperennial candidate[4]
  • George Hollis, optical manufacturer and engineer[4]
  • William Armstrong, unemployed former police officer[4]
  • Jim Cunradi, activist[4]
  • Paul Clark, daycare school owner[4]
  • Dan Russell, firefighter[4]
  • Oren Cox, businessman[4]
  • Jerry Shine, plastic injection molder[4]
  • Alex Weaver, economist[4]
  • John Yuskiw, potter and musician[4]
  • Art Walters, singles group founder and leader[4]
  • Leon Haake, marine engineering technician[4]
  • Walter Sweadner, computer hardware service manager[4]

Campaign

[edit]

Four candidates with prior elected experience contested the special mayoral election. Former city council memberMaureen O'Connor, a Democrat, was considered the early front-runner and likely to advance to a runoff election, if not win the first round outright. O'Connor's major opponents in the first round election included county supervisorRoger Hedgecock, city council member and acting mayorBill Cleator, and city council member Bill Mitchell, all self-identified Republicans.[3] In addition to the main four candidates, an additional 16 other candidates qualified for the ballot.[4]

In her campaign, O'Connor proposed freezing utility rates, focusing on creating jobs, and improving public transportation.[5] Hedgecock ran as a political moderate and emphasized environmental protection.[6] Cleator positioned himself as a pro-business Republican, and he criticized Hedgecock as a renegade Republican.[7]

On March 15, 1983, O'Connor came in first in the primary with 36.8 percent of the vote, followed by Hedgecock with 31.1 percent of the vote. Cleator finished in third with 25.6 percent of the vote. Mitchell, whose campaign never really took off, trailed behind in fourth with only 5.0 percent of the vote. None of the 16 minor candidates received more than 1 percent individually.[8]

Because no candidate received a majority of the vote, O'Connor and Hedgecock advanced to a runoff election scheduled for May 3, 1983. Hedgecock ultimately prevailed in the runoff with 52.2 percent of the vote, and was elected mayor.[8]

Primary election results

[edit]
San Diego mayoral special primary election, 1983[8]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMaureen O'Connor66,05436.8
RepublicanRoger Hedgecock55,81131.1
RepublicanBill Cleator46,06225.6
RepublicanBill Mitchell9,0285.0
NonpartisanRich Riel1,2390.7
NonpartisanJoe Jaffe1,1520.6
NonpartisanDon Parker5580.3
NonpartisanRosalyn4160.2
NonpartisanGeorge Hollis3840.2
NonpartisanWilliam Armstrong3120.2
NonpartisanPaul Clark2760.2
NonpartisanJim Cunradi2690.1
NonpartisanDan Russell2360.1
NonpartisanOren Cox2270.1
NonpartisanJerry Shine1840.1
NonpartisanAlex Weaver1740.1
NonpartisanJohn Yuskiw1720.1
NonpartisanArt Walters990.1
NonpartisanLeon Haake75
NonpartisanWalter Sweadner34
Total votes179,620100

Runoff election results

[edit]
San Diego mayoral special runoff election, 1983[8]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanRoger Hedgecock105,38552.3
DemocraticMaureen O'Connor96,23847.7
Total votes201,623100

References

[edit]
  1. ^"How to Run for Office".The City of San Diego-Office of the City Clerk. RetrievedMarch 9, 2017.
  2. ^Perry, Anthony (January 2, 1983)."Wilson Will Be Leaving A Changed City".The San Diego Union. RetrievedMarch 10, 2017.
  3. ^abcdePerry, Anthony (February 13, 1983)."3 Battle for O'Connor Runoff".The San Diego Union. RetrievedMarch 9, 2017.
  4. ^abcdefghijklmnopqSmolens, Michael (January 25, 1983)."20 of 21 Aspirants Qualify in Mayor Vote".The San Diego Union. RetrievedMarch 9, 2017.
  5. ^Perry, Anthony (March 11, 1983)."4 Mayoral Rivals Claim Victory in Forum".The San Diego Union. RetrievedMarch 11, 2017.
  6. ^Sottili, Carol (March 4, 1983)."Sharp-Tongued Hedgecock Stresses Coalition-Building".The San Diego Union. RetrievedMarch 10, 2017.
  7. ^Perry, Anthony (March 16, 1983)."O'Connor, Hedgecock Gain Mayoral Runoff".The San Diego Union. RetrievedMarch 10, 2017.
  8. ^abcd"Election History - Mayor of San Diego"(PDF). City of San Diego. RetrievedMarch 10, 2017.
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