my-server
← Wiki Redirected from Terry Gillen

2015 Philadelphia mayoral election

The 2015 Philadelphia mayoral election was held on November 3, 2015, to elect the Mayor of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, concurrently with various other state and local elections. Heavily favored Democratic party candidate Jim Kenney won.

Incumbent Democratic party Mayor Michael Nutter could not run for re-election to a third consecutive term due to term limits in the city's home rule charter. Registered Democrats hold a formidable 7-to-1 ratio over registered Republicans in Philadelphia, giving Democratic candidates a distinct advantage in citywide elections.

The mayoral primary elections were held on May 19, 2015. 27% of the city's registered voters voted in the primaries. Democrats nominated Jim Kenney, a member of the Philadelphia City Council, as their party's nominee. Kenney won the primary in a landslide with 55.83% of the vote, defeating a crowded field of five other Democratic candidates, including Anthony H. Williams and former District Attorney Lynn Abraham. Republican Melissa Murray Bailey, a business executive, ran unopposed for the Republican nomination. Had she been elected, Bailey would have become Philadelphia's first female mayor, as well as the city's first Republican mayor in more than 60 years.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Declared

Withdrew

Declined

Polling

  • * Internal poll for the Alan Butkovitz campaign
  • * AFSCME poll for the James Kenney campaign.
  • * Public Policy Polling poll for the James Kenney campaign.

Results

Results by ward

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared

  • Melissa Murray Bailey, businesswoman

Declined

  • Ronald D. Castille, former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, former District Attorney of Philadelphia and candidate for Mayor in 1991
  • Sean Clark, nonprofit executive
  • Allan Domb, real estate developer and President of the Greater Philadelphia Association of Realtors
  • Rhashea Harmon, attorney and nominee for the State Senate in 2010 (running as an Independent)
  • Kelvin Jeremiah, President & CEO of the Philadelphia Housing Authority
  • Sam Katz, businessman, public finance executive and Republican nominee for Mayor in 1999 and 2003
  • Elmer Money, candidate for City Council in 2011
  • Doug Oliver, Vice President of Marketing and Corporate Communications at Philadelphia Gas Works and former press secretary for Mayor Nutter (running as a Democrat)
  • Dana Spain, businesswoman and philanthropist

Results

Independent

Candidates

Declared

  • Rhashea Harmon, attorney and Republican nominee for the State Senate in 2010

Declined

  • Bill Green, former Philadelphia City Councilman and former chair of the Philadelphia School Reform Commission
  • Sam Katz, businessman, public finance executive and Republican nominee for Mayor in 1999 and 2003
  • Dana Spain, businesswoman and philanthropist

General election

Candidates

  • Melissa Murray Bailey – Republican Party
  • James Foster – Independent
  • Osborne Hart – Socialist Workers Party
  • Jim Kenney – Democratic Party
  • Boris Kindij – Independent

Results

Results by Ward

References