1959 San Diego mayoral election

The 1959 San Diego mayoral election was held on March 10, 1959, to elect the mayor for San Diego, California, United Dtates. The incumbent mayor, Charles Dail, stood for reelection to a second term. In the primary election, Dail received a majority of the votes and was elected mayor outright with no need for a run-off.

1959 San Diego mayoral election

← 1955March 10, 1959 (1959-03-10)1963 →
 
NomineeCharles DailJames W. Morgan
PartyDemocraticNonpartisan
Popular vote43,54412,314
Percentage63.4%17.9%

Mayor before election

Charles Dail
Democratic

Elected Mayor

Charles Dail
Democratic

Candidates

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  • Charles Dail
  • James W. Morgan
  • Gerard A. Dougherty
  • Robert Lewis Stevenson
  • Kent Parker
  • Juan Rivera Rosario

Campaign

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Dail stood for re-election to a second term. On March 10, 1959, he came first in the primary election with 63.4 percent of the vote, more than 45 percent higher than James W. Morgan, his nearest competitor. Because Dail received a majority of the vote, there was no need for a run-off election, and he was consequently re-elected to the office of the mayor.[1]

Primary election results

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San Diego mayoral primary election, 1959[1]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticCharles Dail (incumbent) 43,544 63.4
NonpartisanJames W. Morgan12,31417.9
NonpartisanGerard A. Dougherty4,9357.2
NonpartisanRobert L. Stevenson3,5535.2
NonpartisanKent Parker2,8734.2
NonpartisanJuan Rivera Rosario1,4222.1
Total votes68,641 100

General election results

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Because Dail received a majority of the vote in the primary, no run-off election was held.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Election History - Mayor of San Diego" (PDF). City of San Diego. Retrieved September 9, 2017.