2007 Philadelphia mayoral election

The 2007 Philadelphia mayoral election was held on November 6, 2007 when Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States elected Michael Nutter as the Mayor of Philadelphia starting in 2008. The incumbent mayor, John F. Street was barred from seeking a third term because of term limits. The Democratic Party primary campaign saw two well-known, well-funded Philadelphia congressmenBob Brady and Chaka Fattah – eclipsed by self-funding businessman Tom Knox and reformist former Philadelphia City Council member Nutter, who won by a surprisingly large margin in the primary election on May 15. He went on to face Republican Party nominee Al Taubenberger in the general election, which he won by a large margin and with the lowest voter turnout in a Philadelphia mayoral election without an incumbent since 1951.[2] Mayor Nutter was sworn in on January 7, 2008.

2007 Philadelphia mayoral election

← 2003November 6, 20072011 →
Turnout29%[1] Decrease 10 pp
 
NomineeMichael NutterAl Taubenberger
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote222,58346,029
Percentage83.4%17.3%

Results by ward
Nutter:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%

Mayor before election

John F. Street
Democratic

Elected Mayor

Michael Nutter
Democratic

Background

edit

The 2007 Philadelphia mayoral election was held to select the replacement for incumbent Mayor John F. Street, who was prevented from being re-elected a third time by term limits. Nearly four out of five Philadelphia voters are registered Democrats and the city has not elected a Republican mayor in close to sixty years.[3]

Issues

edit

The two major issues in the mayoral campaign were crime and corruption. Philadelphians felt crime was the most important issue because of the city's rising murder rate. There were more than 400 murders in 2006, the most in almost a decade. Corruption was also an important issue. A corruption probe resulted in the conviction a close to two dozen people, some with close ties to Mayor John F. Street.[3] An early poll on issues concerning young adults, crime was the number one issue with public transit, economic development, education and job growth rounding out the top five.[4]

Primary

edit
January 2007 mayoral candidate forum

Philadelphia City Council member Michael Nutter won the Democratic mayoral primary on May 15. His opponent, businessman Tom Knox came in second, with congressmen Bob Brady and Chaka Fattah and State Representative Dwight Evans coming in third, fourth, and fifth respectively. Al Taubenberger became the Republican nominee after running unopposed.[3]

Businessman Tom Knox had started off strong as his self-financed campaign created a barrage of advertising. However, Michael Nutter's message of government reform and criticism of John Street gained him enough support to win the primary.

Primary elections held May 15, 2007
Democratic Primary ResultsRepublican Primary Results
CandidateVotePercentCandidateVotesPercent
Michael Nutter106,80536.64%Al Taubenberger17,44999.50%
Tom Knox71,73124.61%Write-in candidates880.50%
Bob Brady44,47415.26%
Chaka Fattah44,30115.20%
Dwight Evans22,7827.82%
Queena Bass9500.33%
Jesus White4370.15%
Write-in candidates120.00%
Totals291,492100%Totals17,537100%
Source: Committee of Seventy: Philadelphia County Official Certified Election Returns

Election

edit

On November 6, Michael Nutter easily won the mayoral election, receiving 83.4% of the vote to Taubenberger's 17.3%. The margin of victory is the largest since 1931.[5] Nutter's margin of victory was so large the Associated Press declared a winner after just one percent of the vote was counted. Turnout in the election was light with only 28.7 percent of registered voters casting a ballot. The 2007 election had the lowest turnout in a Philadelphia mayoral election without an incumbent since the Home Rule Charter of 1951.[2]

In the general election, the candidates for Mayor were:

In the general election, Michael Nutter became the odds-on favorite to win the election. Nutter raised US$2.9 million for his campaign while Taubenberger raised no more than US$20,000. The candidates held numerous joint appearances and had few disagreements. Towards the end of the race Taubenberger was advertising himself as the "super underdog" .[8]

One of the most significant disagreements on issues the two candidates had was on Nutter's "stop and frisk" proposal. The proposal would allow police officers to stop and frisk people suspected of carrying illegal firearms. Taubenberger criticized the proposal, which was also criticized by Nutter's opponents in the primary and Police Commissioner Sylvester Johnson, saying the proposal could be abused and violate civil rights. Taubenberger proposed hiring more police officers to reduce the city's high murder rate.

Other disagreements dealt with the city's requirement that public employees live within the city, which Taubenberger proposed removing. Nutter said he would keep the rule, but would remove the restriction that allows only people who have lived in the city for at least one year to apply for city positions. Nutter and Taubenberger also disagreed on the city's decision to charge rent for the Cradle of Liberty Council as result of the Boy Scouts of America's policy on homosexuality which the city says violates its laws on discrimination. Nutter supported the decision saying his administration would not subsidize discrimination. Taubenberger said the decision was wrong because the Boy Scouts do too much good and keep kids off the streets.[9]

Results

edit
Philadelphia mayoral election, 2007 (96.85% precincts reporting)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticMichael Nutter222,58383.4+25.2
RepublicanAl Taubenberger46,02917.3-26.3
Socialist WorkersJohn Staggs1,0010.2N/A
IndependentWrite-in candidates740N/A
Turnout269,61328.9
Democratic holdSwing

Polls

edit

General election

edit
Opinion Polls
CandidateOct 17–21
Michael Nutter74%
Al Taubenberger8%
Undecided18%
SourceKeystone poll
Link[10]

Democratic primary

edit
Opinion Polls
CandidateJan 31Feb 15March 13April 5April 17May 1May 14
Bob Brady8%18%17%16%17%11%13%
Dwight Evans10%10%13%10%10%9%6%
Chaka Fattah26%32%22%17%18%18%13%
Tom Knox22%22%25%24%32%29%25%
Michael Nutter12%8%11%12%14%27%36%
Undecided22%21%
SourceKeystone PollSurveyUSASurveyUSAKeystone PollSurveyUSASurveyUSASurveyUSA
Link[11][12][12][13][12][12][12]

References

edit
  1. ^ Denvir, Daniel (May 22, 2015). "Voter Turnout in U.S. Mayoral Elections Is Pathetic, But It Wasn't Always This Way". City Lab. Retrieved April 28, 2019.
  2. ^ a b Brennan, Chris (November 7, 2007). "Voter turnout was, well, light". Philadelphia Daily News.
  3. ^ a b c d Walters, Patrick (May 15, 2007). "Ex-Philly Pol Wins Dem. Mayoral Primary". Associated Press.
  4. ^ "Voice of Young Philadelphia: Decide, Discuss, Vote Survey: Top 5 Issues of 2007" (PDF). Young America PAC, Young Involved Philadelphia, Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce's Young Professional Network. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 10, 2007. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  5. ^ Associated Press (November 7, 2007). "Philly mayor-elect has largest margin of victory since 1931". whptv.com. Archived from the original on December 6, 2007. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  6. ^ Gelbart, Marcia (June 11, 2007). "'I've got nothing to lose'". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. B01.
  7. ^ Warner, Bob (August 2, 2007). "Germantown's John Staggs files for mayoral race on Socialist ticket". Philadelphia Daily News. p. 10.
  8. ^ Gelbart, Marcia; Patrick Kerkstra (November 7, 2007). "Nutter: 'A New Day'". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  9. ^ Fitzgerald, Thomas (November 5, 2007). "Taubenberger takes on Nutter in a final debate". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. B01.
  10. ^ "October 2007 Philadelphia Mayoral Keystone Poll" (PDF). Franklin & Marshall College Poll. Franklin & Marshall. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 28, 2008. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  11. ^ "Keystone Philadelphia Mayoral Poll" (PDF). Franklin & Marshall College Poll. Franklin & Marshall. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 28, 2008. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  12. ^ a b c d e "Report Card: 2007 Philadelphia Mayor Election = A+". SurveyUSA. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
  13. ^ "April 2007 Philadelphia Mayoral Keystone Poll" (PDF). Franklin & Marshall College Poll. Franklin & Marshall. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 28, 2008. Retrieved July 11, 2007.
edit
Preceded by
2003
Philadelphia mayoral election
2007
Succeeded by
2011