1913 Pittsburgh mayoral election

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The 1913 Pittsburgh mayoral election was held on Tuesday, November 4, 1913, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Joseph G. Armstrong was elected mayor of Pittsburgh over Stephen G. Porter in a nonpartisan election.

Quick facts Nominee, Popular vote ...
1913 Pittsburgh mayoral election

← 1909
November 4, 1913
1917 â†’
 
Nominee Joseph G. Armstrong Stephen G. Porter
Popular vote 39,912 37,472
Percentage 51.6% 48.4%

Mayor before election

William A. Magee
Republican

Elected Mayor

Joseph G. Armstrong

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Background

The election in 1913 was the first Pittsburgh mayoral contest to be conducted under a new nonpartisan ballot law that eliminated party labels from ballots and replaced the party primaries with a nonpartisan blanket primary.[1]

In the early stages of the campaign, support formed around two candidates, public works director Joseph G. Armstrong and U.S. Representative Stephen G. Porter. Incumbent mayor William A. Magee, who by law was ineligible to run for a consecutive term, gave his support to Porter, as did longtime political boss William Flinn. U.S. Senators George T. Oliver and Boies Penrose and local Republican leader Max G. Leslie backed Armstrong.[1][2]

Primary election

There were six official candidates in the primary.[1] Although the candidates were officially non-partisan, the press identified Armstrong and Porter as Republicans,[3] Frank I. Gosser as a Democrat,[4] William J. Van Essen as a Socialist,[5] and Robert S. Glass as a Prohibitionist.[5] Victor Breitenstein styled himself as "the workingmen's independent candidate" but rejected a socialist label.[6]

Porter was the top vote-getter, edging second-place Armstrong by 302 votes.[1] The rest of the candidates together captured less than 10 percent of the vote, but this was enough to keep either Porter or Armstrong from attaining a majority.[7]

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Pittsburgh mayoral primary election, 1913[7]
Candidate Votes %
Stephen G. Porter 35,206 45.6
Joseph G. Armstrong 34,904 45.2
Frank I. Gosser 5,418 7.0
William J. Van Essen 1,464 1.9
Robert S. Glass 152 0.2
Victor Breitenstein 96 0.1
M.W. Clair 1 0.0
Total votes 77,241 100.0
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Runoff

As no candidate received a majority of votes in the primary, a runoff election was held between the top two finishers, Porter and Armstrong.[1] This time Armstrong came out ahead of Porter, by a margin of 2,440 votes.[8]

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Pittsburgh mayoral runoff election, 1913[8]
Candidate Votes %
Joseph G. Armstrong 39,912 51.6
Stephen G. Porter 37,472 48.4
Total votes 77,384 100.0
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References

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