1943 Chicago mayoral election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1943 Chicago mayoral election

 1939 April 6, 1943 1947 
 
Nominee Edward J. Kelly George B. McKibbin
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 685,567 571,547
Percentage 54.54% 45.47%

Mayor before election

Edward J. Kelly
Democratic

Elected Mayor

Edward J. Kelly
Democratic

The Chicago mayoral election of 1943 was held on April 6, 1943. The election saw incumbent Edward J. Kelly being reelected to a third term, defeating Republican nominee George B. McKibbin with a 9% margin of victory. Both nominees had received landslide victories in their party's primary elections.

The election was preceded by primary elections held on February 23, 1943, to determine the nominees of both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.

On January 13, incumbent mayor Edward J. Kelly officially confirmed that he would seek re-election.[1] Kelly had served as mayor since 1933. Alongside Patrick Nash, Kelly headed the Kelly–Nash Machine,[2][3] a political machine which The Associated Press contemporarily described as "one of the most efficient political organizations in the country."[3]

Reform-oriented Democrats supported Kelly's challenger, John S. Boyle[2] (a Democratic member of the Chicago City Council, regarded to be independent from Kelly's political machine). Kelly was additionally challenged by Billy Patts, a political noephyte.[3]

Having strong organized support behind his candidacy (by virtue of his political machine), Kelly was widely anticipated win renomination over his two opponents.[3]

Overall turnout in the Democratic and Republican primaries (both held on February 23) was regarded to be light (for the era). The city had 1,784,324 registered voters at the time of the primaries,[3] with the 972,274 combined votes cast for mayor in the two primaries amounting to participation from 54.49% of the city registered electorate. For comparison, in the preceding (1939) election 962,139 voters had participated in the Democratic mayoral primary alone (with the 274,317 Republican primary votes in bringing cumulative mayoral primary votes to 1,236,456 that year).[4][5]

After his victory in the primary, Kelly delivered remarks which emphasized the "leading role" he argued Chicago was playing in the United States' efforts in World War II. He touted wartime economic growth in the city, including job growth and the opening of new factories.[6]

Chicago Democratic mayoral primary[7]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Edward J. Kelly (incumbent) 438,546 79.00
Democratic John S. Boyle 82,836 14.92
Democratic Billy Patts 33,722 6.08
Turnout 555,104

Republican primary

General election

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI