1981 Jersey City mayoral election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1985 Jersey City mayoral election

 1977
June 16, 1981
1985 
 
Candidate Gerald McCann Wally Sheil
Party Nonpartisan Nonpartisan
Popular vote 33,440 23,919
Percentage 58.3% 41.7%

Mayor before election

Thomas F. X. Smith
Nonpartisan

Elected mayor

Gerald McCann
Nonpartisan

The 1981 Jersey City mayoral election was held on June 16, 1981. Incumbent mayor Thomas F. X. Smith ran for governor of New Jersey instead of seeking a second consecutive term in office. In the open race to succeed him, city councilman Gerald McCann defeated state senator Wally Sheil.

A preliminary election was held on May 12. McCann and Sheil advanced over a large field of challengers, including councilman Anthony R. Cucci and police chief James Cowan, who joined with McCann in opposing Sheil. The Sheil campaign received a boost in the runoff campaign when Cucci switched sides, claiming that McCann had offered him a $50,000 bribe. However, Sheil suffered a major setback when he lost his June 2 primary election for the Senate to attorney Edward T. O'Connor Jr. Two weeks later, McCann easily won the election.

This was the first time in Jersey City history that the runoff election had attracted higher turnout than the preliminary election.[1]

In 1977, Thomas F. X. Smith was elected mayor of Jersey City in a surprising upset which ousted the incumbent administration of Paul T. Jordan.[1] Jordan, who had been running for governor of New Jersey, withdrew his campaign following the defeat in the municipal elections. Smith's political organization included Jersey City State College administrator Wally Sheil, who was elected to the New Jersey Senate on his ticket, defeating Democratic incumbent James P. Dugan in the primary election.[1] Although Sheil and Smith split in 1980, weakening the political machine they had built, Smith supported Sheil's campaign for mayor in 1981.[1][2]

Candidates

Primary election

Runoff election

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI