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Elections in California |
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The 1981 Los Angeles mayoral election took place on April 7, 1981. Incumbent Tom Bradley was re-elected over former Mayor Sam Yorty. The election was a third rematch between Bradley and Yorty, the other two being in 1969 and 1973. [1] It would be the last time a Mayor would be elected to a third term, as voters amended the city charter in 1993 to implement a two-term limit for the office of Mayor. [2]
Municipal elections in California, including Mayor of Los Angeles, are officially nonpartisan; candidates' party affiliations do not appear on the ballot. [2]
Yorty had been a last-minute challenger, saying that he had been urged to run after LAPD Chief Daryl Gates announced that he would not challenge Bradley. [3] [4] Yorty said that he "sees the crime issue as the key to the contest" and was seen as injecting racism into the race by saying to a group of businessmen that "black people are really racist. They vote for black people because they're black." [5] [6] Bradley defeated Yorty and the other candidates in a landslide, with some calling the election a "lackluster affair." [7] [8]
Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|
Tom Bradley (incumbent) | 293,501 | 63.84 | |
Sam Yorty | 148,193 | 32.23 | |
Robert S. Fischer Jr. | 2,464 | 0.54 | |
John Anthony Zrynyi | 2,055 | 0.45 | |
Zack Richardson | 1,835 | 0.40 | |
Eileen Anderson | 1,822 | 0.40 | |
Sally Acosta | 1,464 | 0.32 | |
Jim Little | 1,056 | 0.23 | |
James A. Ware | 1,050 | 0.23 | |
Max Odrezin | 969 | 0.21 | |
Arnold B. Luster | 966 | 0.21 | |
Robert Deutsch | 738 | 0.16 | |
Tangela Masson Tricoli | 704 | 0.15 | |
Mort Allen | 667 | 0.15 | |
Earl Smith | 625 | 0.14 | |
Henry V. Seyfried | 457 | 0.10 | |
Michael A. Hirt | 455 | 0.10 | |
Daniel Webster Henderson Jr. | 392 | 0.09 | |
Douglas Carlton | 368 | 0.08 | |
Total votes | 459,781 | 100.00 |
Samuel William Yorty was an American politician, attorney, and radio host from Los Angeles, California. He served as a member of the United States House of Representatives and the California State Assembly, but he is most remembered for his turbulent three terms as the 37th Mayor of Los Angeles from 1961 to 1973. Although Yorty spent almost all of his political career as a Democrat, he became a Republican in 1973.
Thomas Bradley was an American politician, athlete, police officer, and lawyer who served as the 38th Mayor of Los Angeles from 1973 to 1993. Tom Bradley was Los Angeles' first Black mayor, first liberal mayor, and longest-serving mayor. A Democrat, Bradley's multiracial liberal political coalition was a forerunner of future President of the United States Barack Obama's coalition in the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections.
The 1993 Los Angeles mayoral election took place on April 20, 1993, with a run-off election on June 8, 1993. This was the first race in 64 years that an incumbent was not on the ballot. It marked the first time in 24 years that retiring Mayor Tom Bradley was not on the ballot, after five consecutive victories starting in 1973. Richard Riordan became the first Republican mayor elected in 36 years.
Alphonzo Edward Bell Jr. was a Republican United States Representative from California. Bell represented Malibu and the influential Westside region of Los Angeles for eight terms, from 1961 to 1977.
The Bradley effect is a theory concerning observed discrepancies between voter opinion polls and election outcomes in some United States government elections where a white candidate and a non-white candidate run against each other. The theory proposes that some white voters who intend to vote for the white candidate would nonetheless tell pollsters that they are undecided or likely to vote for the non-white candidate. It was named after Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley, an African-American who lost the 1982 California gubernatorial election to California attorney general George Deukmejian, a white person, despite Bradley being ahead in voter polls going into the elections.
The 1961 Los Angeles mayoral election took place on April 4, 1961, with a runoff election on May 31, 1961. Incumbent Norris Poulson was defeated by Sam Yorty, a former U.S. Representative.
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