Chicago mayoral election, 1999

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Chicago Mayoral election, 1999
Flag of Chicago, Illinois.svg
  1995 February 23, 1999 2003  

  RMDaleyCropped (1).png Bobby Rush Official portrait (1).jpg
Candidate Richard M. Daley Bobby Rush
Popular vote428,872167,709
Percentage71.9%28.1%

Mayor before election

Richard M. Daley

Elected Mayor

Richard M. Daley

The Chicago Mayoral Election of 1999, which took place on February 23, 1999, resulted in the re-election of incumbent Richard M. Daley over Bobby Rush, with 428,872 votes to Rush's 167,709. Daley garnered 71.9% of the total vote. [1] This was the first officially nonpartisan Chicago mayoral election, per a 1995 Illinois law.

Richard M. Daley Illinois politician

Richard Michael Daley is an American politician, lawyer, and author who served as the 50th Mayor of Chicago, Illinois from 1989 to 2011. Daley was elected mayor in 1989 and was reelected five times until declining to run for a seventh term. At 22 years, he was the longest-serving Chicago mayor, surpassing the tenure of his father, Richard J. Daley.

Bobby Rush American politician

Bobby Lee Rush is an American politician, activist, pastor, and the U.S. Representative for Illinois's 1st congressional district, serving in Congress for more than two decades; he was first elected in 1992 and took office in 1993. He has since won consecutive re-election. The district was located principally on the South Side of Chicago, with a population from 2003 to early 2013 that was 65% African-American, a higher proportion than any other congressional district in the nation. In 2011 the Illinois General Assembly redistricted this area following the 2010 census. While still minority-majority, since early 2013 it is 51.3% African American, 9.8% Latino and 2% Asian. He was re-elected in 2016. A member of the Democratic Party, Rush is the only politician to have defeated Barack Obama in an election, which he did in the 2000 Democratic primary for Illinois' 1st congressional district. A civil rights activist during the 1960s, Rush founded the Illinois chapter of the Black Panthers.

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