Elections are held in Tel Aviv to elect the city's mayor. Currently, such elections are regularly scheduled to elect mayors to five-year terms.
Prior to 1978, mayors were selected by a vote of the city council. Since 1978, direct elections have been held for mayor. [1]
The 1978 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 8, November 1978, [2] and saw the reelection of Shlomo Lahat.
1978 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [2] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
Shlomo Lahat (incumbent) | Likud | 85,092 | 58.36 |
Asher Ben-Natan | Alignment | 43,025 | 29.51 |
Haim Menachem Besuk | United Religious Front | 12,093 | 8.30 |
Yitzhak Artzi | Independent Liberals | 5,579 | 3.83 |
Total | 145,789 | 100 |
The 1983 Tel Aviv mayoral election saw the reelection of Shlomo Lahat to a third consecutive term.
The 1989 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 28 February 1989, [3] and saw the reelection of Shlomo Lahat to a fourth consecutive term.
1989 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [3] [4] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
Shlomo Lahat (incumbent) | Likud | 70,052 | 55.3 |
Natan Wolloch | Labor | 24,254 | 19.1 |
Mordechai Yitzhari | United Religious Front | 11,898 | 9.4 |
Mordechai Virshubski | Ratz | 7,205 | 5.7 |
Aryeh Zucker | Mapam | 6,192 | 4.9 |
Yitzhak Artzi | Independent Liberals | 4,476 | 3.5 |
Yair Rotlevy | Shinui | 2,600 | 2.1 |
Total | 126,677 | 100 |
The 1993 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 2 November 1993, [5] and saw the election of Roni Milo.
1993 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [5] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
Roni Milo | I am a Tel Avivi | 62,553 | 47.15 |
Avigdor Kahalani | Labor | 56,383 | 42.50 |
Mordechai Yitzhari | United Religious Front | 8,959 | 6.75 |
Mordechai Virshubski | Meretz | 4,769 | 3.60 |
Total | 132,664 | 100 |
The 1998 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 10 November 1998, [6] and saw the election of Ron Huldai.
Incumbent mayor Roni Milo had opted against seeking reelection, instead planning to run for prime minister in 2000 as the head of a new centrist political party. [7] [8]
Huldai had been the principal of Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium. [9] Huldai ran as an independent candidate with the support of the Israeli Labor Party. [10] Huldai was regarded to be a political liberal. [11] His opponents included former general Doron Rubin [12] and actor Samuel Vilozny.
Huldai was considered the front-runner during the campaign. [11]
The campaign of Doron Rubin never received much momentum. [13]
There were instances of electoral violence during the campaign. Instances included a switchboard serving Huldai's campaign office was set on fire, a firebomb being tossed at one of the mayoral candidates homes, and a car belonging to a volunteer for one of the campaigns being set on fire. [11]
Huldai's victory was regarded to be a landslide. [11]
1998 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [6] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Candidate | Votes | % |
Ron Huldai | One Tel Aviv | 66,701 | 50.25 |
Doron Rubin | Doron for Tel Aviv | 32,917 | 25.19 |
Samuel Vilozny | Samuel Vilozny - Our City | 17,655 | 13.51 |
Naftali Lobert | United Torah Judaism | 7,888 | 6.04 |
Dan Darin-Dravkin | Lev - Dan Darin's list | 3,282 | 2.51 |
Yehudit Arad | Tel Aviv elects residents | 2,385 | 1.83 |
Arieh Chertok | Tel Aviv 2000 | 837 | 0.64 |
Total | 130,665 | 100 |
The 2003 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 28 October 2003, [14] and saw the reelection of Ron Huldai. Huldai won 55,966 votes (62.91% of the vote) against 5 opponents.
2003 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [14] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
Ron Huldai (incumbent) | One Tel Aviv | 55,966 | 62.91 |
Arnon Giladi | Likud | 11,507 | 12.93 |
Pe'er Visner | The Greens | 8,531 | 9.59 |
Gila Hertz | Gila Hertz-Public Right | 7,082 | 7.96 |
Israel Meir Godovich | Godovich is good for Tel Aviv | 5,864 | 6.59 |
Naftali Lobert | United Religious Front | 11 | 0.01 |
Total | 88,961 | 100 |
The 2008 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 11 November 2008, [15] and saw the reelection of Ron Huldai to a third consecutive term. Huldai won 51% of the vote. [9]
Huldai was considered the election's front-runner. [16] However, he faced criticisms accusing him of failing to address the demand for affordable housing in the city. and alleging that development in the city during his mayoralty had been beneficial only to the city's wealthy. [16]
Runner-up Dov Khenin, a member of the Knesset who ran on a social and environmental issues-focused platform, won 34% of the vote. [9] Khenin, running under the "City for All" party label, [18] was also affiliated with Hadash. [16]
One of the top issues discussed during the election included growing demand for parking spaces in the city, which outweighed the supply. [16]
2008 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [15] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
Ron Huldai (incumbent) | One Tel Aviv [19] | 67,704 | 50.08 |
Dov Khenin | City of All [19] | 45,737 | 34.30 |
Shachor Svi-Oren | Oren [20] | 13,974 | 10.48 |
Pe'er Visner | Green Party [21] | 5,345 | 4.01 |
Asma Agbaria-Zahalka | Da'am [22] | 584 | 0.04 |
Total | 133,344 | 100 |
The 2013 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held 22 October 2013, [23] and saw the reelection of Ron Huldai to a fourth consecutive term.
2013 Tel Aviv mayoral elections results [23] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
Ron Huldai (incumbent) | One Tel Aviv [24] | 70,048 | 53.24 |
Nitzan Horowitz | Meretz [25] | 50,166 | 38.13 |
Aharon Maduel | City of All [18] | 11,368 | 8.64 |
Total | 131,582 | 100 |
The 2018 Tel Aviv mayoral election was held on 30 October 2018 to elect the mayor of Tel Aviv. It saw the reelection of Ron Huldai to a fifth consecutive term. [9]
The election was part of the 2018 Israeli municipal elections.
Since Huldai's share of the vote exceeded the 40% threshold required to avert a runoff election, no runoff was held. [9]
Turnout was 44.17% [26]
Candidate | Party name | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ron Huldai (incumbent) | One Tel Aviv | תל אביב 1, Tel Aviv Ahat | 91,116 | 46.86 |
Asaf Zamir | City Majority | רוב העיר, Rov HaIr | 66,403 | 34.15 |
Assaf Harel | We Are the City | אנחנו העיר, Anahnu HaIr | 23,604 | 12.14 |
Natan Elnatan | Shas | ש"ס | 13,328 | 6.85 |
Source: Ministry of the Interior [26] |
The 2024 Tel Aviv mayoral election will be held to elect the mayor of Tel Aviv. Current Israeli law imposes no term limits on Mayors, [27] Incumbent Ron Huldai announced his intention to run for a sixth term. [28]
Amnon Linn was an Israeli politician, jurist and member of Knesset.
Ron Huldai is an Israeli politician and businessman who has been Mayor of Tel Aviv since 1998. Before taking office as mayor, Huldai served as a fighter pilot and commander in the Israeli Air Force. After leaving the Israel Defense Force as a brigadier general, he entered the business world and was later headmaster of the Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium in Tel Aviv.
Meir Porush is an Israeli politician who has served as a member of the Knesset for the Haredi Agudat Yisrael faction of United Torah Judaism in several spells since 1996. He served as the Deputy Minister of Education.
Roni Milo is an Israeli politician, lawyer and journalist, and a former Knesset member who held several ministerial positions. He was also mayor of Tel Aviv from 1993 to 1998.
The United Religious Front was a political alliance of the four major religious parties in Israel, as well as the Union of Religious Independents, formed to contest the 1949 elections.
Zvi Henryk Zimmerman was a Zionist activist, jurist, and Israeli politician. He is also known for his cooperation with Henryk Sławik to save Jews during the Holocaust.
Pe'er Visner is an Israeli politician who was deputy mayor of Tel Aviv and chair of the Israeli Green Party.
Professor Yehudit Naot was an Israeli scientist and politician. She served as Minister of the Environment between February 2003 and October 2004.
Mordechai Virshuvski was an Israeli politician who served as a member of the Knesset for several parties between 1977 and 1992.
Yitzhak Artzi was an Israeli politician who served as a member of the Knesset between 1984 and 1988.
Asher Ben-Natan was an Israeli diplomat and a key figure in the country's defense and diplomacy fields. Ben-Natan led the search for Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, who was captured in 1960. He became the Director General of the Israeli Ministry of Defense from 1959 until 1965. Ben-Natan then served as the first Israeli Ambassador to Germany from August 1965 until 1970. Ben-Natan was then appointed as Israel's Ambassador to France from 1970 until his retirement in 1974.
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