1947 Chicago mayoral election explained

Election Name:1947 Chicago mayoral election
Country:Chicago
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1943 Chicago mayoral election
Previous Year:1943
Next Election:1951 Chicago mayoral election
Next Year:1951
Turnout:70.31%[1]
Election Date:April 1, 1947
Image1:File:Martin H. Kennelly (72-599).jpg
Nominee1:Martin H. Kennelly
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:919,593
Percentage1:58.73%
Nominee2:Russell Root
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:646,239
Percentage2:41.27%
Mayor
Before Election:Edward J. Kelly
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Martin H. Kennelly
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The Chicago mayoral election of 1947 was held on April 1, 1947. The election saw Democrat Martin H. Kennelly being elected, defeating Republican Russell Root by a more-than 17% margin of victory.

The election was preceded by primary elections in February 1947 to determine the nominees of both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.

Nominations

Democratic primary

After fourteen scandal-filled years in office, incumbent Democrat Edward J. Kelly was seen by many as unelectable in the year 1947.[2] [3] The Cook County Democratic Party (led by Jacob Arvey) desired to run a candidate with reform bona-fides, wanting to avoid a candidates with allegations of mismanagement and corruption.[4] Thus, they convinced Kelly not to seek reelection.[4] [5] This would be the last Chicago mayoral election until 2011 in which an incumbent did not seek reelection.[6] [7] It was also the first since 1923 in which this was the case.

The Democratic Party opted to back Kennelly, a wealthy warehouse magnate. Kennelly had no prior experience in political office.[3] Kennelly was the third mayoral candidate to reside in Edgewater, following Nathaniel C. Sears and William Emmett Dever, and would consequentially be the second Edgewater resident elected mayor (after Dever).[8]

Republican primary

The number of voters who participated in the Republican primary was roughly half the number of voters who participated in the Democratic primary participated.[9] Republicans nominated Russell Root. Root, considered rather politically undistinguished, had been strongly backed by the statewide Republican organization of Governor Dwight H. Green.[2]

General election

Root, appealing to the onslaught of the second red scare, characterized the race as a "vote for or against Communism".[10] Root attacked the nature Kennelly's nomination, having been selected by the Democratic machine.[2] However, these charges were perhaps rendered less than effective by the nature of Root's own nomination, having been pushed by Green's Republican organization.[2] Kennelly attempted to run on an image of having clean record.[2] Much of the platform he extolled could be attributed to the Progressive Era values he had grown up around.[2] Republicans accused Kennelly of having, in his career as a warehouse magnate, profiteered off of the city in public contracts he received to store polling place materials.[2]

Kenelly rebuked these allegations, arguing that he charged the city the same price in 1947 that he had when he began providing the city this service in 1923, and that he considered it more of a civic duty than a profit-making venture.[2] Kennelly benefited from the strong inroads that Kelly had built with African Americans. The Chicago Defender endorsed Kennelly, arguing that the city's black population saw it as important to, "continue and expand the progressive and far-reaching racial policies" of Kelly.[2]

Results

The election saw a record-breaking total, with more votes being cast than in any Chicago mayoral election before it.[11] Kennelly won the greatest vote total of any mayoral candidate in Chicago history.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mayoral race one for history books; will turnout be headline or footnote? . Chicago Sun-Times . 4 April 2020 . en . 8 February 2019.
  2. Book: Green . Paul M. . Holli . Melvin G. . The Mayors: The Chicago Political Tradition, fourth edition . SIU Press . 22 May 2020 . 147–148, 156 . en . 10 January 2013. 9780809331994 .
  3. Web site: Stewart . Russ . EMANUEL'S CHOICE WAS EITHER TO GET OUT OR TO GET BEAT . https://web.archive.org/web/20210224064651/http://russstewart.com/articles/2018/09-12-2018.html . dead . February 24, 2021 . 4 January 2019 . 12 September 2018 .
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=J5--oiC8ZcQC World War II Chicago By Paul Michael Green, Melvin G. Holli
  5. Pacyyga, Dominic, Chicago: A Biography, 2009, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 324
  6. AN EXAMINIATION OF THE 2011 CHICAGO MAYORAL ELECTION By https://paulsimoninstitute.siu.edu/common/documents/whats-in.../krebs-turner.pdf
  7. Web site: Cichowsk . Marla . Rules For Running For Chicago Mayor . Fox News . 11 December 2018 . September 7, 2010.
  8. Web site: Edgewater Teasers Vol. XVI No. 3 - FALL 2005 . Edgewater History . 13 February 2019.
  9. Web site: Marshall Evening Chronicle Archives, Feb 26, 1947, p. 1. 26 February 1947.
  10. Book: Fried . Richard M. . Nightmare in Red: The McCarthy Era in Perspective . 1991 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-976319-1 . 110 . 22 May 2020 . en.
  11. News: Kennelly, Democrat, Is Elected Chicago Mayor by Wide Margin; KENNELLY ELECTED MAYOR OF CHICAGO CHICAGO MAYORALTY CHANGES HANDS . 11 December 2018 . New York Times . April 2, 1947.