1950 New Orleans mayoral election explained

Election Name:1950 New Orleans mayoral election
Country:New Orleans
Flag Year:1950
Flag Image:Flag of New Orleans, Louisiana.svg
Type:presidential
Vote Type:Popular
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1946 New Orleans mayoral election
Previous Year:1946
Next Election:New Orleans mayoral election, 1954
Next Year:1954
Image1:Chep Morrison 1961.jpg
Candidate1:deLesseps Morrison
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:120,582
Percentage1:65.1%
Candidate2:Charles C. Zatarain
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:58,620
Percentage2:31.7%
Mayor of New Orleans
Before Election:deLesseps Morrison
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:deLesseps Morrison
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The New Orleans mayoral election of 1950 was held on January 24, 1950. It resulted in the re-election of deLesseps Morrison to his second term as Mayor of New Orleans.

Like most Southern states between Reconstruction and the civil rights era, Louisiana's Republican Party was virtually nonexistent in terms of electoral support. This meant that the city's Democratic primary was the real contest for mayor.

Incumbent mayor deLesseps Morrison was backed by labor unions, the major newspapers, and black New Orleanians, but he also publicly maintained his support for segregation on the campaign trail.

After being defeated in the election of 1946, the Regular Democratic Organization political machine was anxious to regain control of the city. After an unsuccessful search for a candidate that briefly included former mayor Robert Maestri, the RDO threw its support behind Charles C. Zatarain, a local businessman and member of the Louisiana Tax Commission. Zatarain also received the endorsement of Governor Earl Long. Though running against Morrison, Zatarain’s platform was largely a watered-down copy of Morrison’s. Zatarain also used racial appeals in his campaign, charging that Morrison planned to build housing for African Americans in Lakeview and Gentilly and circulating photographs of Morrison with black leader Ralph Bunche.Another minor candidate, Alvin A. Cobb, ran on an explicit Dixiecrat platform that included racial attacks on Morrison’s policies.

In the first primary, Morrison won an overwhelming majority over Zatarain, receiving 65% of the vote and winning every one of the city’s 17 wards. Cobb received 4,751 votes. No runoff was needed. With five of Morrison’s seven candidates for council also winning election, it seemed as though the RDO was irrevocably beaten.

CandidateVotes receivedPercentage
deLesseps Morrison (incumbent)120,58265.12%
Charles C. Zatarain58,62031.66%
Alvin A. Cobb4,7512.57%
Anthony J. Deckelmann9320.50%
Mrs. Louis P. Dillon2820.15%

Sources