1977 Buffalo mayoral election explained

Election Name:1977 Buffalo mayoral election
Flag Image:Flag of Buffalo, New York.svg
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Year:1974
Next Year:1981
Image1:File:James D. Griffin at Groundbreaking of Pilot Field (now Sahlen Field), July 1986 (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Jimmy Griffin
Party1:Conservative Party of New York State
Popular Vote1:57,642
Percentage1:41.97%
Nominee2:Arthur Eve
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:43,240
Percentage2:31.49%
Nominee3:John J. Phelan
Party3:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote3:34,171
Percentage3:24.88%
Mayor
Before Election:Stanley Makowski
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Jimmy Griffin
After Party:Conservative Party of New York

The Buffalo mayoral election of 1977 took place in Buffalo, New York, USA, on November 8, 1977, and resulted in the election of Jimmy Griffin to his first term as mayor.

Background

On March 3, 1977, Buffalo's incumbent mayor Stanley Makowski announced he would not seek reelection in May. On the same day, Deputy New York State Assembly speaker Arthur Eve announced his candidacy for the post.[1] Despite his numerous successes at fostering communication, he was described as a militant civil rights leader. Eve's primary campaign was described by Frank Prial of The New York Times as a campaign against Erie County Democratic Chairman Joseph Crangle rather than his handpicked candidate, Leslie Foschio.[2] Eve declared his intentions early to add incentive to a voter registration drive, and he modeled his campaign after Carl Stokes' 1967 Mayor of Cleveland election, which used decentralized election districts.[3] Later in the election cycle, State Senator Jimmy Griffin entered the Democratic Primary.

Primary campaign

Democratic primary

Although Eve was expected to finish no better than third in the four-way race, he believed in a strategy to take 90 percent of the black vote and 10 percent of the rest. 30% of the 425,000 Buffalo residents were black at the time.[2] His candidacy blossomed during four televised Democratic debates. Eve capitalized on Griffin's late campaign strategy of describing the Mayor job as simple like all jobs.[2] Eve and his supporters supposedly registered 10,000 new black voters.[2]

Eve became the first African-American to win the Democratic Party's Buffalo Mayoral Primary election.[4] Eve won the primary for the Democratic nomination by a 25,538 - 23,579 (approximately 37% - 34%) margin over Griffin.

The primary had had a voter turnout of 77–80% in the Black community, the highest ever for an African American community in the Northeast, and surpassed nationwide in terms of African American voter turnout only by the 1967 Mayor of Cleveland election of Carl Stokes.

General election

Eve's victory brought out acts of racist aggression against him and his family, as a cross was burned on his front lawn and his family was subjected to threatening telephone calls.[5]

After losing the primary Griffin became the Conservative Party's nominee; third-placed primary finisher Foschio also threatened to enter the general election. Eve was supported by Erie County Democratic Chairman Joseph Crangle, who hoped to prevent a third Democrat, such as Foschio, from running in the general election by endorsing Eve publicly, but Eve campaigned without Crangle's backing or the Democratic Party's.[1] [6] Eve spurned Crangle's endorsement because he saw the endorsement as associating himself with the Crangle machine. He subsequently distanced himself from Crangle by announcing that he was not supporting the chairman's bid for re-election in 1978.[1]

Griffin went on to win the general election by a ten percent margin over Eve, beating him and Republican candidate John J. Phelan.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Rizzo, pp. 344-345
  2. News: Black Activist Confounds Experts In Upset in Buffalo Mayoral Race. Prial, Frank J.. September 10, 1974. 53. The New York Times.
  3. Levy and Miller, p. 58
  4. Web site: Essentially Eve Arthur O. Eve Has Turned His Life Into A Crusade. The Question Is Whether He Should Lighten UP. November 23, 2008. November 15, 1992. Newsbank. The Buffalo News. Montgomery, David.
  5. Web site: A Buffalo 'power couple' whose conscience is sorely needed today. Watson. Rod. June 2, 2021. The Buffalo News. June 2, 2021.
  6. News: Griffin Wins Easily In Buffalo Voting; State Senator Defeats Five Others as Eve Trails Far Behind Blow to Crangle Is Seen . May 3, 2009. November 9, 1977. The New York Times. Prial, Frank J. .
  7. Web site: 1977 Buffalo Mayoral Election results. 2 June 2021.