Election Name: | 1993 Los Angeles mayoral election |
Country: | Los Angeles |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1989 Los Angeles mayoral election |
Previous Year: | 1989 |
Next Election: | 1997 Los Angeles mayoral election |
Next Year: | 1997 |
Election Date: | and |
1Blank: | First round |
2Blank: | Runoff |
Image1: | Richard Riordan, 1997.jpg |
Color1: | c0c0c0 |
Candidate1: | Richard Riordan |
1Data1: | 158,527 33.42% |
2Data1: | 314,559 53.94% |
Color2: | c0c0c0 |
Candidate2: | Michael Woo |
1Data2: | 113,913 24.01% |
2Data2: | 268,137 46.06% |
Image3: | Joel Wachs, 1989.jpg |
Color3: | c0c0c0 |
Candidate3: | Joel Wachs |
1Data3: | 52,221 11.01% |
2Data3: | Eliminated |
Image4: | Richard Katz, 2012.jpg |
Color4: | c0c0c0 |
Candidate4: | Richard Katz |
1Data4: | 46,163 9.73% |
2Data4: | Eliminated |
Image5: | Linda Greigo, 2018.jpg |
Color5: | c0c0c0 |
Candidate5: | Linda Griego |
1Data5: | 34,227 7.22% |
2Data5: | Eliminated |
Mayor | |
Before Election: | Tom Bradley |
After Election: | Richard Riordan |
The 1993 Los Angeles mayoral election took place on April 20, 1993, with a run-off election on June 8, 1993. This was the first race in 64 years that an incumbent was not on the ballot. It marked the first time in 24 years that retiring Mayor Tom Bradley was not on the ballot, after five consecutive victories starting in 1973.[1] Richard Riordan became the first Republican mayor elected in 36 years.
Municipal elections in California, including Mayor of Los Angeles, are officially nonpartisan; candidates' party affiliations do not appear on the ballot.[2]
After the retirement of Tom Bradley, the seat was open for the first time since the 1929 election when incumbent George E. Cryer retired. Many city council members ran for the post, including Michael Woo, Joel Wachs, Nate Holden, and Ernani Bernardi. Other local area politicians, including Assemblyman Richard Katz, Deputy Mayor Linda Greigo, and Board of Recreation and Parks Commissioner Richard Riordan.[3] [4]
Riordan used $4.2 million during the campaign, with much of the donations to him from the more conservative San Fernando Valley, Westside, and Harbor area.[5] In the primary election, Riordan and Woo advanced to the runoff.[6]
Riordan and Woo criticized each other over their ability to fight crime and about the economy, with Riordan calling Woo a career politician and Woo saying that Riordan was a "symbol of 1980s greed."[7] [8] In the runoff election, Riordan defeated Woo, with the Jewish population in Los Angeles seen by some as the defining factor for Riordan's win.[9] Some newspapers also said that Riordan's hiring of gay staffers helped bolster the vote from gay and lesbians in the city as well.[10]