Charlotte mayoral election, 2013

The biennial Charlotte mayoral election was held on Tuesday, November 5, 2013. Primary elections were held on Tuesday, September 10, 2013.[1] Unaffiliated voters were allowed to vote in either the Democratic or Republican primary.

On July 2, 2013, Anthony Foxx, a Democrat, announced that he would resign as mayor to become United States Secretary of Transportation. District 1 city councilperson Patsy Kinsey, also a Democrat, was named interim mayor the same day with the understanding that she would not stand in the mayoral election in November. Kinsey instead ran to regain the council seat she had vacated.

Democratic Party nominee Patrick Cannon, another member of the city council, won the general election to become the 55th mayor of Charlotte. However, only under four months into his term, on March 26, 2014, Cannon was arrested by the FBI on charges of accepting bribes (to which he later pleaded guilty) and resigned later that day, prompting the City Council to elect Dan Clodfelter to serve for the remainder of Cannon's term as the 57th Mayor of Charlotte.

Candidates

Democratic

Declined

Republican

Results

Primaries

Candidates Democratic Primary Election - Sept. 10 [11]
Candidate Party Votes Percent
Patrick Cannon Democratic 14,025 55.70%
James "Smuggie" Mitchell Democratic 9,956 39.54%
Gary Dunn Democratic 631 2.51%
Lucille Puckett Democratic 567 2.25%
Candidates Republican Primary Election - Sept. 10 [12]
Candidate Party Votes Percent
Edwin Peacock III Republican 8,289 92.06%
David Michael Rice Republican 715 7.94%

General election

Candidates General Election - Nov. 5 [13]
Candidate Party Votes Percent
Patrick Cannon Democratic 51,310 53.06%
Edwin B. Peacock III Republican 45,036 46.74%

References

External links

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