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The 1921 Pittsburgh mayoral election was held on Tuesday, November 8, 1921. Republican nominee William A. Magee was elected by a large margin over Democratic candidate William N. McNair.

Background

The 1921 election was the last election under a law that prohibited mayors of Pittsburgh from serving consecutive terms. This law precluded incumbent mayor Edward V. Babcock from running for re-election.[1]

The nonpartisan election law governing the previous two mayoral elections was repealed, bringing an end to the nonpartisan blanket primary and a return to the party system.[1]

Republican primary

Former mayor William A. Magee, who had run for a non-consecutive second term in 1917 but lost to Babcock, ran yet again and won the Republican nomination over Joseph N. Mackrell. Magee's victory was aided by a truce in an ongoing feud with Republican boss and "Maker of Mayors" Max Leslie.[1]

General election

In the November general election, Magee easily defeated Democratic candidate William N. McNair.[1] McNair would be elected mayor twelve years later, ushering in an era of Democratic dominance in city politics.

Pittsburgh mayoral election, 1921[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican William A. Magee 77,367 67.9
Democratic William N. McNair* 34,492 30.3
Socialist William J. Van Essen 2,034 1.8
Industrialist George W. Ohls 73 0.1
Total votes 113,966 100.0

*McNair was also the nominee of the Prohibition and "Lincoln" parties.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Townley, John B. (June 23, 1934). "Pittsburgh Has Had Three Democratic Mayors in 50 Years". The Pittsburgh Press. p. 16.
  2. ^ "Official Count of Vote, Nov. 8, Is Made Known". The Pittsburgh Press. December 8, 1921. p. 5.
Preceded by
1917
Pittsburgh mayoral election
1921
Succeeded by
1925