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1999 Chicago mayoral election

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1999 Chicago mayoral election

← 1995 February 23, 1999 2003 →
Turnout41.9%[1] Decrease 0.35 pp
 
Candidate Richard M. Daley Bobby Rush
Popular vote 429,746 167,845
Percentage 71.91% 28.09%

Results by ward

Mayor before election

Richard M. Daley

Elected Mayor

Richard M. Daley

The Chicago mayoral election of 1999, which took place on February 23, 1999, resulted in the re-election of incumbent Richard M. Daley over Bobby Rush, with 428,872 votes to Rush's 167,709. Daley garnered a landslide 71.9% of the total vote, winning by a 44-point margin.[2] This was the first officially nonpartisan Chicago mayoral election,[3] per a 1995 Illinois law.

Candidates

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Disqualified
  • Joe Banks Jr. [5]

Campaign

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Daley was considered a broad front-runner from the start. Nevertheless, to dedicated significant funding and manpower to his campaign, and also gave support to several aldermanic campaigns.[3]

Joe Banks Jr. was denied inclusion on the ballot due to issues regarding the filing of his nomination papers.[5] This left Rush as Daley's sole opponent. Rush was a well-known figure in the city.[3] A congressman,[4] Rush had first made his name in Chicago in the 1960s as a local Black Panther leader, and had received further notability thereafter as a member of the Chicago City Council.[3]

The Chicago Tribune wrote of Daley's campaign,

Daley reaped the benefits of a strong economy and used his powerful political organization to convince voters that Chicago was moving in the right direction and that Rush could not do a better job.[3]

The Chicago Tribune also observed,

Though Daley’s victory was generated by a potent organization able to deliver votes for the mayor, it also was helped along by the disorganization and missed opportunities that plagued Rush’s campaign.[3]

Daley adopted a tactic of ignoring Rush, refraining from saying his opponent's name during campaign speeches.[3] As was the case in all of his reelection campaigns, Daley did not attend any debates.[6] He believed that a debate would only gift Rush free publicity.[3]

Rush's campaign lacked funding. His campaign's theme was addressing an issue of there being a divide that had created "two Chicagos [3] (similar rhetoric to the notion of a divide creating "Two Americas"). Rush argued that poor neighborhoods had been neglected by Daley, while Daley instead focused on downtown projects such as adding flowerpots to beautify downtown streets and the construction of a ferris wheel at Navy Pier.[3]

Endorsements

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Results

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Daley won a landslide re-election to an additional term, which (so long as he completed the full term) would make him the second-longest-serving mayor in the city's history behind only his own father (Richard J. Daley),[3] and surpassing Edward Joseph Kelly.

Citywide result

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The Chicago Tribune considered Daley's win a significant landslide victory, writing,

Daley swept to a fourth term as Chicago’s mayor Tuesday, earning an overwhelming victory over U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush that extended and solidified his grasp over the city in a manner not seen since the days of his father, the late Richard J. Daley.[3]

Daley received his highest-yet percentage of the vote, slightly surpassing the share he received in 1991.[3] However it was not an all-time record, as several earlier mayors had received higher vote-shares.[3]

Mayor of Chicago 1999[7]
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Richard M. Daley (incumbent) 429,746 71.91
Nonpartisan Bobby L. Rush 167,845 28.09
Turnout 597,591

Results by ward

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Daley won a majority of the vote in 33 of the city's 50 wards. Rush won a majority of the vote in the remaining 17 wards.[2]

The Chicago Tribune observed that Daley had,

Received support far beyond the traditional Democratic ward organizations on the Southwest and Northwest Sides, picking up significant vote totals in predominantly African-American wards. The support for the mayor in the city’s black wards, which Rush had considered to be his base constituency, reflected the alliances Daley has forged among religious and political leaders in the African-American community.[3]

This was the last of Daley's campaigns in which he did not carry a plurality of the vote in all 50 wards (as he would do in the next two mayoral elections).

Results by ward[2]

Daley's victory speech

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On the evening of the election, Daley delivered a brief victory speech in which he touted his victory as, "a tremendous vote of confidence...built with votes from all of Chicago's neighborhoods,"[3] remarking,

Today, people from every community said they want us to continue to work together as one city in which everyone has a voice and no one is left behind, and we will.[3]

In his speech, Daley further remarked on his victory,

It was a vote of confidence in our future. And today, the people of Chicago said, "We want to continue to reform our public schools and work toward that day when every child graduates with a real diploma and real opportunities to live their dreams." And we will.[3]

The speech was the first of his campaign in which he mentioned Rush by name. Daley promised to collaborate with Rush (who would continue to Represent portions of Chicago in the U.S. House of Representatives) and other elected officials, "for the betterment of our city and all our neighborhoods."[3]

Rush's concession speech

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On the evening of the election, Rush delivered a concession speech to a gathering of approximately 200 supporters at the HoneySuckle Chicago Restaurant. He declared that their campaign had "stood tall" in the face of a much better-funded opponent. While conceding the evident outcome of the election, Rush remarked,

It seems as though I have lost this election, but I want you to know I don’t consider myself a loser. This wasn’t the right time.[3]

Rush expressed no regret in challenging Daley, opining that he believed that it would have been "disingenuous" to have allowed Daley to be re-elected uncontested because there was a need for Daley to face an opponent promoting a movement "fairness and justice" for the entirety of Chicago. Rush remarked,

That movement, although faint, is still alive, and it will continue to reinvent itself and grow and be the kind of movement that will help lead both Chicagos down the path toward equality and justice.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Denvir, Daniel (May 22, 2015). "Voter Turnout in U.S. Mayoral Elections Is Pathetic, But It Wasn't Always This Way". Bloomberg. City Lab (The Atlantic). Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "Election Results for 1999 General Election, Mayor, Chicago, Illinois". Chicago Democracy. Archived from the original on July 2, 2020. Retrieved August 26, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Kreiter, Marcella S. (February 23, 2003). "Daley Heads For Easy Victory". UPI. Retrieved January 16, 2025.
  4. ^ a b c "Daley Triumphs In Landslide". Chicago Tribune. February 24, 1999. Retrieved January 16, 2025.
  5. ^ a b Multiple sources:
  6. ^ Rudin, Kevin (February 21, 2007). "Chicago's Long-Running Daley Show". NPR. Retrieved January 16, 2025.
  7. ^ "Board of Election Commissioners For the City of Chicago Mayoral Election Results Since 1900 General Elections Only". Chicago Board of Election Commissioners. July 18, 2004. Archived from the original on July 18, 2004. Retrieved March 26, 2023.