Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
2001 Pittsburgh mayoral election
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The mayoral election of 2001 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was held on Tuesday, November 6, 2001. The incumbent mayor, Tom Murphy of the Democratic Party was running for a record-tying third straight term.
Remove ads
Primary elections
Summarize
Perspective
Tom Murphy had a very close and personal primary battle with City Council President and future mayor Bob O'Connor. Murphy won the primary by just a few hundred votes, and in later years this primary battle was the subject of a U.S. Department of Justice probe. It was alleged but never proven in court that Mayor Murphy had a quid pro quo agreement with the powerful Firefighters union in the city, promising to exempt them from citywide budget cuts in return for "bought" votes.
Legend
- Murphy 40-50%
- Murphy 50-60%
- Murphy 60-70%
- Murphy 70-80%
- O'Connor 40-50%
- O'Connor 50-60%
- O'Connor 60-70%
- O'Connor 70-80%
- O'Connor 80-90%
- O'Connor 90-100%
- Tie 40-50%
Legend
- Carmine 50-60%
- Carmine 60-70%
- Carmine 70-80%
- Carmine 80-90%
- Carmine 90-100%
- Rauterkus 50-60%
- Rauterkus 60-70%
- Rauterkus 70-80%
- Rauterkus 80-90%
- Rauterkus 90-100%
- Tie 50%
- No votes
Remove ads
General election
A total of 52,839 votes were cast in the heavily Democratic city. As expected, Murphy won by a huge margin over James Carmine, a philosophy professor at Carlow University.
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads