New York City mayoral election, 1969

New York City mayoral election, 1969
New York City
November 4, 1969

 
Candidate John Lindsay Mario Procaccino John J. Marchi
Party Liberal Democratic Republican
Alliance Independent Civil Service Conservative
Popular vote 1,012,633 831,772 542,411
Percentage 42.36% 34.79% 22.69%

Results by Borough
  Procaccino—40-50%
  Marchi—60-70%
  Linsday—30-40%
  Lindsay—60-70%

Mayor before election

John Lindsay
Republican

Elected Mayor

John Lindsay
Liberal

The New York City mayoral election of 1969 occurred on Tuesday, November 4, 1969, with incumbent Liberal Party Mayor John Lindsay elected to a second term.

Lindsay defeated the Democratic candidate, New York City Comptroller Mario Procaccino, and the Republican candidate, state senator John Marchi.

Lindsay received 42.36% of the vote to Procaccino's 34.79%, a Liberal victory margin of 7.57%.[1]

Marchi finished a distant third with 22.69%.

Linsday, a liberal originally elected in 1965 as a Republican with Liberal Party support, had lost the Republican primary to Marchi, but still managed to be re-elected as a Liberal. Lindsay also received the Independent ballot line.

Procaccino also received the Civil Service ballot line, while Marchi received the Conservative Party ballot line.

Reflecting the 3-way split in the race, with each candidate garnering double-digit support citywide, the five boroughs split between all 3 candidates. Lindsay scored a big victory in Manhattan with 67.1% of the vote, while also winning a narrow plurality in Queens with 36.3% of the vote. Procaccino won pluralities by small margins in Brooklyn and the Bronx. Marchi, a state senator from Staten Island, won that borough with 62.0% of the vote.

Linsday would be sworn in to his second and final term in January 1970.

Results

Note: In one of the most unusual primary seasons since the conglomeration of greater New York, the incumbent Mayor (Lindsay) and a former incumbent (Robert F. Wagner, Jr.) both lost their parties' primaries. Procaccino won with less than 33% of the vote against four opponents, which inspired the use of runoffs in future primaries. In the general election, Lindsay carried Manhattan (the only borough he had carried in losing the Republican primary to Marchi, 107,000 to 113,000) as he did in 1965, but he was only 4,000 votes ahead of giving first place in Queens to Procaccino. Turnout dropped to 2.4 million from 2.6 million in 1965. (In the same election, Lindsay's 1965 opponent Abe Beame was easily returned to his old job of Comptroller.) [2]

1969 General Election party Manhattan The Bronx Brooklyn Queens Richmond [Staten Is.] Total %
John V. LindsayLiberal - Independent328,564161,953256,046249,33016,7401,012,63342.4%
67.1%40.1%36.0%36.3%17.5%
Mario ProcaccinoDemocratic - Civil Service Fusion99,460165,647301,324245,78319,558831,77234.8%
20.3%41.0%42.4%35.8%20.5%
John MarchiRepublican - Conservative61,53976,711152,933192,00859,220542,41122.7%
12.6%19.0%21.5%27.9%62.0%
subtotal
489,563404,311710,303687,12195,5182,386,81699.8%
Rasheed StoreyCommunist 4,0180.2%
T O T A L
2,390,834100.0%
1969 Republican primary
Manhattan The Bronx Brooklyn Queens Staten Island Total
[Lindsay minus Marchi] + 31,779 – 3,910 – 13,119 – 13,811 – 7,271 – 6,332
John V. Lindsay 44,236 12,222 20,575 26,658 3,675 107,366
John J. Marchi 12,457 16,132 33,694 40,649 10,946 113,698
221,064
1969 Democratic primary
Manhattan The Bronx Brooklyn Queens Staten Island Total
Mario Procaccino 26,804 50,465 87,650 79,002 11,628 255,529
percentage
16% 34% 36% 40% 52% 33%
Robert F. Wagner, Jr. 40,978 33,442 81,833 61,244 6,967 224,464
percentage
25% 23% 33% 31% 31% 29%
Herman Badillo 74,809 48,841 52,866 37,880 2,769 217,165
percentage
45% 33% 22% 19% 12% 28%
Norman Mailer 17,372 4,214 10,299 8,700 703 41,288
percentage
10% 3% 4% 4% 3% 5%
James H. Scheuer 7,117 10,788 11,942 8,994 509 39,350
percentage
4% 7% 5% 5% 2% 5%
777,796


References

  1. "New York City Mayoral Election 1969". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  2. page 437 of The Ungovernable City: John Lindsay and His Struggle to Save New York By Vincent J. Cannato (Basic Books, 2001, ISBN 0-465-00843-7)

Further reading