United States mayoral elections, 2023

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2023 mayoral elections
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Ballotpedia covered 40 mayoral elections in 2023. This included all mayoral elections in the 100 largest U.S. cities by population and all mayoral elections in state capitals.

To read about mayoral elections that Ballotpedia designated as battlegrounds in 2023, click here.

As of 2023, Ballotpedia tracked the partisan affiliation of the mayors of the 100 largest cities and each state capital, including mayors of cities holding nonpartisan mayoral elections.[1]

Twenty-nine of the 100 largest U.S. cities held mayoral elections in 2023. Mayoral offices changed partisan control in five cities in 2023—four as the result of elections and one party switch—resulting in no net change in the number of offices held by Democrats and a net loss of two Republican-held offices. Libertarians and independents gained one office each. Once mayors elected in 2023 assumed office, Democrats held 63 top-100 mayoral offices, Republicans held 26, Libertarians held one, independents held four, and nonpartisan mayors held four. Two mayors' partisan affiliations were unknown.

Eighteen state capitals held mayoral elections in 2023, including 11 capitals that fell outside of the top 100 cities. One state capital saw a change in mayoral partisan affiliation in 2023, resulting in a net gain of one office for Republicans and a net loss of one office for Democrats. After mayors elected in 2023 assumed office, there were 37 Democratic state capital mayors, six Republican mayors, one independent mayor, two nonpartisan mayors, and four mayors with unknown partisan affiliation.

This page includes:

2023 mayoral battleground elections[edit]

Ballotpedia designates races expected to be particularly competitive or compelling as battlegrounds.

Click below to expand summaries of key races.


Mayoral partisanship[edit]

See also: Partisanship in United States municipal elections (2023)

Twenty-nine of the 100 largest cities held mayoral elections in 2023. Once mayors elected in 2023 assumed office, Democrats held 63 top-100 mayoral offices, Republicans held 26, Libertarians held one, independents held four, and nonpartisan mayors held four. Two mayors' partisan affiliations were unknown.

The following top 100 cities saw a change in mayoral partisan affiliation in 2023:

Mayoral partisanship in state capitals[edit]

Eighteen state capitals held mayoral elections in 2023, including 11 capitals that fell outside of the top 100 cities.

One state capital saw a change in mayoral partisan affiliation in 2023:

After mayors elected in 2023 assumed office, there were 37 Democratic state capital mayors, six Republican mayors, one independent mayor, two nonpartisan mayors, and four mayors with unknown partisan affiliation.

Mayoral elections across the United States[edit]

Use the tabs below to sort 2023 municipal elections either by state or by date.

By state[edit]

Alabama[edit]

Arizona[edit]

Colorado[edit]

Connecticut[edit]

Delaware[edit]

Florida[edit]

Idaho[edit]

Illinois[edit]

Indiana[edit]

Iowa[edit]

Kansas[edit]

Missouri[edit]

Nebraska[edit]

New Hampshire[edit]

North Carolina[edit]

Ohio[edit]

Pennsylvania[edit]

South Dakota[edit]

Tennessee[edit]

Texas[edit]

Utah[edit]

Vermont[edit]

Washington[edit]

Wisconsin[edit]

By date[edit]

February 21[edit]

Primary[edit]

February 28[edit]

General election[edit]

March 7[edit]

General election[edit]

March 21[edit]

General election[edit]

April 4[edit]

Primary[edit]

General election[edit]

General runoff[edit]

April 18[edit]

General election[edit]

April 25[edit]

General runoff[edit]

May 2[edit]

Primary[edit]

General election[edit]

May 6[edit]

General election[edit]

May 16[edit]

Primary[edit]

General runoff[edit]

June 6[edit]

General election[edit]

General runoff[edit]

August 1[edit]

Primary[edit]

August 3[edit]

General election[edit]

August 22[edit]

General election[edit]

September 12[edit]

Primary[edit]

September 14[edit]

General runoff[edit]

October 3[edit]

General runoff[edit]

October 5[edit]

General election[edit]

October 10[edit]

Primary[edit]

Primary runoff[edit]

November 7[edit]

General election[edit]

November 16[edit]

General runoff[edit]

November 21[edit]

General election[edit]

December 5[edit]

General runoff[edit]

December 9[edit]

General runoff[edit]

List of mayors of the 100 largest cities[edit]

See also: List of current mayors of the top 100 cities in the United States

To view a list of the current mayors of the top 100 U.S. cities by population, click here.

Historical election data[edit]

Cities in Ballotpedia's coverage scope held an average of 30.8 mayoral elections and 54.8 city council elections each year between 2014 and 2022. From 2014 to 2016, our coverage scope included the 100 largest U.S. cities by population. In 2017, Ballotpedia began covering the counties that overlap those cities, as well. In 2021, our coverage scope expanded to include the mayors, city councils, and district attorneys in the 32 state capitals that fell outside the 100 largest U.S. cities.

This section includes statistics for mayoral elections, city council elections, and county elections between 2014 and 2022, comparing uncontested races, incumbents who sought re-election, and incumbents who were defeated in their re-election bids.

The following table details the total number of elections at the city and county level covered by Ballotpedia between 2014 and 2022, including the number of cities to hold mayoral and city council elections in a given year:

Total municipal elections covered by Ballotpedia from 2014 to 2022
Year Cities Mayor City council Counties
2022
86
34
75
81
2021
70
40
59
22
2020
59
29
52
80
2019
64
30
63
29
2018
58
26
49
78
2017
59
36
50
23
2016
46
33
58
N/A
2015
59
33
58
N/A
2014
43
24
42
N/A

Mayoral elections[edit]

Between 2014 and 2022, 66.8% of incumbent mayors sought re-election; of these, 16.8% were defeated in their bids for re-election. The first chart below shows the number of incumbents who sought election each year compared to the number of seats up for election. The second chart shows the number of incumbents who were defeated compared to the number of incumbents who ran for re-election.

The table below is organized by year and includes the total number of mayoral races and the number and percentage of uncontested races, incumbents who sought re-election, and incumbents who were defeated in their re-election bids.

Mayoral election incumbency statistics from 2014 to 2022
Year Total seats Uncontested Incumbents who
sought re-election
Incumbents defeated
# % # % # %
2022
34
0
0.0%
22
64.7%
3
13.6%
2021
40
1
2.5%
24
60.0%
3
12.5%
2020
29
1
3.4%
22
75.9%
5
22.7%
2019
30
2
6.7%
21
70.0%
4
19.0%
2018
26
1
3.8%
18
69.2%
1
5.6%
2017
36
0
0.0%
24
66.7%
5
20.8%
2016
25
4
16.0%
15
60.0%
4
26.7%
2015
33
3
9.1%
25
75.8%
4
16.0%
2014
24
2
8.3%
14
58.3%
2
14.3%

City council elections[edit]

Between 2014 and 2022, 67.9% of city council incumbents sought re-election; of these, 14.0% were defeated in their bids for re-election. The first chart below shows the number of incumbents who sought election each year compared to the number of seats up for election. The second chart shows the number of incumbents who were defeated compared to the number of incumbents who ran for re-election.

The table below is organized by year and includes the total number of city council races and the number and percentage of uncontested races, incumbents who sought re-election, and incumbents who were defeated in their re-election bids.

City council election incumbency statistics from 2014 to 2022
Year Total seats Uncontested Incumbents who
sought re-election
Incumbents defeated
# % # % # %
2022
346
58
16.8%
215
62.1%
37
17.2%
2021
416
63
15.1%
276
66.3%
47
17.0%
2020
253
47
18.6%
175
69.2%
26
14.9%
2019
457
59
12.9%
312
68.3%
39
12.5%
2018
200
29
14.5%
137
68.5%
19
13.9%
2017
367
47
12.8%
274
74.7%
37
13.5%
2016
216
48
22.2%
156
72.2%
22
14.1%
2015
467
97
20.8%
309
66.2%
30
9.7%
2014
198
31
15.7%
130
65.7%
21
16.2%

County elections[edit]

Between 2017 and 2022, 82.6% of county and special district incumbents sought re-election; of these, 8.3% were defeated in their bids for re-election. The table below is organized by year and includes the total number of county races and the number and percentage of uncontested races, incumbents who sought re-election, and incumbents who were defeated in their re-election bids.

County election incumbency statistics from 2017 to 2022
Year Total seats Uncontested Incumbents who
sought re-election
Incumbents defeated
# % # % # %
2022
2,499
1,347
53.9%
2,041
81.7%
152
7.4%
2021
176
59
33.5%
106
60.2%
8
7.5%
2020
2,167
1,190
54.9%
1,861
85.9%
147
7.9%
2019
183
85
46.4%
140
76.5%
11
7.9%
2018
2,168
1,115
51.4%
1,807
83.3%
176
9.7%
2017
108
47
43.5%
74
68.5%
9
12.2%

Uncontested races[edit]

An average of 1.6 mayoral races and 53.2 city council races went uncontested between 2014 and 2022. In terms of mayoral elections, 2016 saw the highest number of uncontested races (four) and 2017 and 2022 saw the fewest (zero). For city council seats, 2015 had the highest number of uncontested races (97) and 2018 had the fewest (29). The chart below shows the percentage of uncontested mayoral and city council races between 2014 and 2022.


More local election analysis[edit]

Local-politics-square.png
See also: United States municipal elections, 2023

Ballotpedia covered municipal elections in 29 counties and 77 cities, including 40 mayoral elections, in 2023. As of 2023, Ballotpedia's coverage scope for local elections included elections on the ballot in the 100 largest U.S. cities by population, as well as elections for mayors, city council members, and district attorneys in each state capital.

Analysis[edit]


See also[edit]

Local Politics 2023 Election Analysis
Local Politics Image.jpg
Ballotpedia Election Coverage Badge.png

Municipal government
Local courts
School boards
Local ballot measures
Local recalls

Municipal elections, 2023
Mayoral elections, 2023
Local court elections, 2023
School board elections, 2023
Local ballot measure elections, 2023
Political recall efforts, 2023

Footnotes[edit]

  1. In most of the nation's largest cities, mayoral elections are officially nonpartisan, though many officeholders and candidates are affiliated with political parties. Ballotpedia uses one or more of the following sources to identify each officeholder's partisan affiliation: (1) direct communication from the officeholder, (2) current or previous candidacy for partisan office, or (3) identification of partisan affiliation by multiple media outlets.
  2. Politico, "Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot concedes," February 28, 2023
  3. WBEZ, "Paul Vallas and Brandon Johnson head to Chicago mayoral runoff," February 28, 2023
  4. Chalkbeat Chicago, "Chicago 2023 mayoral election: Former schools chief, teachers union organizer headed to runoff," February 28, 2023
  5. NBC News, "Lori Lightfoot becomes the first Chicago mayor in 40 years to lose re-election," February 28, 2023
  6. 9News, "Meet the candidates running for Denver Mayor: Kelly Brough," Feb. 14, 2023
  7. Michael Johnston's 2023 campaign website, "Home," accessed Feb. 15, 2023
  8. Denverite, "The winners of a Mike Johnston vs. Kelly Brough runoff: Denver’s political and business establishment and Michael Hancock," April 6, 2023
  9. Denver Democrats, "A big field. And big decisions to make." March 10, 2023
  10. LinkedIn, "Kelly Brough," accessed Feb. 15, 2023
  11. The Denver Gazette, "ENDORSEMENT: Kelly Brough for Denver mayor," March 28, 2023
  12. The Denver Post, "Endorsement: Mike Johnston for Denver mayor," March 16, 2023
  13. Denverite, "The Denver mayor’s race is a big deal for you and us. Here’s why we’re spending so much time and energy on it," Feb. 21, 2023
  14. Denverite, "What does Denver’s mayor do and how much power does the position have?" Dec. 12, 2022
  15. Donna Deegan's campaign website, "Meet Donna," accessed March 29, 2023
  16. LinkedIn, "Donna Deegan," accessed March 29, 2023
  17. Daniel Davis' campaign website, "Home," accessed March 29, 2023
  18. YouTube, "Daniel Davis addresses supporters election night," March 21, 2023
  19. Donna Deegan's campaign website, "Endorsements," accessed April 4, 2023
  20. Florida Politics, "Ron DeSantis endorses Daniel Davis for Jacksonville Mayor," March 31, 2023
  21. Daniel Davis' campaign website, "Home," accessed April 4, 2023
  22. In most of the nation's largest cities, mayoral elections are officially nonpartisan, though many officeholders and candidates are affiliated with political parties. Ballotpedia uses one or more of the following sources to identify each officeholder's partisan affiliation: (1) direct communication from the officeholder, (2) current or previous candidacy for partisan office, or (3) identification of partisan affiliation by multiple media outlets.
  23. 23.0 23.1 Lincoln Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird, Sen. Suzanne Geist advance to general election, "Lincoln Journal Star," April 4, 2023
  24. Suzanne Geist for Mayor, "Lastest News - Suzanne Geist Mayor For Lincoln, NE," April 6, 2023
  25. The Nebraska Examiner, "Lincoln mayor’s primary pits top Nebraska Dem against dueling wings of GOP," April 3, 2023
  26. Lincoln Journal Star, “Leirion Gaylor Baird”, March 18, 2023
  27. Leirion for Lincoln Mayor, “Meet Leirion,” accessed April 20, 2023
  28. Lincoln Journal Star, “Leirion Gaylor Baird”, April 18, 2019
  29. Suzanne Geist for Mayor, “Meet Suzanne Geist - Mayor for Lincoln, NE,” accessed April 21, 2023
  30. 1011 NOW, “Suzanne Geist resigns from legislature to go ‘all in’ on Lincoln mayor race,” April 5, 2023
  31. Suzanne Geist for Mayor, “Suzanne Geist on the Issues - Mayor For Lincoln, NE,” accessed April 21, 2023
  32. The Nebraska Examiner, "Lincoln mayoral candidates Gaylor Baird and Geist trade jabs over which is best for business," April 13, 2023
  33. Twitter, "Geist for Mayor," April 18, 2023
  34. Lincoln Fire Fighters Association endorses Leirion Gaylor Baird for mayor, "ABC8," March 16, 2023
  35. EMILYs List, "EMILYs List Endorses Leirion Gaylor Baird for Mayor of Lincoln, Nebraska," February 23, 2023
  36. Sierra Club, "2023 Political Endorsements," accessed April 22, 2023
  37. Suzanne Geist for Mayor, "Media & News - Suzanne Geist Mayor For Lincoln, NE," accessed April 22, 2023
  38. Nebraska Public Media, "Costliest Lincoln mayor’s primary sets new, $1 million mark for candidate fundraising," March 28, 2023
  39. Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission, "Political Race Research," accessed April 22, 2023
  40. In most of the nation's largest cities, mayoral elections are officially nonpartisan, though many officeholders and candidates are affiliated with political parties. Ballotpedia uses one or more of the following sources to identify each officeholder's partisan affiliation: (1) direct communication from the officeholder, (2) current or previous candidacy for partisan office, or (3) identification of partisan affiliation by multiple media outlets.
  41. Axios, "Inside Nashville mayor's decision not to run," February 1, 2023
  42. The Tennessean, "Struggling to pick a Nashville mayoral candidate? This scorecard might help.," June 22, 2023
  43. 43.0 43.1 Axios Nashville, "O'Connell finishes first in Nashville mayor's race, will face Rolli in runoff," August 4, 2023
  44. The Tennessean, "Meet Freddie O'Connell, candidate for Nashville mayor," August 15, 2023
  45. The Tennessean, "Meet Alice Rolli, candidate for Nashville mayor," August 15, 2023
  46. 46.0 46.1 The Tennessean, "Nashville mayoral race: How election maps could foreshadow runoff results," August 17, 2023
  47. YouTube, "Matt Wiltshire endorses Freddie O’Connell for Mayor," August 14, 2023
  48. The Tennessee Tribune, "Nashville’s Mayoral Candidates Pick Up Endorsements from former Competitors," August 17, 2023
  49. Alice Rolli for Nashville Mayor, "Rolli for Mayor Campaign Announces Key Endorsement Welcomes Education and Business Leader to Team," August 11, 2023
  50. The Tennessean, "Why we could have as many as four mayors in four years in Nashville," March 7, 2018
  51. Linkedin, "Cherelle Parker, Candidate for Mayor of Philadelphia, Former 9th District City Councilwoman/Majority Leader," accessed April 7, 2023
  52. The Philadelphia Inquirer, "Philadelphia City Council gets a leadership shakeup, with Cherelle Parker beating Bobby Henon as majority leader," January 6, 2020
  53. Cherelle Parker for Mayor, "About Cherelle," accessed April 7, 2023
  54. WHYY, "Gun violence, opioid crisis dominate Philly mayoral debate on public health," April 5, 2023
  55. https://www.linkedin.com/in/rebecca-rhynhart-828a2b2a/ Linkedin, "Rebecca Rhynhart, Candidate for Mayor of Philadelphia," accessed April 7, 2023]
  56. Rebecca Rhynhart for Mayor, "Leadership & Experience," accessed April 7, 2023
  57. Parents United for Public Education, "Home," accessed April 10, 2023
  58. Axios Philadelphia, "Meet Philadelphia's Dem mayoral candidates: Helen Gym," April 3, 2023
  59. The Philadelphia Inquirer, "Breaking down 5 candidates’ paths to victory | The 100th mayor newsletter," April 18, 2023
  60. Allan Domb for Mayor, "Allan Domb for Mayor," accessed April 10, 2023
  61. The Philadelphia Citizen, "Who Is Jeff Brown?" March 17, 2023
  62. Axios Philadelphia, "Meet Philadelphia's Dem mayoral candidates: Jeff Brown," April 3, 2023
  63. The Philadelphia Inquirer, "What is Philly’s resign-to-run rule?" August 15, 2022
  64. 64.0 64.1 The Wichita Eagle, "Legalize or criminalize? Wichita mayoral candidates split on marijuana reform," June 17, 2023
  65. The Wichita Eagle, "Local elections are nonpartisan by law. So why is the Republican Party campaigning?" October 25, 2019
  66. The Wichita Eagle, "Wu emerges as front-runner in Wichita mayor’s race, but Whipple says he can still win," August 3, 2023
  67. The Sunflower, "Whipple and Wu advance to general elections in mayoral race," August 2, 2023
  68. LinkedIn, "Lily Wu, Candidate, Mayor of Wichita," accessed July 5, 2023
  69. The Wichita Eagle, "Lily Wu announces run for Wichita mayor, flexes broad coalition of business support," April 3, 2023
  70. LinkedIn, "Dr. Brandon Whipple, Mayor at City of Wichita Kansas," accessed June 30, 2023
  71. KSN.com, "Brandon Whipple – Wichita mayoral candidate," July 18, 2023
  72. KWCH, "Which 2 will move on?: Political expert breaks down crowded Wichita mayoral race," August 1, 2023
  73. LinkedIn, "Bryan Frye, City Councilman at City of Wichita Kansas," accessed June 30, 2023
  74. 'The Wichita Eagle', "City Council member Bryan Frye launches bid to become the next mayor of Wichita," February 17, 2023
  75. 'The Wichita Eagle', "City Council member Bryan Frye launches bid to become the next mayor of Wichita," February 17, 2023
  76. 76.0 76.1 LinkedIn, "Celeste Racette, Experienced financial institution executive and former bank regulator," accessed July 3, 2023
  77. The Wichita Eagle, "Celeste Racette, founder of Save Century II, enters race for Wichita mayor," February 3, 2023
  78. LinkedIn, "Jared Cerullo, Former City Council Member at City of Wichita Kansas," accessed June 30, 2023
  79. The Wichita Eagle, "Former Wichita City Council appointee Jared Cerullo joins crowded mayoral field," May 31, 2023
  80. The Wichita Eagle, "Former Wichita City Council appointee Jared Cerullo joins crowded mayoral field," May 31, 2023
  81. Wall Street Journal, "America’s Cities Need Republicans, and I’m Becoming One," September 22, 2023

Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Original source: https://ballotpedia.org/United_States_mayoral_elections,_2023
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