1986 New Orleans mayoral election

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1986 New Orleans mayoral election

← 1982 February 1, 1986 (first round)
March 1, 1986 (runoff)
1990 →
 
Candidate Sidney Barthelemy
Bill Jefferson
Sam LeBlanc
Party Democratic Democratic
First round 53,961
33.39%
62,333
38.57%
40,963
25.34%
Runoff 93,050
57.89%
67,680
42.11%
Eliminated

Mayor before election

Ernest Morial

Democratic

Elected Mayor

Sidney Barthelemy
Democratic

The New Orleans mayoral election of 1986 resulted in the election of Democrat Sidney Barthelemy as mayor.

Background

Elections in Louisiana—with the exception of U.S. Presidential and Congressional elections—follow a variation of the open primary system. Candidates of any and all parties are listed on one ballot; voters need not limit themselves to the candidates of one party. Unless one candidate takes more than 50 percent of the vote in the first round, a run-off election is then held between the top two candidates, who may in fact be members of the same party. In this election, the first round of voting was held on February 1, 1986, and the runoff was held on March 1.

Candidates

Campaign

The election campaign began in earnest after voters rejected a charter amendment which would have allowed Dutch Morial to run for a third term. This came after a failed attempt in 1983 to remove the two-term limit completely from the charter. The two-term limit was placed in the city charter adopted in 1961.

Early in the primary campaign, polls showed Barthelemy with a 21 point lead over Jefferson, but Jefferson's endorsement by Morial and the support of Morial's political organization LIFE enabled him to take much of Barthelemy's support in the black community. Later, though, Morial's endorsement hurt Jefferson in the runoff as white voters overwhelmingly chose the opponent of 'the Morial candidate.'

Barthelemy spent 1.7 million on the campaign; Jefferson spent 1.3 million.

Results

Primary, February 1

Candidate Votes received Percentage of votes cast
William J. Jefferson
62,333 38.57%
Sidney Barthelemy 53,961 33.39%
Sam LeBlanc 40,963 25.34%
Rudy Lombard 3721 2.3%
Terry Hardy 373 0.23%
Ben Rauch 278 0.17%

Jefferson led in most majority black precincts, taking almost 70% of the black vote. Barthelemy won only about 20% of the black vote. While LeBlanc got slightly over half the white votes, Barthelemy also did well in white neighborhoods and so LeBlanc was unable to make the runoff.

Runoff, March 1

Candidate Votes received Percentage of votes cast
Sidney Barthelemy 93,050 57.89%
Bill Jefferson 67,680 42.11%

In the runoff, the big question was where Sam LeBlanc's white voters would go. Though LeBlanc didn't make an endorsement, most white voters switched to Barthelemy in the runoff. Barthelemy got 86% of white voters and 30% of black voters; while Jefferson received most black votes and got minimal white support.

Significance of the election

The election was a milestone in many respects. 1986 marked the first time in which the runoff featured two black candidates. It was also the first time that the majority of the voting population (51%) was African-American. The city's white electorate became swing voters; the combination of part of the African-American electorate and white voters won Barthelemy the runoff. Unlike his two immediate predecessors Moon Landrieu and Dutch Morial - who were first elected by a combination of a minority of white voters and an overwhelming proportion of the black electorate - Barthelemy won election against a candidate most blacks preferred by appealing to the vast majority of white voters, a strategy which was successfully duplicated by Ray Nagin against Richard Pennington in the 2002 election.

Sources

  • The New Orleans Times Picayune. February 2–3, March 2–3, 1986.
  • Board of Supervisors of Elections for the Parish of Orleans. Election Returns of Orleans Parish, 1986.
  • Haas, Edward F. "Political Continuity in the Crescent City: Toward an Interpretation of New Orleans Politics, 1874-1986." Louisiana History 1998, 39:1.
  • Hirsch, Arnold. "Simply a Matter of Black and White: The Transformation of Race and Politics in Twentieth-Century New Orleans." Found in Arnold Hirsch and Joseph Logsdon's Creole New Orleans: Race and Americanization. LSU Press, 1992.
Preceded by
1982 mayoral election
New Orleans mayoral elections Succeeded by
1990 mayoral election