. . . "40218"^^ . . . "2015"^^ . . . . "1124972956"^^ . "Runoff results by city council district"@en . "Moses Sanchez"@en . . . "Valenzuela:"@en . . . . . "2019-03-12"^^ . . . "10.5"^^ . . "75532"^^ . . . . "Arizona"@en . . . . . . "Daniel Valenzuela"@en . . . "106216"^^ . . . . . "Daniel Valenzuela"@en . "2020"^^ . . "Republican Party"@en . . "presidential"@en . . "2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election"@en . "Thelda Williams"@en . "71121"^^ . . . . "Democratic Party"@en . . . "171035"^^ . . . . . . "The 2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election was held to elect the new Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona. The election was officially nonpartisan; candidates ran on the same ballot. In the initial round of the election, since no candidate reached 50 percent plus one vote (as required by Phoenix City Charter), a runoff election was held between the top two finishers. Phoenix councilwoman Thelda Williams served as temporary mayor until Gallego took office."@en . "40218"^^ . "181748"^^ . . "58.4"^^ . "Nicholas Sarwark"@en . "Gallego:"@en . . . "B3BCC8"@en . "100998"^^ . "2020"^^ . . . . "106216"^^ . . . . ";Members of City Council\n* Sal DiCiccio, member of Phoenix City Council since 2009\n* Jim Waring, member of Phoenix City Council since 2011, former State Senator from 2003\u20132010\n;Organizations\n* Arizona Republican Party\n* Maricopa County Republican Party"@en . "Runoff vote"@en . . "384454"^^ . . . "10.5"^^ . "16265"^^ . "; Former Phoenix Mayors\n* Kenn Weise\n;Federal officials\n* Kirsten Gillibrand, U.S. Senator\n* Ruben Gallego, congressman; ex-husband\n* Harry Mitchell, former congressman\n* Sam Coppersmith, former congressman\n* Ron Barber, former congressman\n* Ann Kirkpatrick, former congresswomen\n;State officials\n* Charlene Fernandez, State Representative and Arizona House Democratic Minority Leader\n* Rebecca Rios, State Senator\n* Isela Blanc, State Representative\n* Kelli Butler, State Representative\n* Athena Salman, State Representative\n* Lisa Otondo, State Senator\n* Martin Quezeda, State Senator\n* Juan Mendez, State Senator\n* Mary Rose Wilcox, Former Maricopa County Supervisor\n;Organizations\n* Arizona Building and Construction Trades Council\n* International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers #640\n* Arizona Carpenters Union #1912\n* Arizona List\n* EMILY's List\n* Planned Parenthood of Arizona\n* Sierra Club"@en . "The 2018\u201319 Phoenix mayoral special election was held to elect the new Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona. The election was officially nonpartisan; candidates ran on the same ballot. In the initial round of the election, since no candidate reached 50 percent plus one vote (as required by Phoenix City Charter), a runoff election was held between the top two finishers. In October 2017, then incumbent mayor Greg Stanton announced that he was running for United States Congress in District 9, which includes much of Phoenix. Stanton resigned effective May 29, 2018, triggering a special election on November 6, 2018. The top two candidates from that election, Kate Gallego and Daniel Valenzuela, both fell short of the required 50 percent of the vote, therefore the mayoral race was decided by a final runoff election on March 12, 2019, which Gallego won. Phoenix councilwoman Thelda Williams served as temporary mayor until Gallego took office."@en . "First round vote"@en . . . . . . . . . "75532"^^ . . . . . . "41.6"^^ . . . . "First round percentage"@en . . . "44.5"^^ . . . "18.5"^^ . . "Mayor"@en . "Kate Gallego"@en . . . . "100"^^ . "155"^^ . . "100998"^^ . "no"@en . . "171035"^^ . "2018-11-06"^^ . . "18.5"^^ . "Phoenix mayoral election, 2018-19.svg"@en . . . "2018"^^ . . . "2018\u20132019 Phoenix mayoral special election"@en . . . "55493405"^^ . "--11-06"^^ . . "Runoff percentage"@en . . . "Moses Sanchez"@en . "44.5"^^ . . "71121"^^ . ";U.S. Governors\n* Bill Weld, former Governor of Massachusetts and Libertarian Party vice-presidential nominee in 2016\n;US Representatives\n* Barry Goldwater Jr. former U.S. Representative from California 1969\u20131983\n;City Council people\n* Clint Olivier,City Council representative for the City of Fresno's Seventh council district since 2010, Fresno City Council President from 2012\u20132013\n;Individuals\n* Michael Langley, former candidate for city council in Phoenix\n* Roy Miller, consultant"@en . . "Kate Gallego"@en . . "26.3"^^ . . . "26.3"^^ . . . "41.6"^^ . . . . "58.4"^^ . . . . . "; Former Phoenix Mayors\n* Phil Gordon\n* Skip Rimza\n* Paul Johnson\n; Current and former Phoenix City Councilmembers\n* Laura Pastor\n* Deb Stark\n* Claude Mattox\n* Peggy Neely\n* John Nelson\n* Maria Baier\n; Unions\n* AFSCME\n* Arizona Police Association\n* Arizona-American Federation of Teachers\n* United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 99\n* Teamsters Local 104\n* Sheet Metal Workers Local 359\n; Arizona State Legislators\n* Secretary of State Katie Hobbs\n* Senator Lupe Contreras\n* Senator Sean Bowie\n* Senator Tony Navarette\n* Representative Diego Espinoza\n* Former Representative Mark Cardenas\n* Representative Richard Andrade"@en . "2015"^^ .