2014 San Jose mayoral election

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2014 San Jose mayoral election

The 2014 San Jose mayoral election was held on June 3, 2014, to elect the Mayor of San Jose, California. Councilmember Sam Liccardo defeated Santa Clara County Supervisor Dave Cortese in a runoff on November 4, 2014.

Quick Facts Candidate, First round ...
2014 San Jose mayoral election

 2010 June 3, 2014 (first round)
November 4, 2014 (runoff)
2018 
 
Candidate Sam Liccardo Dave Cortese Madison Nguyen
First round 33,521
25.75%
43,887
33.72%
26,365
20.26%
Second round 91,840
50.76%
89,090
49.24%
Eliminated

 
Candidate Pierluigi Oliverio Rose Herrera Michael Alvarado
First round 13,197
10.14%
7,950
6.11%
1,959
1.51%
Second round Eliminated Eliminated Eliminated

Mayor before election

Chuck Reed

Elected mayor

Sam Liccardo

Close

Incumbent Democratic Mayor Chuck Reed was term limited and could not run for re-election to a third consecutive term in office.

The election was nonpartisan per California state law, although most of the candidates chose to state a political party affiliation. A primary election was held on June 3, 2014. As no candidate received a majority of the vote, a runoff election was held between the top two vote-getters, Dave Cortese and Sam Liccardo, on November 4, 2014.[1] Liccardo was elected mayor with a majority of the vote.

Municipal elections in California are officially non-partisan.

Candidates

Declared

Withdrew

  • Pete Constant, San Jose City Councilman[3]
  • Andrew Abe Diaz, perennial candidate[4]
  • Louis Garza[4]
  • Susan Marsland (running for San Jose City Council)[4]
  • Larry Rouse[4]
  • David Wall, candidate for Santa Clara County Supervisor in 2013 and for San Jose City Council in 1998[4]
  • David Warner, candidate for San Jose City Council in 2004[4]

Declined

  • Pat Waite, businessman and candidate for San Jose City Council in 2008[2]
  • Forrest Williams, former San Jose City Councilman and candidate for Santa Clara County Supervisor in 2010[5]

Primary election

Summarize
Perspective

The primary election saw a total of ten candidates on the ballot, including Dave Cortese, a Santa Clara County Supervisor and former San Jose City Councilmember, as well as four sitting San Jose City Councilmembers: Vice Mayor Madison Nguyen, Sam Liccardo, Pierluigi Oliverio, and Rose Herrera.

The political climate of the race was influenced by an ongoing dispute between representatives of the city's labor force and Mayor Chuck Reed, stemming from a 2012 ballot initiative championed by Reed to restructure San Jose City employee pensions. Dave Cortese received the full endorsement and support of the politically powerful South Bay Labor Council, while the four sitting councilmembers, having supported Mayor Reed's pension reform initiative, were described as "Reed loyalists."[6] This ideological polarization was present not just in San Jose's mayoral election, but in a number of City Council races as well.[7]

As part of his campaign, Councilmember Liccardo authored a book in which he assessed the issues facing San Jose and offered his own vision for the city. On May 2, the editorial board of the San Jose Mercury News endorsed Liccardo for mayor, citing the book as well as his record on the council.[8]

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Michael
Alvarado
Bill
Chew
Dave
Cortese
Timothy
Harrison
Rose
Herrera
Sam
Liccardo
Madison
Nguyen
Pierluigi
Oliverio
Other Undecided
SurveyUSA[9] May 15–21, 2014 461 ± 4.7% 3% 3% 26% 1% 7% 20% 11% 8% 22%
Close

Results

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Mayoral primary results, June 3, 2014[10]
Candidate Votes  %
Dave Cortese 43,887 33.72
Sam Liccardo 33,521 25.75
Madison Nguyen 26,365 20.26
Pierluigi C. Oliverio 13,197 10.14
Rose Herrera 7,950 6.11
Mike Alvarado 1,959 1.51
Timothy Harrison 1,715 1.32
Bill Chew 1,563 1.20
Total votes 130,157 100
Close

Runoff election

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Dave
Cortese
Sam
Liccardo
Undecided
SurveyUSA[11] October 20–23, 2014 540 ± 4.3% 44% 38% 19%
San Jose State University[12] October 12–16, 2014 571 ± 4.1% 34% 26% 40%
Close

Results

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Mayoral election results, November 4, 2014[13][14]
Candidate Votes  %
Sam Liccardo 91,840 50.76
Dave Cortese 89,090 49.24
Total votes 180,930 100
Close

References

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