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Mayoral elections in Jerusalem

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Elections are held in Jerusalem to elect the city's mayor. Currently, such elections are regularly scheduled to elect mayors to five-year terms.

General history

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Prior to a 1975 national law change, mayors were chosen by the city council (which was elected in a closed list proportional representation system).[1]

Since 1975 law change, mayors have been directly elected in a two round system.[1] Under this system, if no candidate receives at least 40% of the vote in the first round, a runoff election is held between the top-two finishers.[1] The first municipal election to be held under the new law of direct elections for mayor was held in 1978.[2]

1978

[edit]
1978 Jerusalem mayoral election

7 November 1978 1983 →
 
Candidate Teddy Kollek Shmuel Elazar Shaulson
Popular vote 64,622 15,242
Percentage 62.7% 14.7%

 
Candidate Yehoshua Matza Moshe Medalbom
Party Likud
Popular vote 13,616 9,638
Percentage 13.3% 9.3%

Mayor before election

Teddy Kollek
Labor

Elected mayor

Teddy Kollek
Labor

The 1978 Jerusalem mayoral election was held 8 November 1978,[3] and saw the reelection of Teddy Kollek to a fourth consecutive term.

While a member of the Israeli Labor Party, Kollek formally ran as an independent.[4]

1978 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[3]
Candidate Party Votes %
Teddy Kollek (incumbent) 64,622 62.7
Shmuel Elazar Shaulson 15,242 14.7
Yehoshua Matza Likud[4] 13,616 13.3
Moshe Medalbom 9,638 9.3
Total 103,118 100

1983

[edit]
1983 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 1978 25 October 1983 1989 →
 
Candidate Teddy Kollek Shlomo Toussia-Cohen Meir Porush
Party One Jerusalem Likud Agudat Yisrael
Popular vote 79,535 23,912 17,737
Percentage 63.86% 19.20% 14.24%

Mayor before election

Teddy Kollek
Labor

Elected mayor

Teddy Kollek
Labor

The 1983 Jerusalem mayoral election was held 25 October 1983,[5] and saw the reelection of Teddy Kollek to a fifth consecutive term.

The election took place among increasing tension between religious and nonreligious Jews in the city.[6] Kollek spoke strongly against what he alleged were intolerant Orthodox factions that were seeking to enforce their lifestyle beliefs upon all Jerusalem.[6] Kollek was assaulted by militantly religious youth ten days prior to the election.[6] Turnout among Arab voters was over 25%.[7] It is believed that many of the Arabs who opted to vote were municipal employees.[8]

Despite efforts of some in the Palestine Liberation Organization to encourage a boycott among the city's East Jerusalem Arab electorate, this electorate came out in greater numbers than they had in previous mayoral elections. The Arab voters who participated strongly supported Kollek, contributing to his strong performance.[6]

Ahead of the election, Kollek was heavily favored for reelection, as a result of his personal popularity.[6] However, the coinciding election for Council of Jerusalem was competitive, and it was seen as uncertain whether the "One Jerusalem" party list which Kollek fielded, would retain the majority it held.[6] Orthodox and right wing political parties, in opposition of the mayor, were vying to flip control of the council.[6] The "One Jerusalem" slate, ultimately, narrowly retained its majority on the council, winning 17 of 31 seats.[6][7]

Since Kollek exceeded the 40% threshold required to avert a runoff election, no runoff was held.[6]

1983 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[5][6]
Candidate Party Votes %
Teddy Kollek (incumbent) One Jerusalem 79,535 63.86
Shlomo Toussia-Cohen Likud 23,912 19.20
Meir Porush Agudat Yisrael 17,737 14.24
Gershon Salomon 3,356 2.70
Total 124,540 100

1989

[edit]
1989 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 1983 28 February 1989 1993 →
 
Candidate Teddy Kollek Nissim Ze'ev
Party One Jerusalem Shas
Popular vote 73,006 20,490
Percentage 58.8% 16.5%

 
Candidate Shmuel Pressburger Meir Porush
Party Likud Agudat Yisrael
Popular vote 16,369 13,646
Percentage 13.2% 11.0%

Mayor before election

Teddy Kollek
Labor

Elected mayor

Teddy Kollek
Labor

The 1989 Jerusalem mayoral election was held 28 February 1989,[9] and saw the reelection of Teddy Kollek to a sixth consecutive term.

Kollek ran as the candidate of his own One Jerusalem Party, which was affiliated with the national Israeli Labor Party.[10]

While he won an overwhelming victory in the mayoral election, his party list lost its majority on the Council of Jerusalem.[11] This Council of Jerusalem result was partially attributable to Arab residents of the city voting in lesser numbers than in the recent preceding elections, with more Arabs than usual boycotting the municipal elections.[11] Arab turnout was as small as under 4%.[8] Another contributing factor was backlash from the left wing, who felt that Kollek had given too many compromises to the Haredi.[11] Another contributing factor was a strong turnout of religious Jews, especially with Orthodox Jews, with the election especially seeing an abnormally high turnout of Haredi voters.[10][8] Kollek had had a majority of the Council be directly aligned with him for the entirety of his mayoralty up to the 1989 election.[8][10]

1989 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[1][9]
Candidate Party Votes %
Teddy Kollek (incumbent) One Jerusalem 73,006 58.8
Nissim Ze'ev Shas[7] 20,490 16.5
Shmuel Pressburger Likud[7] 16,369 13.2
Meir Porush Agudat Yisrael[12] 13,646 11.0
Mike Kramer 748 0.5
Total 124,259 100

1993

[edit]
1993 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 1989 2 November 1993 1998 →
 
Candidate Ehud Olmert Teddy Kollek Nissim Ze'ev
Party Likud Labor Shas
Popular vote 90,992 53,954 8,300
Percentage 59.38% 35.21% 5.41%

Mayor before election

Teddy Kollek
Labor

Elected mayor

Ehud Olmert
Likud

The 1993 Jerusalem mayoral election was held 2 November 1993,[13] and saw Likud nominee Ehud Olmert unseat Labor incumbent Teddy Kollek.[1] This ended Kollek's 28-year mayoralty.[1] This also marked the first time in roughly four decades that Jerusalem would have a mayor who was not a member of either the Israeli Labor Party or its predecessor organizations.[1] This was seen as a handing a "blow" to the nation's governing Labor Party.[14]

1993 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[1][13]
Candidate Party Votes %
Ehud Olmert Likud 90,992 59.38
Teddy Kollek (incumbent) Labor 53,954 35.21
Nissim Ze'ev Shas 8,300 5.41
Total 153,246 100

1998

[edit]
1998 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 1993 10 November 1998 2003 →
 
Candidate Ehud Olmert Shimon Shetreet Ornan Yekutieli
Party Likud One Israel
Popular vote 97,171 36,567 13,540
Percentage 61.00% 22.95% 8.50%

Mayor before election

Ehud Olmert
Likud

Elected mayor

Ehud Olmert
Likud

The 1998 Jerusalem mayoral election was held on 10 November 1998,[15] and saw the reelection of Likud incumbent Ehud Olmert.[1]

Olmert had been predicted to win a convincing reelection.[16]

1998 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[1][15]
Candidate Party Votes %
Ehud Olmert (incumbent) Likud 97,171 61.00
Shimon Shetreet One Israel 36,567 22.95
Arnan Yekutali 13,540 8.50
Naomi Chazan 6,605 4.15
Elisha Peleg 4,198 2.64
Noam Badr 1,208 0.76
??? 16 0.01
Total 159,305 100

2003

[edit]
2003 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 1998
2008 →
 
Candidate Uri Lupolianski Nir Barkat
Party UTJ Jerusalem Will Succeed
Popular vote 90,090 74,550
Percentage 51.39% 42.49%

Mayor before election

Ehud Olmert
Likud

Elected mayor

Uri Lupolianski
UTJ

The 2003 Jerusalem mayoral election saw the election of United Torah Judaism nominee Uri Lupolianski.[1] Lupolianksi became the first Haredi to serve as mayor of Jerusalem.[17]

Results[18]

2008

[edit]
2008 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 2003 11 November 2008 2013 →
 
Candidate Nir Barkat Meir Porush
Party Jerusalem Will Succeed UTJ
Popular vote 116,947 94,456
Percentage 54.64% 44.13%

Mayor before election

Uri Lupolianski
UTJ

Elected mayor

Nir Barkat
Independent

The 2008 Jerusalem mayoral election was held on 11 November 2008,[19] and saw the election of Nir Barkat.[1]

Candidates

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Campaigning

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Barkat and Porush were the election's front-runners.[20]

Barkat was seen as receiving the support of the city's secular majority, which had been regarded as declining in its share of the electorate.[17]

Porush, a Haredi, was seen as attempting to appeal to a broad swath of the electorate, including both the religious and nonreligious.[20] He centered his candidacy on the issues of education, employment, and housing.[20]

Results

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2008 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[1][19]
Candidate Party Votes %
Nir Barkat Jerusalem Will Succeed 116,947 54.64
Meir Porush United Torah Judaism 94,456 44.13
Arcadi Gaydamak Social Justice 7,988 3.73
Dan Biron Ale Yarok 1,119 0.52
Turnout 214,049 43.81

2013

[edit]
2013 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 2008 3 October 2013 2018 →
 
Candidate Nir Barkat Moshe Lion
Party Jerusalem Will Succeed Likud Yisrael Beiteinu
Popular vote 111,108 95,411
Percentage 51.91% 44.57%

Mayor before election

Nir Barkat
Independent

Elected mayor

Nir Barkat
Independent

The 2013 Jerusalem mayoral election was held on 2 October 2013,[21] and saw the reelection of Nir Barkat.[1]

2013 Jerusalem mayoral elections results[1][21]
Candidate Party Votes %
Nir Barkat (incumbent) Jerusalem Will Succeed 111,108 51.91%
Moshe Lion Likud-Yisrael Beiteinu 95,411 44.57%
Chaim Epstein Jerusalem Faction 7,530 3.52%
Total 214,049 100

2018

[edit]
2018 Jerusalem mayoral election

← 2013 30 October 2018 (first round)
13 November 2018 (runoff)
2024 →
 
Candidate Moshe Lion Ofer Berkovitch
Party Our Jerusalem Awakening
First-round vote 81,426 73,079
First-round percentage 32.76% 29.40%
Second-round vote 112,744 108,979
Second-round percentage 50.85% 49.15%

 
Candidate Ze'ev Elkin Yossi Deutch
Party Jerusalem Will Succeed Agudat Yisrael
First-round vote 49,681 42,289
First-round percentage 19.99% 17.01%

Mayor before election

Nir Barkat
Independent

Elected mayor

Moshe Lion
Independent

The 2018 Jerusalem mayoral election was held on 30 October and 13 November 2018 to elect the mayor of Jerusalem.

With no candidate in the first round meeting the vote threshold of 40% needed to avoid a runoff election, a runoff was held on 13 November.[22] The election was won by Moshe Lion.

Incumbent mayor Nir Barkat did not seek reelection.[23]

Candidates

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Ran

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Withdrew

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Results

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First round

The results of the first round of voting in Jerusalem, with 254,326 voters participating of 638,065 eligible (a 39.86% turnout), are as follows. Of the 254,326 votes, 248,585 were valid.

Candidate Party name Votes %
Moshe Lion Our Jerusalem ירושלים שלנו‎, Yerushalayim Shelanu 81,426 32.76%
Ofer Berkovitch Awakening התעוררות‎, Hit'orerut 73,079 29.40%
Ze'ev Elkin Jerusalem Will Succeed ירושלים תצליח‎, Yerushalayim Tatzli'ah 49,681 19.99%
Yossi Deutch Agudat Yisrael אגודת ישראל 42,289 17.01%
Avi Salman I'm Jerusalem אני ירושלים‎, Ani Yerushalayim 2,110 0.85%
Source: Ministry of the Interior[29]
Runoff

The results of the second round of voting in Jerusalem are as follows. The voter turnout was 35%.

Candidate Votes %
Moshe Lion 112,744 50.85%
Ofer Berkovitch 108,979 49.15%
Source: Ministry of the Interior[30] – provisional data

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Nikolenyi, Csaba (1 March 2020). "The 2018 Municipal Elections in Jerusalem: A Tale of Fragmentation and Polarization". Contemporary Review of the Middle East. 7 (1): 6–24. doi:10.1177/2347798919889762. ISSN 2347-7989. S2CID 213423030. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  2. ^ Blander, Dana. "Elections for the Local Authority – Who, What, When, Where and How?". en.idi.org.il. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
  3. ^ a b "רשומות ילקוט הפרסומים" (PDF). www.nevo.co.il. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Tense Jerusalem awaits upcoming mayoral election". Newspapers.com. The Times Herald (Port Huron, Michigan). Associated Press. 24 September 1978. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  5. ^ a b "רשומות ילקוט הפרסומים" (PDF). www.nevo.co.il. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Shipler, David K. (27 October 1983). "MAYOR OF JERUSALEM WINS A 5TH TERM EASILY". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d Franklin, Stephen (12 February 1989). "Holy City likely to get holier". Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d Tamayo, Juan O. (1 March 1989). "Jerusalem mayor re-elected but loses hold on council". Newspapers.com. The Miami Herald. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  9. ^ a b "רשומות ילקוט הפרסומים" (PDF). www.nevo.co.il. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Ries, William B. (1 March 1989). "Hard-liners gain in Israeli municipal elections". Newspapers.com. The Danville News. United Press International. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  11. ^ a b c Frankel, Glenn (5 March 1989). "Jerusalem mayor last of the giants on Israeli scene". Newspapers.com. Edmonton Journal. The Washington Post.
  12. ^ "ראש העיר החדש: מקים יד-שרה, בן חסות של הרב אלישיב". Haaretz (in Hebrew). 16 February 2003. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  13. ^ a b "רשומות ילקוט הפרסומים" (PDF). www.nevo.co.il. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  14. ^ "News-Press 03 Nov 1993, page Page 2". News-Press. The Associated Press. 3 November 1993. Retrieved 24 July 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ a b "רשומות ילקוט הפרסומים" (PDF). www.nevo.co.il. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  16. ^ Sontag, Deborah (10 November 1998). "Political games turn ugly in local races as Israel vote nears". Newspapers.com. The News and Observer. The New York Times. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
  17. ^ a b Caspit, Ben (25 October 2013). "Jerusalem Mayor's Re-Election Setback for Liberman - Al-Monitor: The Pulse of the Middle East". www.al-monitor.com. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
  18. ^ "לופוליאנסקי ניצח בירושלים: "אשמור על הסטטוס-קוו"". ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  19. ^ a b "בחירות לראשות העירייה ולמועצת העירייה" (PDF). www.jerusalem.muni.il. City of Jerusalem. 17 November 2013.
  20. ^ a b c d e f "Municipal elections underway across Israel". Ynetnews. 11 November 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
  21. ^ a b "רשומות ילקוט הפרסומים" (PDF). www.nevo.co.il. 17 November 2013. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  22. ^ Newman, Marissa (13 November 2018). "Polls close in tense Jerusalem mayoral race; under 1/3 of voters show up". www.timesofisrael.com. Times of Israel. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  23. ^ Bachner, Michael (25 March 2018). "Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat announces Knesset bid". www.timesofisrael.com. Times of Israel. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  24. ^ Liebermann, Oren (31 October 2018). "Netanyahu's candidate stunned in Jerusalem mayoral election". CNN. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  25. ^ Hoffman, Gil (28 October 2018). "Poll finds Tuesday's Jerusalem race close". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  26. ^ "Israel holds municipal votes as Jerusalem chooses new mayor". kdwn.com. KDWN. Associated Press. 30 October 2018. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  27. ^ Times of Israel, "Azaria pulls out of Jerusalem mayoral race, backs Elkin" 26 September 2018 [1]
  28. ^ Cidor, Peggy (22 July 2018). "Chaim Epstein: The wild card in the Jerusalem mayoral race". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  29. ^ "1800 7.11 תוצאות.xlsx". www.moin.gov.il. Ministry of the Interior. 2017. Archived from the original on 21 April 2020.
  30. ^ "תוצאות הסיבוב השני לבחירות המוניציפליות" [Second Round Municipal Election Results] (XLS) (in Hebrew). Israel Ministry of the Interior. 15 November 2018. Retrieved 21 November 2018.