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1925 New York City mayoral election


The 1925 New York City mayoral election took place on November 3, 1925. Incumbent Democratic mayor John Francis Hylan ran for re-election to a third term in office but was defeated in the Democratic Party primary on September 15, 1925 by State Senator Jimmy Walker. In the general election, Walker defeated Republican nominee Frank D. Waterman.

  • John Francis Hylan, incumbent mayor since 1918
  • Jimmy Walker, State Senator and former Assemblyman from Greenwich Village

Walker, the Democratic party leader in the New York State Senate received the support from John McCooey, the leader in Brooklyn, and Walker from Ed Flynn of the Bronx, went on to defeat New York Mayor John Hylan in the Democratic primary.

PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic248,33861.69%
Democratic154,20437.31%
402,542100.00%
Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6Column 7Column 8
1925 Democratic primaryManhattanThe BronxBrooklynQueensRichmond [Staten Is.]Total%
Jimmy Walker102,83545,30865,67128,2036,321248,33862%
79%68%52%47%34%
John Francis Hylan27,80221,22860,81432,16312,197154,20438%
21%32%48%53%66%
subtotal (for Walker and Hylan only)130,63766,536126,48560,36618,518402,542[100%]

Socialist Party campaign poster featuring Norman Thomas as a candidate for mayor

  • Joseph Brandon (Socialist Labor)
  • Warren Fisher (Progressive)
  • Norman Thomas, Presbyterian minister and perennial candidate (Socialist)
  • Jimmy Walker, State Senator and former Assemblyman from Greenwich Village (Democratic)
  • Frank D. Waterman, president of Waterman Pen Company (Republican)

The main contenders in the race were the Democratic Party candidate Jimmy Walker (1881-1946), a city assemblyman and State Senator, and the Republican candidate Frank D. Waterman (1869-1938) of the Waterman Pen Company. Walker's reputation as a flamboyant man-about-town made him a hero to many working-class voters; he was often seen at legitimate theaters and illegitimate speakeasies. Walker backed many social and cultural issues that were considered politically important at the time, such as opposition to Prohibition, social welfare legislation, legalization of boxing, repeal of blue laws against Sunday baseball games, and condemning the Ku Klux Klan. Waterman was a vocal critic of the Tammany machine's mismanagement of municipal affairs with the expansion of the subway system as a main issue. Waterman, however, was repeatedly accused of hostility to labor, discriminatory hiring practices, and anti-Semitism.

Walker defeated Waterman after receiving 748,687 votes to Waterman's 346,546 votes.

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6Column 7Column 8Column 9
1925 general electionPartyManhattanThe BronxBrooklynQueensRichmond [Staten Is.]Total%
Jimmy WalkerDemocratic247,079131,226244,029103,62922,724748,68765.8%
69.4%71.8%60.9%63.0%67.3%
Frank D. WatermanRepublican98,61739,615139,06058,47810,794346,56430.5%
27.7%21.7%34.7%35.6%32.0%
Norman ThomasSocialist9,48211,13316,8091,94320739,5743.5%
Joseph BrandonSocialist Labor388488591155211,6430.1%
Warren FisherProgressive387262528284371,4980.1%
TOTAL355,953182,724401,017164,48933,7831,137,966
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