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1953 New York City mayoral election


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This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources.Find sources: "1953 New York City mayoral election" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2014)

The 1953 New York City mayoral election occurred on Tuesday, November 3, 1953. Incumbent mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri ran for re-election to a second term in office but lost the Democratic nomination to Robert F. Wagner Jr. Wagner went on to win the general election with a decisive plurality in a three-way race against Republican Harold Riegelman and Liberal Rudolph Halley.

Wagner enjoyed the support of the powerful Tammany Hall political machine, easily securing him a victory.

Wagner received 46.33% of the vote to Riegelman's 29.97%, a Democratic victory margin of 16.36%. Halley finished in third with 21.16%.

  • Robert F. Wagner Jr., Manhattan Borough President
  • Vincent R. Impellitteri, incumbent mayor since 1950

Wagner was supported by Tammany Hall and Edward J. Flynn's political machine.

Robert F. Wagner Jr. defeated incumbent Mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri for the Democratic nomination.

PartyCandidateVotes%
Democratic350,47464.14%
Democratic181,29533.18%
Democratic9,3171.71%
Democratic5,3000.97%
546,386100.0%

Rudolph Halley's election as president of the New York City Council as the Liberal candidate in 1951, led to Adolf A. Berle stating that the party could "take over the administration of the City of New York".

The Liberals wanted to form a coalition with the Republicans rather than the Democrats and David Dubinsky met with Young Republicans to discuss a possible coalition. Ralph Bunche, Jacob Javits, Newbold Morris, and Nelson Rockefeller were considered as possible candidates.

Javits was the favorite candidate of the party leadership and Berle told him that he could get the New York Herald Tribune and New York Post to endorse him. Javits wanted to run, but did not want to break from Governor Thomas E. Dewey. Dewey gave Javits permission to run. Maurice Calman, a former Socialist alderman, and Charles Rubinstein, an American Labor Party city council candidate, opposed nominating Javits and believed that Halley could win as an independent candidate. Berle attempted to read the names of five possible mayoral candidates at the party's annual dinner, but could not get past the first name, Halley's, due to "prolonged applause and cheers".

Liberal leadership soured on Javits and Berle stated that Javits was "trying to be both" a Republican and independent. Berle also wrote in his diary that "the Republicans are not popular on the street". The Liberals attempted to negotiate with the Republicans, but they rejected endorsing Halley and were unsure if they would nominate Javits. Halley was given the Liberal nomination on July 13, 1953.

  • Rudolph Halley, President of the New York City Council (Liberal and Independent Citizens)
  • Nathan Karp (Industrial Government)
  • Clifford T. McAvoy, former representative of the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (American Labor)
  • Harold Riegelman, attorney and Postmaster of New York City (Republican)
  • Robert F. Wagner Jr., Manhattan Borough President (Democratic)
  • David Loeb Weiss, electrical worker and filmmaker (Socialist Workers)

Halley's campaign was weakened by facing Wagner, rather than Impellitteri. Ben Davidson stated that "Halley against Impellitteri was one thing. Halley against Wagner was another thing". One Liberal club in Brooklyn endorsed Wagner.

Halley had the best performance for a Liberal in New York City's mayoral election at that point.

PartyCandidateVotes%.mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}±%
Democratic1,022,62646.32%
Republican661,59129.97%
Liberal428,69019.42%
Independent38,4161.74%
Total467,10621.16%
American Labor53,0452.40%
Socialist Workers2,0540.09%
Industrial Government9160.04%
Write-in1800.00%
2,207,518100.00%
Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5Column 6Column 7Column 8Column 9
1953partyManhattanThe BronxBrooklynQueensRichmond [Staten Is.]Total%
Robert F. Wagner, Jr.Democratic236,960206,771339,970207,91831,0071,022,62646.3%
47.9%46.2%46.6%40.6%51.8%
Harold RiegelmanRepublican147,87697,224183,968208,82923,694661,59130.0%
29.9%21.7%25.2%40.8%39.6%
Rudolph HalleyLiberal76,884112,825162,27573,1923,514428,69019.4%
Independent7,6489,85313,2647,35629538,4161.7%
Total84,532122,678175,53980,5483,809467,10621.1%
17.1%27.4%24.1%15.7%6.4%
Clifford T. McAvoyAmerican Labor Party14,90413,29017,3377,18233253,0452.4%

The Liberal Party of New York won over five times as many votes as the American Labor Party in Manhattan, and eight-to-ten times as many in the other boroughs.

Vito Marcantonio later claimed that the poor performance of the American Labor Party in the mayoral election resulted in them failing to receive over 50,000 votes, enough to maintain ballot access, in the 1954 gubernatorial election. He claimed that communists sabotaged the McAvoy campaign by implying that they approved voting for Halley. The ALP voted to dissolve itself in 1956.

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