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Mayor of San Diego

Head of the executive branch of the San Diego city government


Summary

Head of the executive branch of the San Diego city government

FieldValue
postMayor
bodythe City of San Diego
insigniaSeal of San Diego, California.svg
insigniasize100px
insigniacaptionSeal of San Diego
flagFlag of San Diego, California.svg
flagsize100px
flagcaptionFlag of San Diego
imageTodd Gloria 2022.jpg
incumbentTodd Gloria
incumbentsinceDecember 10, 2020
termlengthFour years, renewable once
formation1850
salary$206,000 annually
inauguralJoshua Bean
websiteOffice of the Mayor

The mayor of the City of San Diego is the official head and chief executive officer of the U.S. city of San Diego, California. The mayor has the duty to enforce and execute the laws enacted by the San Diego City Council, the legislative branch. The mayor serves a four-year term and is limited to two successive terms.

There have been 36 people who have served as mayor in San Diego since 1850, when California became a state following the Conquest of California. Prior to the conquest, Californios served as mayor of San Diego during the Spanish and Mexican eras since 1780. From 1852 to 1888, the city was run by a board of trustees and there was no elected mayor. However, the president of the board was called mayor as a courtesy.

The most recent election was held in November 2024, and Todd Gloria was re-elected as the 37th mayor of San Diego.

History

The position of mayor was created when San Diego was first incorporated on March 27, 1850. However, the city went bankrupt in 1852, only two years after incorporation. As a result of the bankruptcy, the State of California dissolved the government and replaced the mayor and city council with a board of trustees. The mayoral position was later re-established with a new charter in 1887. This charter was replaced with a permanent City Charter on May 6, 1889, using the strong mayor form of government.

In 1931, a new charter was adopted using a council–manager government with a citywide mayor as leader of the city council.

In November 2004, voters approved Proposition F, returning San Diego to the strong mayor form of government on a five-year trial basis. This was made permanent in June 2010 with the passage of Proposition D.

Scandals

Then-mayor Roger Hedgecock was forced to resign his post in 1985, after he was found guilty of one count of conspiracy and 12 counts of perjury, related to the alleged failure to report all campaign contributions. After a series of appeals, the 12 perjury counts were dismissed in 1990 based on claims of juror misconduct; the remaining conspiracy count was reduced to a misdemeanor and then dismissed.

A 2002 scheme to underfund pensions for city employees led to the San Diego pension scandal. This resulted in the resignation of newly re-elected Mayor Dick Murphy and the criminal indictment of six pension board members. Those charges were dismissed by a federal judge in 2010.

In 2005, two city council members, Ralph Inzunza and Deputy Mayor Michael Zucchet – who briefly took over as acting mayor when Murphy resigned – were convicted of extortion, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for taking campaign contributions from a strip club owner and his associates, allegedly in exchange for trying to repeal the city's "no touch" laws at strip clubs. Both subsequently resigned. Inzunza was sentenced to 21 months in prison. In 2009, a judge acquitted Zucchet on seven out of the nine counts against him, and granted his petition for a new trial on the other two charges; the remaining charges were eventually dropped.

In July 2013, three former supporters of Mayor Bob Filner asked him to resign because of allegations of repeated sexual harassment. Over the ensuing six weeks, 18 women came forward to publicly claim that Filner had sexually harassed them, and multiple individuals and groups called for him to resign. Filner agreed to resign effective August 30, 2013, subsequently pleaded guilty to one felony count of false imprisonment and two misdemeanor battery charges, and was sentenced to house arrest and probation.

In 2016, Mayor Kevin Faulconer entered into a lease-to-own agreement for San Diego's new City Hall at 101 Ash St. The building is uninhabitable with Asbestos and other issues. 101 Ash has become synonymous in San Diego with political scandals and bad real estate deals. The city overpaid for the property by $30M. It then botched renovations and eventually discovered its own real estate broker had also been working for the building's seller.

Duties and powers

The mayor serves as the official head of the City of San Diego for all ceremonial and civil purposes. The mayor has the authority to approve or veto council actions, subject to a two-thirds vote veto overrule. Under the strong mayor system, the mayor has sole authority to appoint and dismiss the city manager and to direct and control the city manager as permitted by the city charter. The mayor also has the authority to dismiss the chief of police or the chief of the fire department subject to a council overrule. The mayor may recommend measures and ordinance to the city council, but may not vote on these items.

On or before January 15, the mayor is obligated to communicate a State of the City address to the city council. The mayor must also propose a budget to the city council and for public review no later than April 15.

The salary of the mayor was set at $100,464 in 2003. In March 2012, the city's Salary Setting Commission proposed that the mayor be paid $235,000, but the city council unanimously rejected the recommendation, instead keeping the salary at the 2003 level. In March 2014, the Salary Setting Commission recommended no pay increase for the mayor or city council. Instead, they recommended exploring future pay increases with additional condition that council members voting for pay increases not be allowed to benefit from the increase. This recommendation was approved by the city council in a 5–3 vote in favor of the changes. As of December 2020, the mayoral salary is $206,000.

Election and succession

The mayor is elected in citywide election. Elections follow a two-round system. The first round of the election is called the primary election. The top-two candidates from the primary election advance to a runoff election, called the general election. Write-in candidates are only allowed to contest the primary election and are not allowed in the general election. The mayor is elected to a four-year term, with a limit of two consecutive terms. The mayor is officially non-partisan by state law, although most mayoral candidates identify a party preference.

If the office of the mayor becomes vacant with one year or less remaining in the term, the city council appoints a person to fill the vacancy. If the vacancy occurs with more than one year remaining, the city council is obligated to call a special election. The candidate with the majority of the votes in the special election is declared mayor. If no candidate receives a majority, a special run-off must be held between the two candidates with the highest number of votes. While the mayor's office is vacant pending a special election, the president of the city council serves as the interim mayor, with limited powers, until a new mayor is elected. If for any reason a mayor serves a partial term of two years or more, it will count as one full term.

The most recent election was held in November 2024. Todd Gloria was re-elected as the 37th mayor of San Diego, defeating police officer Larry Turner. Gloria had previously served as interim mayor in his role as city council president following the 2013 resignation of Bob Filner.

List

As of , 36 individuals have served as mayor. There have been 37 mayoralties because Edwin M. Capps served non-consecutive terms; he is counted chronologically as both the ninth and sixteenth mayor. The longest term was that of Pete Wilson, who served for eleven years over three terms prior to the establishment of successive term limits. The shortest term, not counting interim or acting mayors, was that of George P. Tebbetts, who served for less than two months before the position of mayor was abolished due to the bankruptcy of the city. Percy J. Benbough is the only mayor to have died in office. Two women have been elected mayor: Maureen O'Connor and Susan Golding consecutively. John F. Forward Sr. and John F. Forward Jr. are the only father and son to have both served as mayor. Todd Gloria is the first mayor of color, with Filipino, Latino, and Native American heritage. Gloria is also the first elected mayor to be openly gay.

This list includes people who served as acting mayor or interim mayor due to a vacancy in the office of the mayor, but who were not officially elected or appointed as mayor. The acting and interim mayors are not included in the count of mayoralties.

No.MayorTerm in officeElectionsParty11850218513185241887N/A518896189171893, 18958189791899101901, 1903111905121907131909141911151913161915171917, 1919181921, 1923, 1925191927, 192920193121193222N/AN/A231935, 1939N/A24N/A251943, 1947261951271955, 1959281963, 1967291971, 1975, 1979N/A301983, 1984N/A311986, 1988321992, 1996332000, 2004N/AN/A342005, 2008352012N/A362013–2014, 2016372020, 2024
[[File:Mayorbean.png100px]]Joshua Bean
1818–1852
(aged 33–34)June 17, 1850January 14, 1851Independent
[[File:David B Kurtz.jpg100px]]David B. Kurtz
1819–1898
(aged 78–79)January 14, 1851January 10, 1852Whig
[[File:George Tebbetts.jpg100px]]George P. Tebbetts
1828–1909
(aged 80–81)January 10, 1852February 28, 1852Independent
Office abolished (1852–1888)
[[File:William Hunsaker.jpg100px]]William Jefferson Hunsaker
1855–1933
(aged 77)January 3, 1888November 13, 1888Workingmen's
Martin D. Hamilton
1855–1922
(aged 66–67)November 13, 1888May 6, 1889Republican
[[File:Douglas Gunn.jpg100px]]Douglas Gunn
1841–1891
(aged 50)May 6, 1889May 4, 1891Republican
[[File:Matthew Sherman.jpg100px]]Matthew Sherman
1827–1898
(aged 70)May 4, 1891May 1, 1893Republican
[[File:William H. Carlson.png100px]]William H. Carlson
1864–1937
(aged 73)May 1, 1893May 3, 1897Independent
[[File:D C Reed.jpg100px]]David C. Reed
1847–1928
(aged 81)May 3, 1897May 1, 1899Republican
[[File:Edwin M Capps.jpg100px]]Edwin M. Capps
1860–1938
(aged 77)May 1, 1899May 6, 1901Democratic
[[File:Frank P Frary.jpg100px]]Frank P. Frary
1856–1911
(aged 54)May 6, 1901May 1, 1905Republican
[[File:John L Sehon.jpg100px]]John L. Sehon
1862–1913
(aged 50)May 1, 1905May 6, 1907Democratic
[[File:John F Forward Sr.jpg100px]]John F. Forward Sr.
1851–1926
(aged 75)May 6, 1907May 3, 1909Republican
[[File:Mayor Conard.jpg100px]]Grant Conard
1867–1919
(aged 52)May 3, 1909May 1, 1911Republican
[[File:Mayor Wadham.jpg100px]]James E. Wadham
1865–1930
(aged 64–65)May 1, 1911May 5, 1913Democratic
[[File:Mayor O'Neall.jpg100px]]Charles F. O'Neall
1875–1929
(aged 53)May 5, 1913May 3, 1915Democratic
[[File:Edwin M Capps.jpg100px]]Edwin M. Capps
1860–1938
(aged 77)May 3, 1915May 7, 1917Democratic
[[File:Louis J Wilde.jpg100px]]Louis J. Wilde
1865–1924
(aged 58)May 7, 1917May 2, 1921Republican
[[File:Mayor Bacon.jpg100px]]John L. Bacon
1878–1961
(aged 82)May 2, 1921May 2, 1927Republican
[[File:Mayor Clark.jpg100px]]Harry C. Clark
1883–1950
(aged 67)May 2, 1927May 4, 1931Republican
[[File:Mayor Austin.jpg100px]]Walter W. Austin
1880–1951
(aged 70)May 4, 1931May 2, 1932Republican
[[File:Mayor Forward Jr.jpg100px]]John F. Forward Jr.
1876–1938
(aged 61)May 2, 1932August 2, 1934Republican
[[File:Mayor Irones.jpg100px]]Rutherford B. Irones
1877–1948
(aged 70)August 2, 1934February 1, 1935Republican
[[File:Albert W. Bennett, 1934.jpg100px]]Albert W. BennettFebruary 1, 1935May 6, 1935Republican
[[File:Mayor Benbough.jpg100px]]Percy J. Benbough
1884–1942
(aged 58)May 6, 1935November 4, 1942Republican
Fred W. SimpsonNovember 4, 1942November 30, 1942Republican
[[File:Mayor Bard.jpg100px]]Howard B. Bard
1870–1954
(aged 83)November 30, 1942May 3, 1943Democratic
[[File:Mayor Knox.jpg100px]]Harley E. Knox
1899–1956
(aged 57)May 3, 1943May 7, 1951Independent
[[File:Mayor Butler.jpg100px]]John D. Butler
1915–2010
(aged 94)May 7, 1951May 2, 1955Republican
[[File:Charles Dail.jpg100px]]Charles Dail
1909–1968
(aged 59)May 2, 1955December 2, 1963Democratic
[[File:Mayor Frank E. Curran.jpg100px]]Frank Curran
1912–1992
(aged 79)December 2, 1963December 6, 1971Democratic
[[File:Mayor Wilson.jpg100px]]Pete Wilson
Born 1933
( years old)December 6, 1971January 3, 1983Republican
Bill Cleator
1927–1993
(aged 65)January 3, 1983May 3, 1983Republican
[[File:Mayor Hedgecock.jpg100px]]Roger Hedgecock
Born 1946
( years old)May 3, 1983December 5, 1985Republican
[[File:Ed Struiksma, 1981.jpg100px]]Ed Struiksma
Born 1946
( years old)December 5, 1985June 3, 1986Republican
[[File:Maureen O'Connor.jpg100px]]Maureen O'Connor
Born 1946
( years old)June 3, 1986December 7, 1992Democratic
[[File:Susan Golding.jpg100px]]Susan Golding
Born 1945
( years old)December 7, 1992December 4, 2000Republican
[[File:Dick Murphy.jpg100px]]Dick Murphy
Born 1942
( years old)December 4, 2000July 15, 2005Republican
[[File:Commissioner-michael-zucchet-2017-07-13.png100px]]Michael Zucchet
Born 1969
( years old)July 15, 2005July 18, 2005Democratic
[[File:Atkins Headshot.jpg100px]]Toni Atkins
Born 1962
( years old)July 18, 2005December 5, 2005Democratic
[[File:Sanders official portrait.jpg100px]]Jerry Sanders
Born 1950
( years old)December 5, 2005December 3, 2012Republican
[[File:Bob Filner mayoral portrait.jpg100px]]Bob Filner
1942–2025
(aged 82)December 3, 2012August 30, 2013Democratic
[[File:Todd Gloria.jpg100px]]Todd Gloria
Born 1978
( years old)August 30, 2013March 3, 2014Democratic
[[File:Kevin Faulconer Portrait (1).jpg100px]]Kevin Faulconer
Born 1967
( years old)March 3, 2014December 10, 2020Republican
[[File:Todd Gloria 2022.jpg100px]]Todd Gloria
Born 1978
( years old)December 10, 2020IncumbentDemocratic

Presidents of the Board of Trustees

After San Diego's bankruptcy in 1852, the State of California took over city government and ran the city with an appointed board of trustees during 1852–1888. The president of the board was called mayor by courtesy, although there was no official office of mayor. When the office of president was vacated due to death or resignation, the board of trustees would choose a president pro tempore to preside over meetings until a permanent president could be elected by the board.

#PresidentTerm startTerm endParty
1[[File:Charles P Noell.jpg100px]]Democratic Party (United States)}}
2[[File:James W Robinson.jpg100px]]Democratic Party (United States)}}
3Democratic Party (United States)}}
4[[File:Louis Rose.jpg100px]]
5
6Whig Party (United States)}}
7[[File:WHALEY, Thomas (1823-1890).jpg100px]]Whig Party (United States)}}
8Democratic Party (United States)}}
9
10[[File:David B Kurtz.jpg100px]]Democratic Party (United States)}}
11[[File:CASSIDY, Andrew (1817-189x).jpg100px]]Democratic Party (United States)}}
12[[File:Joseph S Manasse.jpg100px]]
13[[File:José Guadalupe Estudillo High Res.jpg100px]]
14[[File:McCOY, James (1821-1895).jpg100px]]Democratic Party (United States)}}
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
23Democratic Party (United States)}}
24Republican Party (United States)}}

References

  1. Smythe, William. (1907). "History of San Diego, 1542-1908: The modern city". History Co..
  2. Larson, Thomas. (October 28, 2004). "Elections San Diego Style". [[San Diego Reader]].
  3. "A History of San Diego Government". [[San Diego.
  4. Horstman, Barry. (December 6, 1987). "Man About Town : San Diego's Ex-Mayor Roger Hedgecock Hasn't Let His Felony Conviction Get Him Down. But This Week, the Past May Catch Up With Him.". Los Angeles Times.
  5. Abrahamson, Alan. (February 2, 1992). "Bailiff's Bias in Hedgecock Trial Disclosed". Los Angeles Times.
  6. (January 1, 1991). "Hedgecock has clean slate; judge erases felony record". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  7. (June 13, 2005). "San Diego's Widening Pension Woes". Bloomberg BusinessWeek.
  8. Strumpf, Daniel (June 15, 2005) [https://web.archive.org/web/20090219224628/http://www.sdcitybeat.com/cms/story/detail/?id=3244 San Diego's Pension Scandal for Dummies], San Diego City Beat via Internet Archive. Retrieved April 3, 2011.
  9. Hall, Matthew T.. (April 8, 2010). "Five cleared in San Diego pension case". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  10. (July 19, 2005). "Councilmen Guilty". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  11. (January 20, 2012). "Ralph Inzunza Goes to Prison (Soon)". NBC San Diego.
  12. "Appeals Court opinion, Sept. 1, 2009".
  13. Greg Moran. (October 14, 2010). "''Seven Years Later, Zucchet Cleared''". San Diego Union-Tribune.
  14. [http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/Jul/11/filner-backers-news-conference-resign/?#article-copy Filner apologizes, gets professional help], ''San Diego Union Tribune'', July 11, 2013
  15. Lah, Kyung. (August 21, 2013). "Another sex harassment accusation for San Diego Mayor Bob Filner". CNN.
  16. (August 23, 2013). "San Diego Mayor Resigns in Sexual Harassment Scandal". NY Times.
  17. (October 15, 2013). "Ex-San Diego mayor Bob Filner pleads guilty to 3 charges". USA Today.
  18. (July 5, 2021). "Anatomy of the Deal: What happened on Ash Street".
  19. "ARTICLE XV Strong Mayor Form of Governance". [[San Diego.
  20. (March 10, 2014). "No pay hikes for mayor, council". [[U-T San Diego]].
  21. (March 5, 2012). "City Council Rejects Salary Hikes For Mayor, Council". [[KGTV.
  22. (November 21, 2018). "Ballot measures hiking council pay, boosting transparency approved by wide margins in San Diego". The San Diego Union-Tribune.
  23. (April 17, 2020). "Despite budget cuts, San Diego's next mayor in line for massive raise". ABC 10 News.
  24. "How To Run For Office Details". [[San Diego.
  25. Dotinga, Randy. (August 22, 2013). "The Differences Between an Interim Mayor and a Strong Mayor". [[Voice of San Diego]].
  26. (November 8, 2020). "Todd Gloria will bring lots of firsts as San Diego's new mayor". Los Angeles Times.
  27. "City Clerk Archives". [[San Diego.
  28. "Selected Chronological List of San Diego City Officials". San Diego History Center.
  29. "William Jefferson Hunsaker (1855-1933)". San Diego History Center.
  30. (November 14, 1888). "The Mayor's Resignation". [[U-T San Diego.
  31. Crawford, Richard. (August 25, 2011). "San Diego Pioneer Moved from Newspapers to Mayor's Chair". [[U-T San Diego.
  32. (April 18, 1934). "Forward to End Job August 1 Action Follows His Failure to Oust F. M. Lockwood as City Manager Three Councilmen and City Attorney in Line for Post as Municipal Head". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  33. (February 5, 1935). "Hit-Run Mayor Drops Out.". [[The New York Times]].
  34. (February 2, 1935). "Bennett Acting Mayor of S.D. as Irones Fate Debated". [[U-T San Diego.
  35. (November 5, 1942). "PERCY J. BENBOUGH; Mayor of San Diego Since 1935, Ex-Head of Fire, Police Groups". [[The New York Times]].
  36. (November 5, 2014). "P.J. Benbough Succumbs to Lengthy Illness". [[U-T San Diego.
  37. (February 11, 1993). "William E. Cleator, Was San Diego City Councilman". [[Associated Press]].
  38. Abrahamson, Alan. (February 2, 1992). "Bailiff's Bias in Hedgecock Trial Disclosed". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  39. (February 25, 1986). "Election Today for S.D. Mayor". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  40. Dillon, Jeff. (2005-04-25). "San Diego mayor announces departure less than 5 months into second term". [[U-T San Diego.
  41. Coffey, Daniel. (October 14, 2010). "Justice undone: Michael Zucchet and Ralph Inzunza". San Diego Daily Transcript.
  42. (July 26, 2005). "Toni Atkins to serve as San Diego's deputy mayor until new mayor elected". [[U-T San Diego.
  43. Gustafson, Craig. (August 30, 2013). "Q&A with Todd Gloria, interim mayor". [[U-T San Diego]].
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