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Philadelphia City Council

Legislative body of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US

Philadelphia City Council

Legislative body of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US

FieldValue
namePhiladelphia City Council
coa_picSeal of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.svg
coa_altSeal of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
background_color#f3c613
house_typeUnicameral
leader1_typePresident
leader1Kenyatta Johnson
party1Democratic
election1January 2, 2024
leader2_typeMajority Leader
leader2Katherine Gilmore Richardson
party2Democratic
election2January 1, 2024
leader3_typeMinority Leader
leader3Kendra Brooks
party3Working Families
election3January 1, 2024
members17
voting_system1*First-past-the-post (for single-member district seats)
last_election1November 7, 2023
next_election1November 2, 2027
structure1File:Philadelphia City Council 2024.png
structure1_res250px
political_groups1* Democratic (14)
*borderdarkgray}} Working Families (2)
*{{Color box#F8050Dborderdarkgray}} Republican (1)
session_roomPhiladelphia-CityHall-2006.jpg
session_res200px
meeting_placePhiladelphia City Hall
websiteCity Council Website
  • Limited voting with limited nominations (for citywide at-large seats)
  • Working Families (2)
  • Republican (1)
City Hall from postcard, {{circa}} 1900
text=Interactive version}})
text=Interactive version}})

The Philadelphia City Council is the legislative body of the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is composed of 17 councilmembers: ten members elected by district and seven members elected at-large from throughout the city.

The Council serves as a check against the Mayor of Philadelphia in a mayor-council system of government. Council can override mayoral vetoes with a two-thirds vote. Among other responsibilities, the Council approves the city budget proposed by the Mayor. Councilmembers are elected for four-year terms with no limits on the number of terms they may serve.

The head of the City Council is the Council President. The current Council President, Democrat Kenyatta Johnson, assumed office in January 2024. All proposed legislation is introduced by a councilmember and then the Council President refers proposed legislation to the appropriate committee.

Democrat Katherine Gilmore Richardson has headed the Democratic majority in the chamber as Majority Leader since January 2024. Working Families Party member Kendra Brooks is the Minority Leader, representing the Council's minority caucus since January 2024. The Working Families Party is the minority caucus with two seats, ahead of the Republican Party's one seat held by Brian J. O'Neill.

It is the only city council of a first class city in the United States in which the Republicans do not serve as the minority caucus while retaining a seat on the council.

History

While William Penn's original 1691 charter for the city of Philadelphia included a "common council" with appointed members, no records exist of this body ever having been convened. Its successor, the Proprietor's Charter of 1701, constituted the city as a municipal corporation with a non-elected council made up of major city officials who selected their own successors. In 1796, a bicameral city council was created including a 20-member Common Council elected annually and 12-member Select Council elected every three years; the sizes of both bodies increased with the population of the city, peaking at 149 members of Common Council and 41 in Select Council, the largest municipal legislature in the US. It was replaced with a single 21-member chamber in 1919, which remained in effect until the adoption of a Home Rule charter in 1951.

Composition and term

The 1951 Home Rule Charter established the council as the legislative arm of Philadelphia municipal government, consisting of seventeen members. Ten council members are elected by district and seven from the city at large. At-large council members are elected using limited voting with limited nomination in which voters may only select five candidates on the ballot, and which guarantees that two minority-party or independent candidates are elected. Each is elected for a term of four years with no limit on the number of terms that may be served.

The members of City Council elect from among themselves a president, who serves as the regular chairperson of council meetings. In consultation with the majority of council members, the President appoints members to the various standing committees of the council. The president is also responsible for selecting and overseeing most Council employees.

Philadelphia City Councilmembers are some of the highest paid city councilors in the United States.

Legislative process

Every proposed ordinance is in the form of a bill introduced by a Council member. Before a bill can be enacted, it must be referred by the president of the council to an appropriate standing committee, considered at a public hearing and public meeting, reported out by the committee, printed as reported by the committee, distributed to the members of the council, and made available to the public. Passage of a bill requires the favorable vote of a majority of all members. A bill becomes law upon the approval of the mayor. If the mayor vetoes a bill, the council may override the veto by a two-thirds vote.

Under the rules of the council, regular public sessions are held weekly, usually on Thursday morning at 10:00am, in Room 400, City Hall. Council normally breaks for the summer months of July and August.

Gerrymandering

In a 2006 computer study of local and state legislative districts, two of the city's ten council districts, the 5th and the 7th, were found to be among the least compact districts in the nation, giving rise to suspicions of gerrymandering. The Committee of Seventy, a non-partisan watchdog group for local elections, asked candidates for council in 2007 to support a list of ethics statements, including a call for fair redistricting, which should take place after the 2010 United States census. In 2011, the council approved a redistricting map with more compact boundaries, eliminating the gerrymandered borders of the 5th and 7th districts; it took effect for the 2015 elections.

Councilmanic prerogative

Councilmanic prerogative is the legislative practice where a Philadelphia city council member has final say over land use in their district. Chicago has a similar practice called aldermanic prerogative. This unwritten practice affords council people who represent a geographically defined district unchecked power over land use decisions as it is custom for the 16 other council members to defer to them. A Pew study from 2015 uncovered that 726 of 730 Council votes on land use decisions were unanimous with only six total dissenting votes. Since 1981, of six council members convicted of misconduct all revolved around land-use.

Critics of councilmanic prerogative argue that it undermines government transparency and accountability, often operating in obscurity, thereby hindering development, fostering public mistrust, favoring political insiders, and allowing narrow interests to override broader city goals. District council members argue that prerogative appropriately empowers elected representatives to oversee land use projects, allowing them to safeguard their communities' interests, enhance development quality, and secure funding for local initiatives, based on their intimate knowledge of the neighborhoods they represent.

City council members

:

DistrictNameTook officeParty
1Mark Squilla2012Dem
2Kenyatta Johnson, Council President2012Dem
3Jamie Gauthier2020Dem
4Curtis J. Jones Jr.2008Dem
5Jeffery Young Jr.2024Dem
6Michael Driscoll2022Dem
7Quetcy Lozada2022Dem
8Cindy Bass2012Dem
9Anthony Phillips2022Dem
10Brian J. O'Neill Leader of the Third Party1980Rep
At-largeKatherine Gilmore Richardson, Majority Leader2020Dem
At-largeIsaiah Thomas, Majority Whip2020Dem
At-largeKendra Brooks, Minority Leader2020WFP
At-largeJim Harrity2022Dem
At-largeNina Ahmad2024Dem
At-largeRue Landau2024Dem
At-largeNicolas O'Rourke, Minority Whip2024WFP

Presidents of the City Council

PresidentTermTerm endPolitical party
James A. FinneganDemocratic
James TateDemocratic
Paul D'OrtonaDemocratic
George X. SchwartzDemocratic
Joseph E. ColemanDemocratic
John F. StreetDemocratic
Anna C. VernaDemocratic
Darrell L. ClarkeDemocratic
Kenyatta JohnsonIncumbentDemocratic

References

References

  1. Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxson. (1911). "Philadelphia: A History of the City and its People". [[S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.
  2. Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxson. (1911). "Philadelphia: A History of the City and its People". [[S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.
  3. Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxson. (1911). "Philadelphia: A History of the City and its People". [[S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.
  4. (1904). "American Municipal Councils".
  5. (8 November 2000). "City Council".
  6. Marin, Max. (August 1, 2019). "Independents are on the rise in Philly. Could they actually win a City Council seat?". [[WHYY-FM.
  7. (November 17, 2015). "About PHL Council". Philadelphia City Council.
  8. "Rules of the Council of the City of Philadelphia". Philadelphia City Council.
  9. "The Gerrymandering Index: Using geospatial analysis to measure relative compactness of electoral districts". Azavea.
  10. "City Council Ethics Agenda". Committee of Seventy.
  11. (September 23, 2011). "Philadelphia Council approves redistricting map". [[The Philadelphia Inquirer]].
  12. (July 23, 2015). "Philadelphia's Councilmanic Prerogative".
  13. (November 29, 2023). "HUD cites aldermanic prerogative fueling segregation in Chicago".
  14. Terruso, Julia. (February 27, 2019). "The primary election issue most Philly voters have never heard of: councilmanic prerogative". [[The Philadelphia Inquirer]].
  15. Vadala, Nick. (March 21, 2022). "Councilmanic prerogative in Philadelphia: What you need to know". [[The Philadelphia Inquirer]].
  16. Saffron, Inga. (2019-02-27). "How an obscure City Council rule leaves a trail of blight in Philadelphia {{!}} Inga Saffron".
  17. (October 20, 1992). "Paul D'Ortona, 88, Philadelphia Official". The New York Times.
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