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Washington, D.C.
mayoral election, 2006
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The 2006 Washington, D.C. mayoral election also known as 2006 District of Columbia mayoral election determined the successor to two-term mayor Anthony A. Williams, who did not run for re-election. The Democratic primary was held on September 12, 2006, and the general election was held on November 7, 2006. The winner of both was Adrian Fenty, the representative for Ward 4 on the Washington, D.C. City Council. He took office on January 2, 2007, becoming the sixth directly elected mayor since the establishment of home rule in the District, and — at 35 — the youngest elected mayor of a major American city in U.S. history.
Candidates [edit]
General Election [edit]
In addition to the candidates above, the following candidates lost in the primary election.
Democratic Party primary [edit]
| Democratic Primary Results |
| Candidate |
Votes |
Percent |
| Adrian Fenty (winner) |
60,732 |
57.20% |
| Linda Cropp |
32,897 |
30.98% |
| Marie Johns |
8,501 |
8.01% |
| Vincent Orange |
3,075 |
2.90% |
| Michael A. Brown |
650 |
0.61% |
| Artee (RT) Milligan |
105 |
0.10% |
| Nestor Djonkam |
73 |
0.07% |
| Write In, if any |
145 |
0.14% |
| Total |
106,178 |
100.00% |
| Source: D.C. Board of Elections |
- Linda W. Cropp - Cropp was considered Fenty's rival as the frontrunner for the mayoral primary, although Fenty took a lead in the polls about two months before the election.
- Marie Johns
- Vincent Orange
- Michael A. Brown, who consistently had trailed the pack in polling data, dropped out of the race September 8, and announced he was throwing his support to Cropp.
Republican Party primary [edit]
David W. Kranich ran in the Republican Party primary election. Albert Ceccone gathered signatures to run on the ballot as well, but after a challenge by Kranich, the District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics declared many of the signatures invalid.[1] Consequently Ceccone did not have enough valid signatures to appear on the ballot, and only Kranich's name appeared as running for mayor on the Republican primary ballot.[2] Kranich received 65% of the vote.[3]
Statehood Green Party primary [edit]
Chris Otten ran unopposed for the Statehood Green party's primary election.[4] Otten received 50% of the vote.[3]
Endorsements [edit]
- Fenty received the endorsements of, most notably, The Washington Post and former mayor Marion Barry.
- Cropp received the endorsement of, most notably, outgoing mayor Anthony A. Williams.
- Orange received the endorsement of, most notably, recently terminated Metrobus driver Sidney Davis, as highlighted in the August 21, 2006 article, "Soapbox on Wheels", in The Washington Post.
- Johns received the endorsement of, most notably, The Washington Times.
External links [edit]
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 The DC Mayor's Race 2006: Linda Cropp dcmayor06-Lcropp_Interview.rm. |  Interview about 2006 mayor's race in Washington DC I conducted some man-on-the-street interviews in regards to the mayoral contest in 2006 in Washington DC, on September 12, 2006, the date of the primary elec... |  Interview about 2006 mayor's race in Washington DC I conducted some man-on-the-street interviews in regards to the mayoral contest in 2006 in Washington DC, on September 12, 2006, the date of the primary elec... |  The DC Mayor's Race 2006: Michael Brown on the Issues dcmayor06-Brown_Interview_w_PercyN_issues.rm. |  The DC Mayor's Race 2006: Michael Brown on Teen Crime dcmayor06-Brown_Interview_w_DonaldW_crime.rm. |  The DC Mayor's Race 2006: Marie Johns dcmayor06-Mjohns_Interview.rm. |  Raw Video: Johnson Discusses Mayoral Race, Issues Kevin Johnson, a former NBA star and candidate for Sacramento mayor, talks about incumbent Heather Fargo, the city budget deficit and the idea of building a new sports arena. |  Marie Johns vs. Adrian Fenty Part VIII Washington DC Mayoral Candidates Debate on Saturday, August 12, 2006. |  The DC Mayor's Race: The Issues: The Environment dcmayor06-Segment3_Environment.rm. |  Mayor Gray & Councilmember McDuffie Announce Ward 5 Industrial Land Task Force Mayor Vincent C. Gray and Ward 5 Councilmember Kenyan R. McDuffie have announced the formation of a 13-member task force charged with developing a strategic ... |
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