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Historic Chicago Mayor’s Race Narrows To 2 Black Women

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Holding the first open elections for more than 100 years, Chicago has cleared the path to elect its first black female mayor, advancing Toni Preckwinkle and Lori Lightfoot in Tuesday’s mayoral race to the April 2 runoff.

Fourteen candidates vied for top spot to replace incumbent Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel in the nation’s 3rd largest city. It was the largest candidate field in its history, and campaigns collectively raked in more than $30 million. More than half a million voters went to the polls Tuesday in a lower-than-expected vote turnout.

Leading the field with 17 percent of the vote, Preckwinkle is the president of the Cook County Board of Commissioners and the chair of the Cook County Democratic Party. Lightfoot, a former U.S. assistant attorney and Chicago Police Board president who has never held elected office, received 14 percent.

Although he led fundraising with over $8 million and hailed from a family who has dominated Chicago politics for the past six decades, former U.S. Commerce Secretary and Obama Chief of Staff Bill Daley failed to secure a runoff spot after a third place showing. Several candidates voiced hope that “Daley fatigue” would work in their electoral favor.

Several issues dominated the campaign, including the city’s pension system shortfalls, crime rates, K-12 school performance policies and under-enrollment, economic and racial divisions, affordable housing, and government ethics.

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