Pennsylvania
Related: About this forumAnalyzing the voting data behind O'Connor's Pittsburgh mayoral primary win -- and Gainey's loss
It took a little more than two hours for The Associated Press to call the mayoral race in Pittsburghs Democratic primary Tuesday night. But warning signs were flashing for Mayor Ed Gainey moments after the polls closed.
Thats when the county posted results from more than 17,000 mail-in ballots sent in by voters and processed by election workers during the course of the day. Gainey himself got about 35% of those votes roughly the same share as he earned in his challenge of then-Mayor Bill Peduto four years before. But his rival, Corey OConnor, improved on Pedutos performance by 10 percentage points a roughly 800-vote improvement.
Those early returns made one factor obvious from the outset: Unlike in 2021, when there were two other dark-horse Democrats challenging the incumbent, there was no one sharing space with OConnor on Tuesdays ballot to divide the opposition vote.
Tony Moreno, who ran in that Democratic primary and got 2,114 mail-in votes, is now a Republican (and will challenge OConnor in the fall). But many of the areas where he performed well in 2021 swung over to OConnor in his absence.
https://www.wesa.fm/politics-government/2025-05-21/pittsburgh-primary-election-data

bucolic_frolic
(50,710 posts)Tony Moreno, party switcheroo. Shameless.
FakeNoose
(37,593 posts)... but yes, he is shameless.
I believe Corey O'Connor is the better choice because of his background in financial management and the fact that people like him and want to work with him. I have nothing personal against Ed Gainey, but he lacks financial management credentials and it shows.
I really disliked Gainey's negative and defensive campaign commercials, but even more troubling is the revolving door at the Pittsburgh Chief of Police, and the many police resignations in the past 4 years. That's no way to run a city, and I believe "Pittsburgh deserves better" as Corey O'Connor is fond of saying.