Ivy R. Taylor

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Ivy R. Taylor
Image of Ivy R. Taylor
Prior offices
San Antonio City Council District 2

Mayor of San Antonio
Successor: Ron Nirenberg

Bildung

Bachelor's

Yale University

Absolvent

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Kontakt

Ivy R. Taylor is a Democrat and the former mayor of San Antonio in Texas. Taylor was initially appointed to the nonpartisan position in 2014 by the San Antonio City Council. First elected in 2015, Taylor lost a re-election campaign in the runoff election on June 10, 2017.[1]

Biography

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Taylor obtained a B.A. from Yale University and an M.S. in city and regional planning from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Her professional experience includes working for the City of San Antonio in the Housing and Community Development Department and the Neighborhood Action Department.[2]

Elections

2017

See also: Municipal elections in San Antonio, Texas (2017)

The city of San Antonio, Texas, held runoff elections for mayor and six of its 10 city council seats on June 10, 2017. Ron Nirenberg defeated incumbent Ivy R. Taylor in the runoff election for mayor of San Antonio.

Mayor of San Antonio, Runoff Election, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Ron Nirenberg 54.60% 54,020
Ivy R. Taylor Incumbent 45.40% 44,922
Total Votes 98,942
Source: Bexar County, Texas, "June 10, 2017 Media Report," June 22, 2017

The city of San Antonio, Texas, held general elections for mayor and all 10 of its city council seats on May 6, 2017. Candidates had to earn a majority of the votes cast in this election to win. Any race where no candidate received a majority (50 percent plus one) of the general election votes cast for that position advanced to a runoff election on June 10, 2017. The following candidates ran in the general election for mayor of San Antonio.[3]

Mayor of San Antonio, General Election, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Ivy R. Taylor Incumbent 42.01% 41,794
Green check mark transparent.png Ron Nirenberg 37.08% 36,890
Juan Manuel Medina 15.13% 15,049
Keven Roles 1.57% 1,557
Antonio Diaz 0.97% 966
Will McLeod 0.55% 545
Felicio Hernandez Flores II 0.43% 429
John Velasquez 0.39% 383
Gerard Ponce 0.37% 366
Michael Idrogo 0.37% 366
Rhett Rosenquest Smith 0.32% 321
Stephen Lucke 0.32% 315
Julie Iris Oldham 0.27% 270
Napoleon Madrid 0.23% 225
Total Votes 99,476
Source: Bexar County, Texas, "May 6, 2017 Media Report," May 18, 2017

Endorsements

On April 24, 2017, the San Antonio Express-News endorsed Taylor for re-election.[4]

Campaign finance

2017

The table below lists campaign finance totals for the mayoral candidates as of reports available from the city of San Antonio following the May 3 filing deadline.

Campaign themes

2017

Taylor provided the following statement on her campaign website:

" When Mayor Taylor ran for a full term as our mayor, she promised to keep our community safe and protect taxpayers by reaching a contract agreement with the San Antonio Police Officers Association (SAPOA) that kept public safety spending to 66% of the City’s budget while fairly compensating the men and women who risk their lives on a daily basis for all San Antonians.

After a long and difficult negotiation, the members of SAPOA agreed to a new contract that was approved by the San Antonio City Council on an overwhelming 9-2 vote. The contract increased pay for police officers while saving $87.5 million in health care costs over the next five years and achieving the fiscal discipline sought by Mayor Taylor and her Council colleagues.

But Mayor Taylor knows resolving the police contract is just one part of keeping our community safe. She understands our City must continue reforming policing to ensure that every San Antonian is confident that law enforcement truly protects and serves them.

Since taking office, Mayor Taylor has supported the use of body cameras and the creation of specialized police response teams trained to deal with situations involving the homeless and those suffering from mental illness.

She is also working to address accountability within the police department to prevent the tension and distrust seen between police officers and citizens in other communities around the country. Creating the Mayor’s Committee on Police-Community Relations, Mayor Taylor has asked neighborhood, civic, religious and law enforcement leaders to work together in developing solutions that make our community more secure by increasing police accountability in instances where bad cops break the law and harm instead of protecting San Antonians. She knows promoting healthy dialogue, diversifying our police force and working together to find solutions that lead to lasting reforms are critical to avoiding the divisions that plague so many others.[9]

—Ivy Taylor's campaign website (2017)[10]

See also

San Antonio, Texas Texas Municipal government Other local coverage
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External links

Footnotes

Political offices
Preceded by
Julián Castro
Mayor of San Antonio
2014-2017
Succeeded by
Ron Nirenberg