1917 New York City mayoral election

1917 New York City mayoral election

November 6, 1917
 
Candidate John F. Hylan John P. Mitchel
Party Democratic Fusion
Popular vote 314,010 155,497
Percentage 46.78% 23.16%

 
Candidate Morris Hillquit William M. Bennett
Party Socialist Republican
Popular vote 145,332 56,438
Percentage 21.65% 8.4%

Results by Borough
Hylan:      40–50%      50–60%

Mayor before election

John P. Mitchel
Fusion Party

Elected mayor

John F. Hylan
Democratic

The 1917 New York City mayoral election was held on November 6, 1917. Incumbent mayor John Purroy Mitchel, elected as a Republican but running on the Fusion Party ticket, was defeated for re-election by Judge John Francis Hylan, a Democrat supported by Tammany Hall and William Randolph Hearst.

The election was notable not only for the first partisan primary elections for city offices, but for the contentious debate over American entry into World War I, vigorously supported by Mitchel and opposed by the Socialist candidate, Morris Hillquit. Mitchel and Hillquit each won about a fifth of the total vote, while Hylan won office with less than half the vote.