1977 Pittsburgh mayoral election

The Mayoral election of 1977 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was held on Tuesday, November 1, 1977. The incumbent mayor, Richard Caliguiri, had ascended to the office just 10 months earlier, after longtime mayor Pete Flaherty resigned to take a position in the newly formed Jimmy Carter White House. The former City Council President chose to renounce his lifelong Democratic Party membership for the election and run for his first full term as an Independent.

1977 Pittsburgh mayoral election

November 1, 1977
 
Nominee Richard Caliguiri Tom Foerster Joe Cosetti
Party Independent Democratic Republican
Popular vote 68,902 62,860 12,205
Percentage 47.9% 43.7% 8.5%

Mayor before election

Richard Caliguiri
Independent

Elected Mayor

Richard Caliguiri
Independent

Primary elections

Allegheny County Commissioner Tom Foerster, a powerful party leader, won the Democratic Primary. He was victorious in a contentious battle over city Controller Frank Luccino and fellow city Councilman Jim Sims.

General election

Caliguiri had originally planned not to seek reelection, but a personal clash with Foerster over environmental issues and mass transit funding led to Caliguiri reentering the race; because the filing deadline for the primary had already passed, the Democrat was forced to run as an independent. With Republican attorney Joe Cosetti a nonfactor in the heavily Democratic city, Caliguiri emerged victorious in a highly contested race between two fixtures of area politics.[1] A total of 143,967 votes were cast.

Pittsburgh mayoral election, 1977
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Richard Caliguiri (incumbent) 68,902 47.9
Democratic Tom Foerster 62,860 43.7
Republican Joe Cosetti 12,205 8.5
Turnout 143,967

References

Preceded by
1973
Pittsburgh mayoral election
1977
Succeeded by
1981
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