Democrat Corey O’Connor wins Pittsburgh mayor’s race, defeats Republican Tony Moreno
Corey O'Connor, winning with over 92% of early votes, aims to tackle affordable housing, public safety, and economic growth as Pittsburgh's 62nd mayor.
- The Associated Press projected on Tuesday night that Democrat Corey O'Connor won the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania mayoral race, defeating Republican nominee Tony Moreno and declaring the call at 8:26 p.m. EST.
- The Democratic primary turned acrimonious with funding disputes as Gainey accused O'Connor of accepting money from Trump supporters and criticized his stance on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
- Allegheny County Controller Corey O'Connor, a former Pittsburgh City Council member, led early returns with 92.2% of the vote and said, `It comes to the chief of police and how we don't even have one.`
- Following the projection, Corey O'Connor addressed the South Side election-night crowd, thanking Moreno and local unions as he prepares to serve as Pittsburgh's 62nd mayor sworn in January 5, 2026.
- Pittsburgh's result could be a bellwether for Democrats in Pennsylvania, a blue city in a state that flipped red in 2024, amid Democratic gains seen as a rebuke of President Donald Trump.
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O’Connor elected Pittsburgh mayor, winning father’s office and Gainey’s problems
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Democrats appear to gain three seats in Mississippi Legislature
Voters at Alabama A&M University pass a voting sign after voting at Elmore Gym during Election Day on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024 in Huntsville, Ala. Democrats Tuesday appeared to gain three seats in the Mississippi Legislature, possibly ending a Republian supermajority in the Mississippi Senate. (Eric Schultz for Alabama Reflector)This story originally appeared on Mississippi Today, a nonprofit news outlet covering Mississippi. Sign up for their free…
'Inroads in tough territory': Dems break GOP supermajority in deep red state
The Democratic party's sweeping Tuesday night victories included many high profile ones, but over in deep red Mississippi, for the first time in years, the party broke the Republican supermajority by flipping two seats, Newsweek reports.The wins come after court-ordered special redistricting elections that were intended to give greater representation to the state's Black voters. The redistricting stemmed from a 2022 lawsuit brought by the Missis…
Mississippi Democrats Break Republican Senate Supermajority, Flipping 3 Legislative Seats
After 13 years, Mississippi Democrats have broken the Republican Party's supermajority in the Mississippi Senate. Voters elected Democrats to two seats previously held by Republicans, reducing the number of Republican senators in the upper chamber from 36 to 34. The post Mississippi Democrats Break Republican Senate Supermajority, Flipping 3 Legislative Seats appeared first on Mississippi Free Press.
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