1939 Chicago mayoral election


In the Chicago mayoral election of 1939, incumbent Edward J. Kelly was reelected by a double-digit margin of victory.

Nominations

Democratic primary

Incumbent Democrat Edward J. Kelly had already served for nearly six years, which meant that he was going to tie the record at the time for the most consecutive years spent as mayor. By seeking election an additional four-year term, Kelly was running to have the longest uninterrupted mayoralty Chicago had ever seen. An additional four years would also tie him with Carter Harrison Jr. for the longest-serving mayor in Chicago history at the time.
Kelly fended off a primary challenge from Thomas J. Courtney. Rebellious and reform-oriented Democrats united behind Thomas J. Courtney as a challenger to Kelly and the political machine. Courtney had initially held hopes of aligning himself with Governor Henry Horner. Horner had been engaging in a political feud with Kelly and Chicago Democratic boss Patrick Nash. However, Horner made peace with Chicago's Democratic machine before the mayoral primary, consequentially robbing Courntney of an opportunity to capitalize off of discord between the Chicago political establishment and the state's governor.
Despite efforts to draft him, Harold L. Ickes did not run for the nomination.

Results

Republican primary

Dwight H. Green defeated former mayor William H. Thompson in the Republican primary.
Thompson had announced his bid in mid-December of 1938.

Results

Independent candidates

Republican Arthur P. Reilly ran as an independent.

General election

Republican nominee Dwight H. Green was strong opponent to the incumbent Kelly. Green was a young and talented lawyer, as well as a political reformer. As an assistant district attorney, Green had helped to construct the income tax evasion case which led to mobster Al Capone's imprisonment. Green ran a vigorous campaign which attempted to make the case against Kelly's political campaign for its connections with criminal elements. His campaign also harshly criticized increases in the city tax rate. Green's campaign, in a sense, was a four-month series of attacks on the Kelly-Patrick Nash political machine.
Kelly did not respond to Green's criticisms. In fact, for the duration of his campaign, Kelly did not even utter his Republican opponent's name.
After his defeat in the primary, Thomas Courtney reluctantly agreed to endorse Kelly.
Kelly received the backing of trade unions. By 1939, a significant number of Chicago's African American voters had migrated their support from the Republican party to the Democratic Party. Kelly would receive at least half the African American vote. Additionally, many of those who supported or benefited from the New Deal policies of Democratic president Franklin Roosevelt supported Kelly's reelection.
On the eve of the election, Kelly received a further boost when former United States District Attorney George E. Q. Johnson declared in a radio address that he considered Chicago to no longer be a capital of crime, arguing that the city now led the nation in crime prevention, largely crediting Kelly and the city's police commissioner for this.

Results

Kelly won the election by a decisive margin and with a record-setting vote total. The overall vote total in the election was record-setting as well.

Aftermath

Both parties attempted to spin the narrative of the election result to their advantage. Democratic National Committee chairman James Farley declared that "As Illinois goes, so will the nation 1940." However Republicans tried to argue that Green's performance, the best by a Republican Chicago mayoral candidate in a decade, demonstrated that there was promise for Republicans to carry Illinois' 29 electoral votes in 1940.
Green would go on to be elected Governor of Illinois the following year.