Sharpe James was first elected to public office in 1970 as South Ward Councilman. He was first elected Mayor of Newark on May 13, 1986, and was sworn into office on July 1 of that year. He was the first Newark mayor to run unopposed when he sought re-election in 1990 and handily won re-election in 1994 and 1998. Sharpe James became Newark's longest-serving mayor when he was re-elected for an unprecedented fifth term in 2002, a year after being named Mayor of the Year by the New Jersey Conference of Mayors. In December 1992, James was a member of the New Jersey StateElectoral College, one of 15 electors casting their votes for the Clinton/Gore ticket. In June 1999, while serving as Mayor, James was appointed to the New Jersey Senate to fill out the unexpired term of the late Senator Wynona Lipman, and won election to that seat the following November. He was re-elected for a full term in November 2001 and continued to hold both offices. His Senate district encompassed part of Newark in Essex County and all of the Township of Hillside in Union County. Sharpe James became known in his early years as mayor for often wearing jogging suits in public and making high-profile efforts to attract development to Downtown Newark. In 1997, Newark saw the completion of the acclaimed New Jersey Performing Arts Center. In 2006, James championed the relocation of the New Jersey Devils to the City of Newark. The Prudential Center is the newest arena in the Newark metropolitan area. In terms of housing, James' policy in the 1990s was to demolish Newark's massive, but mostly abandoned, housing projects, and replace them with small-scale public housing or market rate middle class residences.
Political life
In 1986, James challenged and defeated Kenneth A. Gibson, Newark's first African American mayor. James then became known as an example of "machine politics". He had a reputation for questionable campaign tactics, including alleged use of the police force for his own purposes, intimidating supporters of his opponents and attacking his opponents' heritage. His final reelection campaign, against then-Councilman Cory Booker in 2002, was documented in the 2005 feature film Street Fight. On March 16, 2006, James filed for reelection as mayor, but announced eleven days later he would not seek a sixth term. On April 9, 2007, James announced he would not seek re-election to his State Senate seat. In 2013, Sharpe advised the election campaign of his son John Sharpe James, who won a seat on the Municipal Council of Newark. Sharpe also endorsed Cory A. Booker, a former foe he had defeated in the 2002 Newark mayoral race, in the special election for U.S. Senator to replace the late Frank Lautenberg.
Fraud conviction
On April 16, 2008, Sharpe James was convicted on five counts of fraud by a federal jury for conspiring to rig the sale of nine city lots to his mistress, who quickly resold them for hundreds of thousands of dollars in profit. James served his two-year prison sentence in a federal prison camp in Petersburg, Virginia. James's co-defendant and former girlfriend, Tamika Riley, was also found guilty on those five counts and eight others, including tax evasion. After 18 months in prison, James was released on April 6, 2010. While in prison, he wrote a 17-chapter book titled Political Prisoner. James appealed his convictions and in September 2010, one of the five convictions was overturned. The four remaining convictions were left unchanged. He further appealed seeking to overturn the convictions due to a juror being dishonest, this appeal was dismissed in 2013.