Harold Washington Party

The Harold Washington Party was founded in Chicago in the late 1980s to represent the interests of the city's African-American population who felt disenchanted with the mainline Democratic Party. The party was named for Chicago's first black mayor, Harold Washington, who died before the party was created. It nominated candidates for mayor and several other offices in Cook County, with mayoral nominee Timothy C. Evans receiving 41% of the vote in 1989. In 1990, a court decision denied Harold Washington Party nominees ballot access, which was reported a boon to the Democratic Party slate.[1] Later, most of these officially became nonpartisan in the mid 1990s.

Harold Washington
Line graph of the vote share of the party's candidates in Chicago mayoral elections

References

  1. Mount, Charles; Thomas Hardy (September 21, 1990). "Judge Drops Harold Washington Party From Ballot". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
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