2011 Portland, Maine, mayoral election

2011 Portland, Maine, mayoral election

November 8, 2011 2015 →
 
Candidate Michael F. Brennan Ethan Strimling Nicholas Mavodones
Party Nonpartisan Nonpartisan Nonpartisan
First round vote 5,211 4,392 2,931
First round percentage 25.5% 22.3% 14.9%
Final round vote 8,971 7,138 eliminated
Final round percentage 55.7% 44.3% eliminated

 
Candidate David Marshall Jed Rathband
Party Nonpartisan Nonpartisan
First round vote 1,506 1,393
First round percentage 7.6% 7.0%
Final round vote eliminated eliminated
Final round percentage eliminated eliminated

Mayor before election

Nicholas Mavodones

Elected mayor

Michael F. Brennan

Portland, Maine, held an election for mayor on November 8, 2011.

In November 2010, Portland voters approved a citywide referendum changing the city charter to recreate an elected mayor position that had previously been removed in 1923.[1] From 1923 until 2011, city councilors chose one of themselves each year to serve as mayor, a primarily ceremonial position. On November 8, 2011, former State Senator and candidate for U.S. Congress Michael F. Brennan was elected. On December 5, 2011, he was sworn in as the first citizen-elected mayor in 88 years.

The new citizen-elected mayor serves full-time in the position for a four-year term, exercises the powers and duties enumerated in Article II Section 5 of the Portland City Charter,[2] be elected using instant-runoff voting,[3] and, like the rest of municipal government in Portland, be officially non-partisan.[4]

  1. ^ Maine Voices | Why Portland doesn't have an elected mayor by Abraham Peck, Portland Press Herald, September 27, 2010
  2. ^ Portland City Charter Archived 2011-09-08 at the Wayback Machine SEE: Article II Section 5. Mayor’s powers and duties.
  3. ^ Ranked Choice Voting City of Portland, Maine
  4. ^ Portland, Maine, to get popularly elected mayor Boston Globe, November 4, 2010