San Antonio City Council and mayoral appointment Taylor was elected to
San Antonio City Council in 2009 to represent District 2 on the east side of the city, and was re-elected to the body in 2011 and 2013. Taylor was appointed as mayor by the San Antonio City Council to serve in the interim following
Julian Castro's departure to serve as the
United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development during the
presidency of Barack Obama. Castro was named in May 2014 to the Obama Cabinet and therefore was obligated to vacate his position as mayor. The charter of the City of San Antonio requires that in the event of a mayoral vacancy, the replacement mayor must be elected by and from the other ten members of the council with a majority of six votes. On July 22, 2014, the members of the San Antonio City Council held a special election to fill the vacant position. After Taylor and fellow councilman Ray Lopez split the vote 5–3 in favor of Taylor, Lopez withdrew from consideration, and Taylor was elected with a 9–0 vote. Once Taylor was elected, Castro immediately resigned as mayor.
2015 San Antonio mayoral race Taylor had initially said that she would not run for mayor when her interim term expired in 2015; In the
San Antonio mayoral election held on May 9, 2015, no candidate received a majority of the vote. A
runoff election was held on June 13 between Taylor and her remaining rival,
Leticia Van de Putte, a
liberal Democratic former member of the
Texas Senate and the
Texas House of Representatives. Though Van de Putte narrowly led the field in the first round of balloting, Taylor went on to win, 51.7%–48.3%, and hence retain her position as mayor for a full two-year term.
2017 San Antonio mayoral race On November 13, 2016, Taylor officially announced her intention to run for a second full term as mayor. Elections were held May 6, 2017. She advanced to a runoff on June 10, 2017, where she was defeated by city councilman
Ron Nirenberg. ==Tenure==