Hammons declared his candidacy for mayor of Muskogee on January 29 and filed for office on February 5. By the end of the filing date, Hammons was one of six candidates vying to be mayor, including a former Muskogee mayor and a former city councilor. On election night on April 1, Hammons won the popular vote by coming in first place with 42% of the vote. Herschel McBride came in second place with 38% of the vote. The remaining 20% was divided among the four other candidates. With the general election failing to deliver a candidate with an absolute majority, the Muskogee City Charter required Hammons and McBride to face one another in a runoff election to determine who would serve as mayor. Vote tallies showed Hammons carried the east side of Muskogee while McBride carried the west side. At the May 13 runoff election, Hammons had captured 70% of the vote, winning the largest popular vote total of any candidate in Muskogee history and the largest margin of victory in
Muskogee County history. The election was the largest shakeup in the city government since 1952. On May 19, 2008, Hammons was sworn in as 47th (and youngest) Mayor of the City of Muskogee. At a
press conference held on November 30, 2009, at the
Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame, Hammons announced that he would seek a second term as mayor of Muskogee. Hammons drew three opponents: local businessman and cousin of sitting US Senator
Tom Coburn Bob Coburn, local travel agent Chris James, and local volunteer Teresa Garris. On election day, April 6, 2010, Hammons handily won reelection to a second two-year term, receiving just over 51% of the vote in the four-way race, defeating his nearest opponent by 20 percentage points. In the election, Hammons carried 17 of the city's 18
voting precincts. On November 3, 2011, Hammons announced his plans to step down at the end of his second term, having decided to attend the
University of Oklahoma College of Law rather than seek a third term in office. As one of his last acts, Hammons changed Muskogee's decades-old electoral system from one in which all City Council members are elected by the city
at-large to one in which each member is elected only by the voters in the
electoral district they represent. In his
farewell address in February 2012, Hammons, calling Muskogee a "shining city on the hill", listed enacting permanent funding for economic development, road improvements, and tourism promotion as his top achievements while in office. Councilman Bob Coburn, Hammons' 2010 challenger, was elected to succeed him in office. ==Election history==