Candidates •
William M. Bennett, former State Senator from
Lower Manhattan and candidate for Governor in 1916 (Republican) •
Morris Hillquit, candidate for U.S. Representative in 1906 and 1908 (Socialist) •
John Francis Hylan, Brooklyn judge (Democratic) •
John Purroy Mitchel, incumbent mayor since 1914 (Fusion)
Campaign favored Hillquit and Hylan. The caption read, "
Crown Prince: 'Any more victories, Papa?' - Kaiser: 'I can't tell until Tuesday.'" The Fall 1917 election, which
The New York Times called a "puzzle without parallel", would have been exciting even had it occurred in peacetime. Hylan's position on the war was unclear; he focused instead on criticisms of the administration's support for private transit corporations. In the final weeks, the Fusion campaign focused its attacks on Hillquit. Mayor Mitchel hinted at Hillquit's foreign birth by saying that "any man who will not buy a Liberty bond when he can afford them is not fit to be a citizen of the United States", and former President
Theodore Roosevelt declared that Hillquit "stands as an aid to the Prussianized autocracy of the
Hohenzollerns."
Results As of , this is the highest percentage of the vote the Socialist Party has received in a mayoral election; the party also elected ten State Assemblymen, seven city Aldermen, and a municipal court judge.
Results by borough Hylan won every borough, though he carried a majority only in
Queens and
Staten Island. Mayor Mitchel ran second in every borough but
the Bronx, where Hillquit pushed Mitchel into third place; he came within two hundred votes of doing the same in Queens. Bennett came in fourth in each borough except
Staten Island, where he finished third ahead of Hillquit.
[Others and Total from The Encyclopedia of New York City
(Yale, 1995), which does not exactly match the other numbers, taken from The World Almanac
for 1929 & 1943.] == Aftermath ==