In the mayor's race, incumbent
Democrat Richardson Dilworth ran for reelection against
Republican Harold Stassen. After service in
World War I and a law degree from
Yale, Dilworth practiced law in Philadelphia. He and
Joseph S. Clark Jr., were allies in the anti-corruption reform effort that had swept the city
eight years earlier in coalition with the Democratic political organization. Dilworth had run for mayor unsuccessfully
in 1947, with Clark as his campaign manager. In 1949, he was elected City Treasurer. He resigned that post to run for governor in 1950, but was defeated by Republican
John S. Fine. Democratic party leaders had intended Dilworth to be their candidate for mayor again
in 1951, but when Clark announced his candidacy, Dilworth agreed to run for district attorney instead, and won.
In 1955, Dilworth got his shot at the mayor's office when Clark instead ran for the Senate; he was elected with 59% of the vote. Four years later, he was renominated without opposition. The Republicans nominated
Harold Stassen. In 1938, Stassen was elected Governor of Minnesota at the age of thirty-one. He became known as an efficient, honest, and moderately
liberal governor, and was reelected in 1940 and 1942. Stassen resigned as governor shortly after his 1942 reelection to serve in
World War II. He made an unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination for president
in 1948; later that year, he was appointed president of the
University of Pennsylvania. After four years, he left that position to work in the
Dwight D. Eisenhower administration as a special assistant for nuclear disarmament efforts. In 1958, he sought the nomination for Governor of Pennsylvania, but was unsuccessful. As the 1959 election approached, Republican City Committee leaders
Wilbur H. Hamilton and
Austin Meehan backed Stassen for their party's nomination. Triumphing over token opposition in the May primary, Stassen pledged to cut taxes and promised to run a "fusion campaign," inviting the support of Democrats dissatisfied with Dilworth's administration. Dilworth called for more spending, especially on streets, highways, and public housing, and admitted that increased taxation was likely the price of those improvements. As in 1955, the result was a landslide for Dilworth. Dilworth called the victory "greater than we had anticipated" and said the scale of the landslide "puts us on a spot. We really have to deliver during the next four years." Stassen said he would return to his law practice and promised to continue to build the Republican Party in Philadelphia. Dilworth secured nearly two-thirds of the vote and fifty-eight out of fifty-nine wards, continuing a trend of Democratic dominance in the city's politics. ==City Council==