Lesbian mayoral candidates could make history in April

Lesbian mayoral candidates (clockwise from upper left): Lori Lightfoot (Chicago); Satya Rhodes-Conway (Madison, WI); Jolie Justus (Kansas City, MO); and Jane Castor (Tampa). Victory Fund photos.

(Washington, DC) Four lesbian mayoral candidates in top 100 cities are well-positioned to win their races and make LGBTQ history this year – all of them facing a run-off or critical primary election in April. Victories for all four would triple the number of out lesbians ever elected mayor of a top 100 city – from two to six.

It would also nearly double the number of LGBTQ people to have ever been elected mayor of a top 100 city – from six to ten. Victory Fund is investing heavily in its lesbian mayoral candidates this election cycle in an effort to make 2019 the Year of the Lesbian Mayor.

Three mayoral candidates – Lori Lightfoot in Chicago, Satya Rhodes-Conway in Madison, Wisconsin, and Jolie Justus in Kansas City – have elections on April 2. Lightfoot and Rhodes-Conway are in run-offs that will determine the next mayor and Justus is the frontrunner in a crowded primary that will determine the candidates for a general election in June. On April 23, Jane Castor will compete in a run-off that will decide the next mayor of Tampa.

If elected to the nation’s third-largest city, Lightfoot will become the highest-ranking openly LGBTQ mayor in American history – taking the torch from LGBTQ Victory Fund President & CEO Annise Parker, who served as mayor of Houston from 2010 to 2016. Lightfoot will also be the only Black openly lesbian mayor serving anywhere in the country.

If victorious, Rhodes-Conway will become the first openly LGBTQ mayor of Madison, Justus will become the first openly LGBTQ big city mayor in the Heartland, and Castor the first openly LGBTQ big city mayor in the Southeast.

The large number of lesbian mayors poised to make history is especially notable given research shows both women and LGBTQ people need to be asked more times to run for office before they take that leap.

“We are well-positioned to make 2019 the year of the lesbian mayor – potentially tripling the number of lesbians elected major city mayors in just one cycle,” said Mayor Parker. “All four women are on a clear path to victory and together would control city budgets of nearly $10 billion – that’s real responsibility and real power.

“Mayors have a profound influence on the daily lives of their constituents, so it is vital that diverse leaders with unique perspectives and solutions are elected to these positions.”

Currently there are just two openly LGBTQ mayors serving in top 100 cities. Only six openly LGBTQ people have ever been elected mayor of a top 100 city. Those six are:

  • Mayor Sam Adams, Portland (2009 – 2012)
  • Mayor Jenny Durkan, Seattle (2017 – present)
  • Mayor Robert Garcia, Long Beach (2014 – present)
  • Mayor Jim Gray, Lexington (2011 – 2019)
  • Mayor Ed Murray (2014 – 2017)
  • Mayor Annise Parker, Houston (2010 – 2016)

There are 38 openly LGBTQ people currently serving as mayors in cities large and small. Their names are available on LGBTQ Victory Institute’s Out for America elected officials map which you can view here.  

LGBTQ Victory Fund works to change the face and voice of America’s politics and achieve equality for LGBTQ Americans by increasing the number of openly LGBTQ elected officials at all levels of government. For information, visit www.victoryfund.org.

The Gayly – March 27, 2019 @ 1:50 p.m. CDT.