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In 2020, Kate Gallego ran for re-election. In November 2020, she was returned to office with the highest number of votes ever cast in a mayoral election. Merissa Hamilton, a Libertarian write in candidate, was Gallego's closest opponent. Hamilton received 26.29% of votes. Gallego won the election receiving 60.7% of the votes. [13]
Kate Gallego has endorsed Ruben Gallego, a five-term member of Congress, in the Senate race. After the information was released, the Gallegos continued to blame the unwanted attention on Lake.
The current mayor of Phoenix is Kate Gallego, a Democrat, who won the seat after defeating her former fellow-council member, Daniel Valenzuela in a run-off election in March 2019. [2] In setting city policy and passing rules and regulations, the mayor and city council members each have equal voting power. [1]
Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego and U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego of Arizona's 7th district host a news conference outside Phoenix City Hall to discuss their push to add extreme heat to the Federal Emergency ...
Incumbent Mayor Kate Gallego ran for reelection as the favored candidate and won reelection in a landslide. [1] A runoff would have been held on March 11, 2025, if no candidate received a majority of the vote. [2] The election was held alongside elections to the city council, several city initiatives, and other Arizona elections. [3]
PHOENIX (AP) — Divorce records for Arizona Democratic Senate candidate Ruben Gallego and his ex-wife, Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego, were made public Thursday after an Arizona court unsealed most of the seven-year-old case file. The records offer little insight into the high-profile marriage or the reasons it fell apart.
Less than 24 hours after Arizona’s near-total abortion ban was repealed, Kari Lake challenged Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego, her likely opponent for the state’s US Senate seat, to a debate on ...
The top two candidates from that election, Kate Gallego and Daniel Valenzuela, both fell short of the required 50 percent of the vote, therefore the mayoral race was decided by a final runoff election, which Gallego won. [3] Phoenix councilwoman Thelda Williams served as temporary mayor until Gallego took office. [3]