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The San Antonio mayoral election of 2009 was held on May 9, 2009. The incumbent mayor Phil Hardberger was term-limited after serving two terms. The election was won by Julian Castro, who took office on June 1, 2009. The election was officially nonpartisan.
The three main challengers that challenged him in 2009 (Trish DeBerry-Mejia, Diane Cibrian and Sheila McNeil), opted not to seek a re-match, and at the closing of the filing period, faced only four challengers. [1]
Julian Castro, who was elected mayor in the 2009 San Antonio mayoral election, resigned in 2014 to become the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Ivy Taylor was selected by the San Antonio City Council as Castro's successor. Taylor successfully ran for re-election as mayor in the 2015 San Antonio mayoral election.
San Antonio City Council 7th district, 2003 election [2] Party Candidate Votes % ... Trish DeBerry-Mejia 22,031 28.98% Nonpartisan: Diane Cibrian 6,181 8.13%
Castro won the election on May 9, 2009, with 56.23% of the vote, his closest opponent being Trish DeBerry-Mejia. [27] He became the fifth Latino mayor in the history of San Antonio. He was the youngest mayor of a top-50 American city. [ 28 ]
San Antonio (/ ˌ s æ n æ n ˈ t oʊ n i oʊ / SAN an-TOH-nee-oh; Spanish for "Saint Anthony") is a city in the U.S. state of Texas and the most populous city in Greater San Antonio, the third-largest metropolitan area in Texas and the 24th-largest metropolitan area in the United States at 2.6 million people in the 2020 U.S. census. [12]
S. Robert Salaburu; Mario Marcel Salas; Yolanda Saldívar; Benito Fernández de Santa Ana; Robert Santos; Tom Scaperlanda; Marie Charlotte Schaefer; Sheryl Sculley
Mary Drake built the house in 1895 in an area known as Milam Bend. [2] After moving to the area, businessman Van Alvin Petty Sr. (1860–1929) and his wife Mary Cordelia née Dabney (1861–1943) purchased the house in November 1901.