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Meanwhile, a group of African-American leaders, including the Rev. Jesse Jackson, decided that their best hope of electing a black mayor was to convince all but one of the major black candidates to drop out of the race. Both U.S. Rep. Danny Davis and State Sen. James Meeks, the pastor of a megachurch on Chicago's South Side, ended their candidacies and threw their support behind Braun. The city's first black mayor was Harold Washington, who was elected in 1983. The first woman mayor was Jane Byrne, elected in 1979. The black consensus effort marked a return to the spotlight for Braun, who last won election in 1992 when she became the first African-American woman to win a U.S. Senate seat. She had largely been out of the spotlight since she announced a longshot bid for the Democratic nomination for president in 2004. But Braun made headlines when, after rival Patricia Van Pelt-Watkins wondered aloud at a debate about Braun's absence from public life, Braun shot back that the reason Van Pelt-Watkins didn't know what she'd been up to was that she had been "strung out on crack." Van Pelt-Watkins said afterward she'd had a drug problem years ago, but denied ever using crack, and Braun later apologized. But she has often shown sharp elbows during the campaign in exchanges with Emanuel and even calling a local newspaper columnist. Some polls had her stuck in single digits or the teens while Emanuel scored well above 40 percent. The other two main candidates, Chico and del Valle, have throughout the campaign struggled to get media attention, in large part because the fight over Emanuel's residency took center stage. A sixth candidate, William "Dock" Walls, is also running.
Patrick Johnson, a 41-year-old carpenter, said he is voting for Emanuel, in part because he did not hear enough from the other candidates. "There was an inability to promote themselves," he said. Another voter, Lucinda Williams, said she too is voting for Emanuel -- in large part because he knows Obama. "I mean, he's the president," she said. Others said they weren't impressed by what they heard during the campaign, particularly Braun's remarks about Van Pelt-Watkins. "That drove people toward Emanuel," said Randolph Wells, a 46-year-old employee with United Airlines who lives on the city's Southwest Side. He said he was voting for Emanuel because he thinks the former White House chief of staff is best equipped to fix what ails the city: "All that mudslinging, that split-splat."
[Associated
Press;
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