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The Race For Dallas Mayor: 9 Hopefuls, But No Frontrunner, Headed For May 4 Election

Most Dallas mayor candidates appeared at an election forum March 28, 2019, at the Dallas Scottish Rite Temple in downtown Dallas. Pictured is Dallas school board member Miguel Solis addressing the audience.
Bill Zeeble
/
KERA News
Most Dallas mayor candidates appeared at an election forum March 28, 2019, at the Dallas Scottish Rite Temple in downtown Dallas. Pictured is Dallas school board member Miguel Solis addressing the audience.

Early voting started Monday for the May 4 municipal elections across Texas, and the highest-profile election on local ballots may be the race for Dallas mayor. Term limits mean Mike Rawlings will leave after two four-year terms  leading the city. Meet the nine candidates running to replace him.

» RELATEDHere Are The Issues The Candidates For Dallas Mayor Are Talking About

Dallas native Albert Black, Jr. was the first candidate to launch his campaign – he announced his bid last summer. An African American businessman, he grew up in Frazier Courts public housing.

"No one would think that I would be here," Black said, addressing an audience of voters in the Scottish Right Temple in downtown Dallas on March 28. "My dad was a doorman at the Baker Hotel. No one would think that a person that went through the kind of school chaos I did, with public busing of school, right at the end of my formative years, would be up on this stage."

Black's campaign message: He'll apply the same smarts and hard work that led to his business success to help the city of Dallas succeed. That same "nothing to something" storyline echoed by several of the mayoral candidates.

Dallas Democratic State Representative Eric Johnson – the last to enter this race – thanked his West Dallas first grade teacher for instilling a love of learning. 

"Through the Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas," Johnson said at a differen mayoral forum, at Edna Rowe Elementary Sschool in February. "I was able to get a scholarship to Greenhill School, and that changed my life. I'm here running for mayor because I want to make sure every kid in this city has every opportunity I had to succeed."

» RELATEDHere's The Final List Of The 9 Candidates For Dallas Mayor

Johnson and Black aren't alone. Dallas school board member Miguel Solisoffers his own story.

"I'm the grandson of immigrants that came to this country fleeing the Mexican revolution," Solis said. "Luckily, there was an infrastructure of opportunity, good education, a good house, public transportation that got them where they needed to go. And jobs that paid a fair wage. I want to rebuild that infrastructure of opportunity."

And that's just three of the nine candidates in this wide open race. We've seen elections like this before. In 2007, for example, 11 people ran.

For the past several weeks, this group of nine candidates has been running around to election forums, raising money and meeting prospective voters.

The real fight on May 4 isn't to win the job; it's to make a two-person runoff.

Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University, says it will be next to impossible for any candidate to get a majority of the votes in the first round.

"This is the first mayor's race that I can recall that has eight, 10 people, half of whom could make the runoff. But among the top five or six, it's hard to say which two end up in the runoff," Jillson said.

He points out one sign of the lack of a clear front runner: The Dallas Citizens Council, a powerful group of business leaders, announced it would not endorse a candidate. Jillson says some Citizens Council members, however, have independently backed someone. He figured they would pick builder-developer Mike Ablon.

"But it's not Ablon. It is Eric Johnson. And that is unusual," Jillson said. "The idea behind that endorsement and the money that came with it is fairly unclear." 

» RELATEDCandidates For Dallas Mayor Share Plans To Curb Homelessness

What is clear, says Jillson? Money matters in a race that's had very little public polling. In this year's first quarter, Johnson raised the most: more than $500,000.  Solis came in second, and philanthropist Lynn McBee third, raising nearly $400,000. She heads an educational non-profit and for years had lived in Highland Park before moving to Dallas last summer.

Not far behind in fundraising is Regina Montoya, who collected more than $300,000 in the first quarter. The lawyer has decades of non-profit experience. She served in President Clinton's administration, and has co-chaired the Mayor's Task Force on Poverty.

Whatever the job, Montoya says she has always focused on helping students, especially from low income families.

"Over 90% of our children qualify for free and reduced lunches," Montoya explained during the Scottish Rite Temple forum in March. "We have to create the pre-school programs and those do include quality child care [and] after school programs, because there are many parts of our city that don't have them."

Montoya says she would work closely with the school superintendent to accomplish those goals.

There are three other candidates on the mayoral ballot in Dallas:

Scott Griggs, who currently represents North Oak Cliff on the City Council

Jason Villalba, who lost a Republican primary to keep his State House seat last year

Alyson Kennedy, who ran for president in 2016 – as a member of the Socialist Workers Party

Bill Zeeble has been a full-time reporter at KERA since 1992, covering everything from medicine to the Mavericks and education to environmental issues.