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New Orleans Mayor

NEW ORLEANS — Frustrated by term-limited Mayor Ray Nagin’s leadership of New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina, voters elected Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu to succeed him Saturday, turning to a political scion to speed up the city’s recovery.

Landrieu, 49, became the majority-black city’s first white mayor since 1979, the year his father Moon left the office. The mayor-elect, a moderate Democrat, won in a landslide over a field of 10 opponents in a campaign that concluded as Carnival celebrations and preparations for the New Orleans Saints’ appearance in the Super Bowl took place.

Landrieu’s victory party was a nod to both: the ballroom of a the Roosevelt hotel — recently reopened after a post-Katrina restoration — was festooned with Saints-themed black and gold balloons. A roving brass band played Mardi Gras tunes and he prefaced his victory speech by leading the crowd in the Saints’ “Who Dat” cheer.

RELATED: New Orleans Mayoral Election Tests City’s Racial Divide

“We’re all going together and we’re not leaving anybody behind,” he shouted to a jubilant crowd as family members, including his father and his sister, U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu, stood beside him.

With all of the precincts reporting, Landrieu had 66 percent of the vote.

The campaign also focused on the city’s violent crime and slumping finances. Landrieu, who lost to Nagin in a runoff four years ago, was a welcome change for some voters who grew frustrated with the city’s current mayor. Little known outside New Orleans before Katrina, Nagin became a central, and sometimes controversial figure, in the city’s struggle to recover. Though he won re-election as he courted black voters in the 2006 campaign, Nagin notoriously pledged after the hurricane that New Orleans would be a “chocolate city” again, offending many whites.

RELATED: New Orleans Saints Helped Revive City After Katrina

Polls showed his popularity fell sharply in the years after the storm.

“I certainly don’t want another Ray Nagin — a businessman,” said Charlotte Ford, a 76-year-old semi-retiree and registered Republican who voted for Landrieu. “They balk instead of finding out what works, how the system works.”

Ursula Murphy and her husband, Bill, voted early so they could avoid traffic caused by the parades. Both cast votes for Landrieu. “After eight years of negative, we’re going to see some positive,” Bill Murphy said.

Tags: Elections, New Orleans
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  • http://www.blackplanet.com/soulstar147/ soulstar147

    BAD MOVE!

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/cwm299/ cwm299

    So they replace one corrupt politico with another one, what’s the difference?

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/WestsideCartelAtl85/ WestsideCartelAtl85

    I’m not liking this move. N.O. always been corrupt since way back and this looks like the Great White Hope move politically.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/3Z33_09/ 3Z33_09

    I HOPE HE GETS IN THERE AND CLEAN IT UP!!…SHUT DOWN ALL THEM GHETTOS AND MAKE ALL OF THEM GET A JOB…CLEAN UP ALL THOSE BUMS AND BEGGERS WALKING AROUND THE STREET.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/kaikai7/ kaikai7

    Wasn’t New Orleans a predominantly black city? Hurricane Katrina displaced alot of the original people who inhabited the city and were unable to rebuild!Funny how nothing was done to rebuild the city, beyond people volunteering from the goodness of their own hearts. Now suddenly with a new appointed white mayor the interest in rebuilding is stronger than ever! How long ago was Hurricane Katrina? We have all this money to send over to Haiti on an humanitarian effort, which I am not opposed to at all, but what about New Orleans which is here in the USA? Hopefully this mayor will accomplish something positive in the city and black people who desire to return to the city or remain in New Orleans (for those who stuck it out after Katrina)will not be alienated by this change in city leadership!

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