W. W. Herenton

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Willie Herenton

Incumbent
Assumed office 
1991
Preceded by Richard Hackett
Succeeded by Incumbent

Dr. Willie W. Herenton (born April 23, 1940) is the mayor of Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. Herenton is a graduate of Le Moyne-Owen College in south Memphis, and the University of Memphis. His doctorate was earned at Southern Illinois University. He is also a recipient of two honorary doctorates from Rhodes College and Christian Brothers University, both of Memphis. He has four children, the youngest of which was born in late 2004 to a local waitress.

He is the first African-American to be elected mayor of Memphis. He won his first term by defeating incumbent mayor Richard Hackett in 1991 by a mere 146 votes. Prior to serving as mayor, Herenton was the superintendent of Memphis City Schools for twelve years; his doctorate is an earned one in the field of education. In his State of the City address on January 1, 2006, Herenton announced his intention to run for a fifth term in 2007 and refused to debate his challengers during the campaign.

He was elected to his fifth term in office on October 4, 2007 [1], thus making him the first Memphis mayor to be elected to five terms of office. Despite his win, Herenton garnered only 42% of the popular vote on the October 4, 2007 election. Nonetheless, run-offs for Memphis city-wide elections have been banned by court order since 1991, on the premise that the intent of run-offs was to give white candidates an advantage [2]. Indeed, Herenton also scored his initial 1991 victory as well as his 1999 re-election with less than majority support.

In recent times, Herenton has faced mounting criticism from citizens and other observers, who have charged that he has, among the following:

  • Failed to ensure sound fiscal management of the City of Memphis [3]
  • Fraud allegations involving national money for the building of the FedEx Forum [4]
  • Failed to communicate effectively with the City Council [5]
  • Failed to address multiple allegations of improprieties regarding Memphis Light Gas and Water [6]
  • Served as the prime target and catalyst for the City Charter rewrite [7]
  • Angered citizens to the point of becoming a target of a citizen recall effort [8]
  • Done little in response to the significant rise in crime under his leadership, stating that "No mayor in any American city can solve the crime problem."[9]
  • Stated that those who don't like the way he has served as mayor can move out of Memphis.
  • In June 2007, Herenton held a press conference to announce that he was the target of a conspiracy by “rich, white businessmen plotting to derail his re-election by videotaping him having sex with a strip club waitress.”[10]
  • On September 19, 2007, as reported by the Commercial Appeal [11], Mayor Herenton called for a halt to early voting due to "irregularities". The Shelby County Election Commission stated that early voting would continue.
Preceded by
Richard C. Hackett
Mayor of Memphis, Tennessee
1992–
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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