Election results: Gina Ortiz Jones wins race for San Antonio mayor

Jones bested her runoff competitor, Rolando Pablos, and will lead the Alamo City for the next four years.

SAN ANTONIO — Gina Ortiz Jones declared victory and her opponent, Rolando Pablos, congratulated her on the win as a prolonged San Antonio mayoral race reached the finish line on Saturday night. 

Shortly after, San Antonio’s remaining vote centers reported their results, padding her historic victory. She finished with 54.3% to her opponent’s 45.7%, and will be sworn in as Mayor Ron Nirenberg’s successor on June 18. 

Jones in the process becomes the city’s first out LGBTQ+ mayor and the first to win the office without City Council experience since Phil Hardberger in 2005. More than 12,000 votes separated her from Pablos in the final tally. 

Nirenberg will leave office after serving eight years, the most allowed under the City Charter. But Jones will be the first Alamo City mayor to serve a four-year term, following voter-approved changes to the City Charter last fall. 

“As we move forward as a community, I am very thankful for the opportunity to serve with everybody in mind,” Jones said at her watch party, to applause from supporters. “We reminded folks what San Antonio stands for. We reminded them that our city leads with compassion.”

The Democratic National Committee said Jones’ win overcame “massive amounts of right-wing dark money,” adding she will “move San Antonio forward.”

Pablos, speaking from his watch party at Drury Inn, acknowledged the contest was “very tough.”

“San Antonio continues to be a blue city,” he said. “(The race) became highly partisan, and today it showed.” 

Jones’ lead grew over the course of the evening after she jumped out to an early lead with 52.3% of the early votes. More than 142,000 ballots were counted in the mayoral race. 

The final result nearly mirrored Nirenberg’s first mayoral win in 2017, when he collected 54.6% of the vote. At latest check, just under 17% of San Antonio’s 841,653 registered voters made it to the polls.

The initially close race reflected just how intensely partisan the technically non-partisan race has become since the May 3 election in which they beat out 25 other candidates, including four sitting City Council members. 

One expert, Jon Taylor, a UTSA political science professor, said he anticipated the race to be “relatively close” between the two candidates.  

“Whoever wins, it’s gonna be a historical election,” Taylor told KENS 5 leading up to Election Day. “The narrative will be much different: San Antonio elects a progressive woman as mayor versus a conservative Republican who’s elected who might be emblematic of a new trend of blue cities electing more conservative mayors.”

Whoever wins will be sworn in on June 18, along with four City Council members. 

About the mayoral contest

Pablos entered the race in August and Jones joined a couple months later in December. They ended up being the top two vote-getters in the jam-packed May 3 election. 

With the pair headlining June’s runoff, the race has taken on a partisan scope. 

Jones, a former U.S. Air Force under secretary who served under then-President Joe Biden, has blasted Gov. Greg Abbott’s school voucher initiative and criticized local ICE operations in rounding up undocumented migrants. She’s won the endorsements of more progressive members of City Council, including Jalen McKee-Rodriguez and Phyllis Viagran. Jones has cited expanding free Pre-K services and protecting public education among her priorities, and has expressed concerns about transparency regarding Project Marvel, the city’s multibillion-dollar plan to revitalize downtown. 

Pablos served as Texas secretary of state for two years under Abbott and has been staunch in his support for law enforcement and smart budgeting. He’s secured endorsements from Marc Whyte, the most conservative member of the current City Council makeup, as well as San Antonio’s police union. His campaign’s focus points: tackling poverty, infrastructure and smart spending.  

Jones will be expected to get up to speed quickly before diving into annual budget discussions. In the long term, she will help carve the city’s future as it relates to growth, Project Marvel, 2027 bond priorities, and issues like poverty and lack of affordable housing. 

See all runoff election results here.

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