Daniel Tinney
Daniel Tinney (Republican Party) ran for election for an at-large seat of the Philadelphia City Council in Pennsylvania. Tinney lost in the general election on November 5, 2019.
Biography
Tinney is from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and graduated from Archbishop Ryan High School in 2000. He received a bachelor's degree in business logistics and international business from Pennsylvania State University in 2005. He started working construction in the energy sector in 2010 after several years as a financial advisor. He became a Republican Committeeman of the 45th Division in the 66th Ward in 2014.[1]
Elections
2019
See also: City council elections in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (2019)
General election
General election for Philadelphia City Council At-large (7 seats)
The following candidates ran in the general election for Philadelphia City Council At-large on November 5, 2019.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Helen Gym (D) | 15.4 | 205,661 | |
✔ | Isaiah Thomas (D) | 14.7 | 196,733 | |
✔ | Derek Green (D) | 14.2 | 189,819 | |
✔ | Katherine Richardson (D) | 14.2 | 189,813 | |
✔ | Allan Domb (D) | 13.9 | 186,665 | |
✔ | Kendra Brooks (Working Families Party) | 4.5 | 60,256 | |
✔ | David Oh (R) | 4.0 | 53,742 | |
Al Taubenberger (R) | 3.6 | 47,547 | ||
Nicolas O'Rourke (Working Families Party) | 3.5 | 46,560 | ||
Daniel Tinney (R) | 3.5 | 46,270 | ||
Bill Heeney (R) | 3.2 | 43,249 | ||
Matt Wolfe (R) | 3.1 | 41,341 | ||
Sherrie Cohen (A Better Council Party) | 0.7 | 9,116 | ||
Joe Cox (Independent) | 0.7 | 8,880 | ||
Maj Toure (L) | 0.5 | 6,179 | ||
Steve Cherniavsky (Term Limits Philadelphia Party) | 0.3 | 3,480 | ||
Clarc King (Independent) | 0.2 | 2,959 | ||
Other/Write-in votes | 0.1 | 745 |
Total votes: 1,339,015 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
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Democratic primary election
Democratic primary for Philadelphia City Council At-large (7 seats)
The following candidates ran in the Democratic primary for Philadelphia City Council At-large on May 21, 2019.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Helen Gym | 15.6 | 107,153 | |
✔ | Allan Domb | 9.8 | 67,193 | |
✔ | Isaiah Thomas | 9.2 | 63,295 | |
✔ | Derek Green | 8.9 | 61,070 | |
✔ | Katherine Richardson | 6.6 | 45,470 | |
Justin DiBerardinis | 6.2 | 42,643 | ||
Adrian Reyes | 5.2 | 35,565 | ||
Eryn Santamoor | 5.1 | 35,026 | ||
Erika Almiron | 5.0 | 34,329 | ||
Deja Alvarez | 3.9 | 26,617 | ||
Sandra Glenn | 2.6 | 18,105 | ||
Willie Singletary | 2.6 | 17,858 | ||
Ethelind Baylor | 2.1 | 14,259 | ||
Beth Finn | 2.0 | 14,015 | ||
Ogbonna Hagins | 1.8 | 12,570 | ||
Fernando Trevino | 1.7 | 11,400 | ||
Fareed Abdullah | 1.6 | 10,676 | ||
Asa Khalif | 1.4 | 9,779 | ||
Billy Thompson | 1.3 | 8,976 | ||
Latrice Bryant | 1.3 | 8,966 | ||
Joseph Diorio | 1.1 | 7,803 | ||
Hena Veit | 0.8 | 5,405 | ||
Edwin Santana | 0.8 | 5,154 | ||
Wayne Allen | 0.7 | 4,941 | ||
Vinny Blackwell | 0.7 | 4,516 | ||
Mark Ross | 0.6 | 4,255 | ||
Bobbie Curry | 0.6 | 3,920 | ||
Devon Cade | 0.4 | 2,854 | ||
Wayne Dorsey | 0.4 | 2,780 | ||
Sherrie Cohen | 0.0 | 44 |
Total votes: 686,637 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
- Melissa Robbins (D)
- Mike Stack (D)
- Janice Tangradi (D)
- David Conroy (D)
Republican primary election
Republican primary for Philadelphia City Council At-large (7 seats)
The following candidates ran in the Republican primary for Philadelphia City Council At-large on May 21, 2019.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Daniel Tinney | 21.0 | 13,611 | |
✔ | Al Taubenberger | 19.4 | 12,542 | |
✔ | Matt Wolfe | 19.1 | 12,362 | |
✔ | Bill Heeney | 18.5 | 11,976 | |
✔ | David Oh | 10.0 | 6,477 | |
Drew Murray | 6.1 | 3,935 | ||
Irina Goldstein | 5.9 | 3,790 |
Total votes: 64,693 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
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2015
The city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, held elections for mayor and city council on November 3, 2015. A primary election took place on May 19, 2015. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was March 10, 2015. There were seven at-large seats up for election, one of which was vacant at the time of the election. Two at-large seats on the Philadelphia City Council are reserved for members of the minority party. In the Democratic at-large primary, Derek Green, Allan Domb, Helen Gym and incumbents Blondell Reynolds Brown and William Greenlee advanced past incumbents Edward Neilson and W. Wilson Goode, Jr. and Jenne Baccar Ayers, Wilson Alexander, Thomas Wyatt, Carla Cain, Lillian Ford, Paul Steinke, Barbara Capozzi, Marnie Aument Loughery, Sherrie Cohen, Billy Ivery, Frank Rizzo and Isaiah Thomas. In the Republican at-large primary, incumbents David Oh and Dennis M. O’Brien and Terrence Tracy Jr., Daniel Tinney and Al Taubenberger advanced past James Williams and Matt Wolfe. Green Party candidate Kristin Combs, Independent candidate Sheila Armstrong, Philadelphia Party candidate Andrew Stober and Socialist Workers Party candidate John Staggs also ran in the general election. Gym, Green, Domb, Brown, Greenlee, Oh and Taubenberger won election to the at-large seats.[2][3]
Philadelphia City Council At-large, General election, 2015 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Vote % | Votes | |
Democratic | Helen Gym | 15.9% | 145,087 | |
Democratic | Derek Green | 15.8% | 144,337 | |
Democratic | Allan Domb | 15.7% | 143,265 | |
Democratic | Blondell Reynolds Brown Incumbent | 15.5% | 141,368 | |
Democratic | William Greenlee Incumbent | 15.1% | 137,315 | |
Republican | David Oh Incumbent | 3.8% | 34,887 | |
Republican | Al Taubenberger | 3.8% | 34,711 | |
Republican | Dennis M. O’Brien Incumbent | 3.8% | 34,324 | |
Republican | Daniel Tinney | 3.5% | 31,863 | |
Republican | Terrence Tracy Jr. | 3.1% | 28,050 | |
Philadelphia | Andrew Stober | 1.8% | 16,301 | |
Green | Kristin Combs | 1.2% | 11,366 | |
Independent | Sheila Armstrong | 0.6% | 5,466 | |
Socialist Workers | John Staggs | 0.3% | 3,028 | |
Write-in votes | 0.01% | 105 | ||
Total Votes | 911,473 | |||
Source: City of Philadelphia, "Official general election results," accessed November 23, 2015 |
Philadelphia City Council, At-large Democratic Primary, 2015 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Vote % | Votes | ||
Derek Green | 10.6% | 68,505 | ||
Blondell Reynolds Brown Incumbent | 9.8% | 62,922 | ||
Allan Domb | 9% | 57,691 | ||
William Greenlee Incumbent | 7.9% | 50,849 | ||
Helen Gym | 7.7% | 49,270 | ||
Isaiah Thomas | 7.5% | 48,000 | ||
W. Wilson Goode, Jr. Incumbent | 7.2% | 46,555 | ||
Sherrie Cohen | 7.1% | 45,847 | ||
Edward Neilson Incumbent | 6.3% | 40,786 | ||
Paul Steinke | 5.8% | 37,104 | ||
Jenne Baccar Ayers | 5.1% | 32,637 | ||
Thomas Wyatt | 4.7% | 30,310 | ||
Frank Rizzo | 4.1% | 26,260 | ||
Wilson Alexander | 3% | 19,210 | ||
Carla Cain | 2.7% | 17,115 | ||
Marnie Aument Loughery | 1.7% | 10,890 | ||
Write-in | 0% | 87 | ||
Total Votes | 644,038 | |||
Source: Philadelphia City Commissioners, "Historical Election Results," accessed August 24, 2015 |
Philadelphia City Council, At-large Republican Primary, 2015 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Vote % | Votes | ||
David Oh Incumbent | 18% | 8,960 | ||
Dennis M. O’Brien Incumbent | 16.2% | 8,038 | ||
Terrence Tracy Jr. | 15.7% | 7,801 | ||
Daniel Tinney | 15.1% | 7,528 | ||
Al Taubenberger | 13.2% | 6,587 | ||
Matt Wolfe | 11.7% | 5,800 | ||
James Williams | 10% | 4,979 | ||
Write-in | 0.1% | 32 | ||
Total Votes | 49,725 | |||
Source: Philadelphia City Commissioners, "Historical Election Results," accessed August 24, 2015 |
Campaign themes
2019
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Daniel Tinney did not complete Ballotpedia's 2019 Candidate Connection survey.
2015
Tinney's website highlighted the following campaign themes:[4]
Job creation
- Excerpt: "Establish Neighborhood Business Incubators for Small Business Start-Ups, Partnering with Businesses, Chamber of Commerce, Non-Profits and Universities."
Safety
- Excerpt: "Continue to Provide the Police Department with Upgrades Such as Body Cameras for All Officers. Enhance Block Watch Programs with More Interaction With the Police Department."
Fiscal responsibility
- Excerpt: "Coordinate with Local and County Governments to Establish More Collective Purchasing Agreements to Save Hard-Earned Taxpayer Dollars on Essential Government Purchases. Target Ways to Reduce Future Cost of Government to Avoid any Tax Increases."
Infrastructure
- Excerpt: "Encourage Re-Training Programs for Construction Workers to Keep up with the Latest Technology. Procure Further Funding from Harrisburg for Road and Bridge Repairs. Enhance Pothole Patrols During Off-Peak Hours. Retrofit all Traffic Lights and Traffic Signals With LED Lights. Promote Green Energy Technologies During Re-Modeling of Buildings."
Quality of life
- Excerpt: "Crack Down on Nuisance Crimes by Supporting Funding for CLIP (Community Life Improvement Program). Expand Corporate and Non-Profit Partnerships to Build More Playgrounds, Parks, and Recreational Facilities."
Personal
Note: Please contact us if the personal information below requires an update.
Tinney lives in the far Northeast neighborhood of Philadelphia. He is a member of Our Lady of Calvary Catholic Church.[1]
See also
2019 Elections
External links
- Office of the Philadelphia City Commissioners - 2015 Primary Election Candidates
- Official campaign website
- Daniel Tinney on Facebook
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Dan Tinney campaign website, "About Dan," accessed August 25, 2015
- ↑ Philadelphia City Commissioners, "Historical Election Results," accessed August 24, 2015
- ↑ Office of the Philadelphia City Commissioners, "Comprehensive Election Calendar," accessed November 17, 2014
- ↑ Dan Tinney campaign website, "Dan's Plan," accessed August 25, 2015
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