Local media called the election for Reed, who overwhelmingly defeated television station owner David Woods by more than 16,000 votes."Let the record show tonight, above all … what we can do when we come together in this city and we build around positivity, around opportunity, and all the things that tie us together versus those things that keep us apart," Reed told supporters at a rally turned victory party.Reed's message was one of unity."Tonight isn't the end, tonight is the beginning," he said. "Tonight sent a signal, not just to all of us here in Montgomery, all of us in Alabama, it sent a signal throughout this country about what kind of community we are right now, not what we were."The vote count, according to the Montgomery County Election Center, with 98% of precincts reporting, was:• Reed: 32,918 votes; 67.3%• Woods: 16,010 votes; 32.7%In his concession speech, Woods said he would work to support Reed and to bring Montgomery together as a united city, according to the Montgomery Advertiser.Reed and Woods received the most votes in August in the city's 12-person primary, leading to Tuesday's run-off. Reed got 42% of the vote, while Woods earned about 25%, CNN affiliate WSFA reported. "We ran a very good race. We worked hard, met with a lot of people, and it just worked out that our opponent had more votes than we did," Woods told WSFA. Sixty percent of Montgomery's roughly 200,000 residents are black or African-American, according to the US Census.Longtime resident Diana Stokes Williams told CNN outside a polling station she had marched during the civil rights movement, been through segregation and was "very aware of the prejudice that has existed in her community.""Coming from Montgomery … where there's been a lot, Alabama's been full of lot of prejudice , and to go from (former Alabama Gov.) George Wallace to Reed would be a major step."Williams said she voted in every election and it is important to have someone who looks like Reed represent the community.She said as a black man, Reed has a greater perspective on life in Montgomery and can see both sides. She added that she hoped Reed would represent all races.Alabama's second-largest city and its capital, Montgomery was also the first capital of the Confederacy early in the Civil War, and many streets and schools still bear Confederate names. Montgomery later became the site of Rosa Parks' famed bus boycott in 1955 and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s Dexter Avenue Baptist church, as well as the destination of the Read More – Source
Montgomery, Alabama, elects its first black mayor
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