Seattle City Council races: It's the biography, stupid!
With lots of big controversies out there, this season's campaigns are light on issues. Instead, it's all life stories, all the time. What gives?
Remember The Great Viaduct Debate? Earlier this year the city and region were consumed with the future of the elevated waterfront freeway. The debate was heated and involved big questions about capacity, car emissions, transit alternatives, livability. It was a momentous discussion about what kind of city we want to be and how we want to plan our future.
On the City Council campaign trail this season, what you hear about the Alaskan Way Viaduct is – almost nothing. Oh sure, the candidates all have positions on what should be done to replace the old, earthquake-vulnerable structure, mostly supporting a surface-transit option. With the exception of longshot Judy Fenton, who favors a retrofit, the candidates bring up the waterfront transportation issue only when asked. It's never in their stump speeches.
What a difference a few months makes.
But it's not just the Viaduct. One might argue that general issue fatigue has set in. Many of the big issues facing our city and region are mostly ignored in this year's City Council races. Instead, everyone wants to talk about their life stories. Call it the A&E Biography campaign, or, if you like, "It's the biography, stupid!"
For instance, Venus Velazquez spent a lot of time (before her DUI arrest, at least) talking about her "decisiveness" and how proud she is of sometimes ruffling feathers and what a good mother she is. Her opponent, Bruce Harrell, has spent just as much time talking about his approach to civic issues and what a great dad he is. He says he's "collaborative," clearly an attempt to create a contrast.
David Della says he's shown "leadership" on the council, without really talking about how he would put that to use in a second term, instead dwelling on his past roots in the community. Tim Burgess says, as often as he can, that he would be the real leader going forward. But then he goes on to talk about all the jobs he has had in the past that "uniquely" qualify him for office.
In sum, it's a City Council campaign season that is unusually heavy on style and feather-light on policy.
"Seattle has always been a resume town, but I would have hoped that candidates would have come out with agendas for solutions," says former council President Sue Donaldson. She has given money to Jean Godden (who is challenged by Joe Szwaja) and Sally Clark (the incumbent Fenton is challenging) but is neutral on the other races.
Indeed, I don't recall ever hearing the phrase "I have a plan" from any of the nine candidates – something more than just a position on an issue, such as a memorable comprehensive proposal or a big area they want to stake out as their own if elected. Instead, the candidates seem more comfortable talking about small things and spending money, like renewing the very popular pro-parks levy and adding more police officers. That's about as bold as things get, policy-wise.
There are some big issues and tough decisions out there, such as the looming $22 million shortfall Seattle faces starting in 2009 because of a change in state tax law. One huge issue, generally avoided, is big Proposition 1, the roads-and-transit measure that would have a enormous impact on the city if it passes. The multibillion-dollar package would lay down miles of light rail, grapple with the Mercer Mess, help make a surface solution possible for the Viaduct, and put some big bucks down on a Highway 520 bridge solution. You'd think increasing the sales tax to 9.5 percent, as Proposition 1 would do, might stir up the political embers. But no: It's never a major theme, either pro or con, on the council campaign trail.
Of course, there's always a risk in taking stands or offering up bold plans during campaigns, giving opponents an opening. But avoiding big issues doesn't seem to help candidates avoid big attacks. This being a biography campaign has probably made things more acrimonious, personal, and negative, not less, than would be the case in a more issues-oriented election cycle.
For instance, Velazquez spends a lot of time reminding audiences, pointedly, that her kids go to public schools, implying that she is more connected to everyday people. That forces Harrell (whose own kids go to private schools) to spend time telling people that at least he went to public school in Seattle - his way of implying that Venus didn't grow up here. It's an uncomfortable and unflattering exchange that I've seen a number of times this season.
Burgess and Della have been even more direct in their personal attacks. Della takes every opportunity to point out Burgess's ad agency had as a client a conservative non-profit group, trying to spread doubt on Burgess' values and imply that Burgess is a closet Republican. (City Council races are non-partisan, but having any Republican taint in overwhelmingly Democratic Seattle is usually not an advantage.) Burgess relentlessly pounds away at what he calls Della's failed leadership on all major issues, implying that the incumbent is not up to the job.
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Comments:
Posted Fri, Oct 26, 8:28 a.m. inappropriate
Public school mom says: C.R. -
I love your work but here are a few facts you don't know.
Most moms with kids in public school cannot afford the pleasure of staying out on a school night drinking past the legal limit.
Venus has consistantly put Bruce Harrell on the defensive about the fact that she is a mom with kids in public school.
Both Venus and Bruce live in the same neighborhood but neither have their kids in the local public school. To be fair to both, they want the best school for their kids - just like all parents in Seattle want.
Why isn't anybody in the press talking about the money that is supporting Venus Velazquez for office? "Forward Seattle" a PAC composed of business tycoons and developers is picking up the tab for Venus's campaign.
Forward Seattle donors are tenacious and successful business people who expect a return on their investment and don't take "No" for an answer. It's too late for them to buy a new and better candidate but not too late to try to buy an election. If Venus is elected to the City Council, you can bet Forward Seattle will be calling all the shots for Venus.
We voters want to hear more substance but you moderators and political writers don't take control or responsibility for doing what you're hired to do.
Serious Seattle voters must resort to speaking to the candidates and elected official directly if they want to know important details.
Don't choose the candidate with the quickest response or smartest sounding sound-bite on the campaign trail (like the public school mom with a clever reason for driving while drunk without a license and insurance card).
We want smart people in office who think and take the time to understand issues.
Posted Fri, Oct 26, 8:37 a.m. inappropriate
My Sally Clark Story: A good apple in a rotten barrel?
I met Sally Clark while a transfer student at the UW. Perhaps unwisely I made the decision to focus my older student community activities off campus, but did have a chance to interact with Ms. Clark during her term at the helm of the UW Daily. (Clark was also a former Brewster employee at the Weekly, prior to joining the public sector.)
The first community organization I joined was the effort to form a business improvement area on Capitol Hill. Meeting such modest civic legends as Joe Roegel, Paul Gjefle, Dick Baldwin, and Al Doright was a good thing.
Second was the early Metro/KC regional governance effort, KC2000. I organized a forum on the UW Campus, and Clark printed my op-ed publicizing the effort.
The forum had fading 70's reformer Phyliss Lamphere and rising power broker/Mark Sidran cohort (on the Pine Street finance deal most notably, but also Woodland Zoo) Gerald Johnson, attorney at PGE. FWIW I'd not be surprised if both my, and Clark's, Preston, Gates, Ellis file started at that same time.
Clark went on to work for the former PGE recruited east coast power dyke,
Tina Podlodowski - campaigning against the neighborhood candidate I was somewhat associated with, Pat Strosahl. (My first publishing experience was editing the Vision Seattle Newsletter, 'CityWatch' - including doing an influential survey on the Seattle Commons)
I only ran into Clark once since that first meeting, a chance encounter on Phinney Ridge when she was in the apparently romantic accompaniment of a mutual aquaintance - a former Brock Adams volunteer and Cathy Allen employee. For some reason the aquaintance went off on me. I suppose she had been informed of my then developing reputation - in any case definitely not a stable type.
Clark's potential can't be denied - whether it can be realized or not will say a lot about this City, or at least, what it was.
-Douglas Tooley
Lincoln Hill, Tacoma
Posted Mon, Oct 29, 2:51 p.m. inappropriate
Jean Godden's Ethics: Over the past two weeks, I have been amazed by the fact that no one in the media will report on numerous ethics violations that are being committed by Jean Godden.
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