Snores of a summer political season
Our summertime primary has crisped Mossback's brain, making him strangely reliant on media endorsements
Mallahan campaign
The group Friends of Seattle has released its endorsements for the upcoming primary.
FOS is a fairly new, quite green group. I wonder why greens always rally around "friendship." Wouldn't a group that really cared about Seattle want to be more than friends? Friends with benefits at least? And is friendship really what our relationship with the planet is all about (Friends of the Earth, 1,000 Friends of Washington, eco-friendly)? It seems to me Seattle needs some tough love, a roll in the hay, maybe a long-term relationship with significant others, but it seems to have an overabundance of "friends." Besides, in the Facebook era, the definition of friend is "someone you barely knew in high school."
But I digress. Forgive me, it's the heat. Mossback has been crisping in the record temps and dry spell. A swallow of politically incorrect bottled water, and I'll continue.
Kudos to FOS for taking politics seriously during a Seattle summer. This time, we've got our second August primary (the 18th), an idea that rates right up there with the notion of getting teenagers to class by 8 am. What teenager's brain is working at 8 am? What true Seattleite gives a rat's ass about politics before Labor Day? Our annual share of sunshine is so meagre that you cannot blame people for tuning out.
My sympathies go out to the editorial boards and committees given the responsibility of making endorsements for an August primary. Imagine the stamina of get-a-lifers at the Municipal League trying to decide between "good" and "very good" while everyone else gets a tan.
I remember from my days at Seattle Weekly how miserable summers were were: a virtual Bataan Death March of "special" issues: "Summer Guide," "Best of Seattle," "Bumbershoot," "Fall Arts," maybe even "Fashion." Meanwhile, we had to interview all the candidates for fall endorsements, and we covered political stories even as many readers hit the snooze button on local politics until summer was over. The last big summer political story in Seattle was Strippergate in 2003. It was about zoning but it had the virtue of being about naked people!
Now, the dwindling corps of editors must do all the candidates interviews earlier. Dominic Holden at The Stranger has been scrambling to get it all together. That paper's primary endorsement "cheat sheet" is already on Slog, with Mike McGinn getting the mayoral nod and Dow Constantine the choice for County Executive. Holden was filling in for the recently departed news editor Erica Barnett. Barnett is now at Publicola with fellow Stranger alums Josh Feit and Sandeep Kaushik, and their endorsements are being rolled out as we speak. Publicola has been criticized for having contributors who are also working for various candidates. I don't have a problem with that. But many former Stranger writers and editors have complained of having their copy and agendas hijacked by the heavy editorial hand of Dan Savage. Now that the Publicolans are free of such editorial tyranny (and what is any editor but a tyrant?), it will be interesting to see if their endorsements reflect new-found independence. Contrast and compare: not much difference except the Savage crew go for Dow Constantine and the Feit team go for Ross Hunter for County Executive.
The Seattle Times has been busy with umpteen candidate interviews, and my sometime seat mate on KUOW, Joni Balter, has the appearance of someone who's interviewed one too many city council hopefuls. The Timeshas already issued its mayoral endorsements, wanly favoring Greg Nickels and Joe Mallahan (they pick two in a primary since two people will advance).
Seattlepi.com and Seattle Weekly are no longer in the endorsement business, lucky them. Such things are time-consuming and looked down upon by the Weekly's current overlords, and the P-I-as-website doesn't seem to have the staff power to endorse. The new edition of Best Of Seattle features lingerie football models and is more in keeping with the summer spirit. Perhaps you can enjoy the pictures while listening to a podcast of Weekday's July 31 hard-hitting segment during which Steve Scher got to taste many flavors of locally crafted ice cream.
Crosscut is not making endorsements, which our non-profit status forbids, but we have however been meeting for on-the-record lunches with some candidates (e.g. Jordan Royer, Nick Licata, Mike McGinn, Mike O'Brien, Jan Drago, Ross Hunter, Fred Jarett, Sally Bagshaw, Dow Constantine, Joe Mallahan...). There's no attempt, thank goodness, at being completely thorough; some folks have refused to come by (Greg Nickels) or they have yet to appear, but it's been informative. I am leaning toward voting for City Council candidate Jordan Royer because on the hottest day of the century, I thirstily noticed that the "R" on his campaign signs is the Rainier beer "R." In summer, you can tend to make decision like that. One is more sober (literally and figuratively) in September.
Oddly, I am as yet undecided in the mayor's race, beyond knowing that I am not voting for Nickels in the primary. I have an abundance of opinions, but am not sure who is the best candidate to challenge Nickels in the fall (assuming the unpopular Nickels is not "schelled" in August). So I'll be paying attention to endorsements this year not because I'm a political junkie, but because I am an undecided voter.
James Donaldson seems nice and presents himself well, has lots of experience in the community, and he's received the backing of many Sonics heros, from Lenny Wilkens to Gary Payton to Michael Cage. But he seems shallow on the issues and I keep thinking about his days with the Sonics as the "gentle giant" of the Winnebago Wall. Can he really run a city? He's getting specific on that score. He's issued a "135-point plan" for doing just that, to which I want to cry, "prioritize, man." I don't sense a real political there there with Donaldson.
Mike McGinn has put his Irish feistiness to work for the Sierra Club but I worry about his being a one-note anti-tunnel guy. He says Seattle already rejected the tunnel (yes, but it was a different tunnel) and rightly worries about cost over-runs. If you ask voters, do they want a big tunnel boondoggle, the sane will say no, of course not. But if you asked them, hey, do you want the whole Viaduct question to be reopened, I'll bet even more would say, "Hell no." How many people want to unmake a decision in a city that can hardly ever makes a big decision?
And McGinn is very vague on the option to the tunnel. The surface plans were pretty bad. And imagine the spectacle of a Seattle mayor in an already regionally unpopular city stopping a state highway mid-stream with the promise that somehow, all that Tacoma to Everett industrial traffic will simply fade onto the surface streets, like a river in the desert. It's a state highway. McGinn seems attracted to challenging things over which he has no actual authority (state roads, schools, Metro).
I like the way he's taken on Nickels on his City worker donors and expanded appointees — he clearly gets what is "Chicago" about the mayor's style and has a toughness that's appealing for a Nickels challenger. On the other hand, my impression is if you had to call Mayor McGinn to fix a pothole, the response would be: "Why are you driving? You should be riding a bike!" It should be noted that wearing a bike helmet in Seattle is to local politics what wearing an American flag lapel pin is in Omaha, Nebraska. The question: Can McGinn manage a city where everyone doesn't drink the Sierra Club Kool-Aid?
Like what you just read? Support high quality local journalism. Become a member of Crosscut today!











Twitter
Facebook
RSS Feeds
Comments:
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 9:02 a.m. Inappropriate
I think Mallahan would easily lose in the general election because of the troubling news on his company's strong anti-union policy and their poor record on LGBT issues. It makes him very vulnerable in Seattle.
On the one hand he's claiming to be a powerful force at T Mobile, and a union advocate and a great organizer, but on the other hand he hasn't done anything for these two important groups. It does not add up. He still works for T Mobile.
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 9:37 a.m. Inappropriate
Since you haven't decided and said that you are paying attention to endorsements, here is a link to the Sierra Club endorsements: http://cascade.sierraclub.org/endorsements/2009
enjoy!
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 9:39 a.m. Inappropriate
Knute, you easily dismiss the surface plans as pretty bad, yet the SDOT-WSDOT led stakeholder group found the I-5 + Transit + Surface alternative to work the best (yes, better then the tunnel, and significantly less expensive). Also, all that Everett to Tacoma industrial traffic that you mention (a tiny minority of the traffic that currently uses the viaduct - 60% of the current traffic on the viaduct is going to and from Downtown) could just as easily use I-5 if we fixed it up, but there's no money for those improvements in the tunnel plan. Also, a majority of Seattleites think that the tunnel's not going to happen anyways because the money's just not there, and it's ridiculously unpopular (see the recent King 5 poll), so don't assume that people are happy that "the decision has been made." Lastly on the tunnel, for a state road over which the Mayor has "no authority" (your claim, not mine), Nickels and Drago sure have played a pretty large role in getting us into our current situation; that seems like more than a little bit of authority to me. One final note, I think both Mayors Rice and Nickels would disagree with you about the role our Mayor can play in improving schools and Metro service respectively; it's simply a matter of priorities. To close, you provide a great analysis of Mallahan (though you neglected to mention that McGinn has the most Democratic endorsements); virtually no knowledge of the issues and to be honest, would he even be in the discussion if he didn't have $200,000 of his own money in the race?
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 10:43 a.m. Inappropriate
While Donaldson may lack political experience his non confrontational style and congenial nature may be just what’s needed to restore Seattle’s standing in state and federal circles.
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 11:25 a.m. Inappropriate
I dropped out of the FoS Facebook group. After their "Analysis" was published, then they bacame too needy.
Experience is bad, unless it is good; the bag tax is good and they will hold it against a candidate, unless they like the person (like, not like-like).
The whole thing has an AstroTurf feel to it, not that it is, it just feels that way.
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 11:26 a.m. Inappropriate
Eat the State weighs in with its brand of progressive endorsements. They like Mallahan.
http://eatthestate.org/13-23/PrimaryEndorsementsMail.htm
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 1:27 p.m. Inappropriate
Knute - I don't always agree with you but your analysis of the mayoral race is spot on. August is too early for a primary but after a few years we'll get used to ballots stained with watermelon juice.
Granted, Nickels has other flaws and his heavy-handed style rubs Seattlites the wrong way, but what I don't get is Nickels continued support of Crunican. She has become a lightning rod to criticism after SnowplowGate and the Times piece on the SoDo curb fiasco. Right or wrong your average politician have used her as a scapegoat and avoided a lot of opposition. Exactly what does Cruincan have over Nickels? It reminds me of the jokes about Bobby Ayala being Lou Pinella's son-in-law after Bobby had blown another save.
Posted Mon, Aug 3, 1:46 p.m. Inappropriate
Grace Crunican, the Bobby Ayala of Seattle city government. Now that's a devastating comparison.
Posted Wed, Aug 5, 6:08 p.m. Inappropriate
Great piece. I loved the humor about all of the candidates.
Now, what exactly don't you like about Nickels or are you just piling on?
The snow storm response story is "tired."
So what? Worst storm in 30 years and our response needs to improve. Check. End of story. Would have happenend to anyone.
Out of all of these clowns, there is no one better than Nickels.
What "vision" do any of these other wannabes have?
They are all just different flavors of "anyone but Nickels."
Drago should not advance past the council and the others should try starting there first.
I'll take Nickels.
I don't see anyone else who would do a better job than he.
Login or register to add your voice to the conversation.