Election wasn't about 'change'
Some expected this election to express the voter's desire for sweeping change, but in Washington, that wasn't the case. Voters in Seattle cast their votes for change in the dog days of August when they ousted two-term incumbent mayor Greg Nickels in the primary, but by fall, the electorate was more status-quo friendly. City council incumbents did well, King County council members too. Majority opinions on the school board and port were strengthened.
Take Dow Constantine's big win over change candidate Susan Hutchison. Even with so many folks in King County down on county government (a chronic condition nowadays), and with a well-spoken, telegenic candidate, experience trumped the fresh face, voters decided to continue Democratic rule of the county (though the office, technically non-partisan, is in reality not). Constantine is an experienced insider, ran a partisan race trumpeting both his party credentials and his rival's Republican ones, and it worked better than most people expected. Hutchison's campaign posed the question: Do you want the county to be run by a guy who is part of the problem? The answer was a resounding yes. Experienced trumped change.
The victory of R-71 was significant, but remember that it was upholding an act of the legislature, not making new law. Even conservative Hutchison, who isn't exactly known for manning the ramparts of gay rights, favored the measure, not so much as a rights issue but as a matter of settled law: The legislative process has rendered a decision, she said, so let's move on. The public vote was an important, validating, even historic, but it was underlining an act that had already been performed by elected officials.
Most significant was the defeat of Tim Eyman's I-1033, which suggests that while there is anti-government backlash to Obama's New New Deal, there is also an understanding in the land that there is a floor beyond which government should not fall. Eyman's law would have hamstrung not just evil Olympia (often a voter punching bag), but would have had the effect of drying up funding for local city and county governments. It was opposed by Mainstream Republicans, Chambers of Commerce, and it turned out a majority of voters. People might want lower taxes and less government, but they don't want their local governments drowned in the bathtub, to recall conservative Grover Nordquist's famous phrase about what he'd like to do. I pointed out that a number of Eastern Washington Republican strongholds opposed I-1033 at the ballot box, but the margin in some of those GOP areas is worth noting: it was defeated with nearly 60 percent of the vote in Adams and Lincoln counties.
So, in this time of recession and tea-bagger anger, there is still a belief that government is necessary and maybe even good in hard times. Washington voters had a chance to vote for radical change that seemed on the surface like it could be in tune with the cable news-hyped mood, but voters said no. The state's budget shortfalls and fiscal constraints are setting significant limits on what state, county and municipal governments can do, but the risk of making things worse seemed, well, worse.
For a state like Washington, whose very existence is largely due to federal funding and intervention (without it, no dams, no cheap power, no agriculture, no defense or aerospace industry, no railroads, no interstates, no Silicon Forest, no ports...) it seemed like a resurgence of realism.









Comments:
Posted Sun, Nov 8, 9:02 a.m. inappropriate
Constantine will be a horrible choice for Executive. The people will not be well served, only the special interests tha supported him. There will be no positive organizational changes, the relationship between the cities and the county will continue to worsen. The first new tax hike is already in the works and will be in front of the county council on November 18th, thanks to the Constnatine puppet Mr. Triplett. The song remains the same.
Posted Sun, Nov 8, 10:13 a.m. inappropriate
I'd rather agree with your assessment, Knute. Would you please read the tea-leaves on the Seattle mayor's race? For us outside the city lines, the messages are - uh - subject to interpretation.
Posted Sun, Nov 8, 10:33 a.m. inappropriate
Simple really Deb, the 520 project will continue to be a fight. McGinn is a four lane kinda guy. The viaduct project is back in play and another 4 years of delay and litigation is upon us.
Posted Sun, Nov 8, 12:49 p.m. inappropriate
McGinn is definitely a change agent. Enough voters are absolutely demanding change toward transparent and accountable handling of transportation mega-projects. Hutchison would have been a radical change not aligned with reforms voters demand. Despite public process, voters feel decisions are made that disregard public concerns. I believe McGinn is more able to convey the sense that planning agencies are doing their best, and Mallahan would leave the public unsatisfied no matter how well-intended and competent planning is conducted. The McGinn choice was for a amiable leader rather than an unaccountable CEO. Which would the voters rather have a beer with. No contest.
Posted Mon, Nov 9, 4:13 p.m. inappropriate
Pierce County election results may tacitly reveal an ugly truth behind President Obama's ever-more-obvious reluctance to repeal the military's anti-homosexual policies -- yet another example of how "change we can believe in" is turning out to be a Big Lie.
Pierce County voters defeated Referendum 71 by a 52-48 majority. This outcome is not only contrary to the measure’s overall statewide approval but is unique in Pugetopolis.
It was clearly NOT due to some local metastasis of reactionary values: the same Pierce County voters who rejected R-71 beat back Initiative 1033 by an identical margin.
The localized R-71 loss therefore begs more detailed analysis.
My own suspicion -- set out here in the hope some graduate student will research the question in greater depth -- is that the R-71 anomaly reflects the huge presence of military personnel in the Pierce County electorate due to Fort Lewis and McChord Air Force Base.
Which necessitates stepping away from Pierce County for a moment to look at the R-71 issue in more general terms.
Ultimately R-71 is formal repudiation of homophobia and, to a lesser degree, the rejection of puritanical hostility to all non-marital sexuality.
The taboos revoked by R-71 are, like opposition to women's reproductive freedom, religious issues. They are spawned by fanatical Christian zealots and their ever-intensifying campaign to impose the savage tyrannies of Bible-based theocracy on the entire nation.
Too many of us fail to realize that these efforts are not to be taken lightly. They are heavily financed by Wall Street and Big Business in general.
The financiers are motivated by innumerable studies that prove workers who are brainwashed to submission by Christianity make the most dependably anti-union and generally obedient employees -- the notoriously anti-labor South the quintessential case in point.
Moreover the theocrats have already amassed a terrifying record of success. Examples include the defeats of homosexual marriage in Maine and California and the de facto nullification of Roe v. Wade in the health care reform bill just passed by the House.
Probably then Pierce County's defeat of R-71 is additional confirmation of an oft-reported and profoundly disturbing fact: that the U.S. military has wholeheartedly adopted the most relentlessly intolerant dogmas of Christianity -- the fanatical Crusader mentality Bush Administration theocrats sought to make mandatory throughout the armed services.
Thus the Pierce County R-71 result may also point to the likelihood -- despite President Obama’s assertions to the contrary -- there will be no repeal of Don’t Ask /Don’t Tell: not now, not ever.