crosscut.com : 2007 Election News of the Great Nearby. en-us Crosscut http://www.crosscut.com/rss/button.gif http://www.crosscut.com/ Crosscut http://www.crosscut.com/ Copyright 2008 Crosscut LLC. All rights reserved. en-us The post-partisan electorate http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/16955/The+post-partisan+electorate/ <p><b>Reform of King County county government</b> is popular but is almost always painted as a Republican plot. Nevertheless, the generally liberal electorate has embraced change. Last night, they gave the nod to <a href="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2008126020_elexprop20m.html" target="_blank">I-26</a>, which would allow a vote in November on whether or not to make county elected positions non-partisan. It will join another measure passed last year as <ahref="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2003998767_elexkingcouncil07m.html" target="_blank">I-25</a>, which will ask whether or not to make the superintendent of county elections an elected post.</p> Wed, 20 Aug 2008 07:00:01 PDT Crosscut The campaign for Sound Transit will be 'going Facebook' http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/16663/The+campaign+for+Sound+Transit+will+be+%27going+Facebook%27/ Big and corporate didn't do it for last year's roads and transit measure, so the hurry-up, cash-starved campaign for Sound Transit 2 will be Internet-based and volunteer-driven. Mon, 11 Aug 2008 10:00:01 PDT Crosscut The budget mavens take hold at Seattle Schools http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/12999/The+budget+mavens+take+hold+at+Seattle+Schools/ Read this <a href="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/education/2004316803_promises31m.html?" target="_blank">interesting story about the Seattle School Board</a>. You'll find the new language of big-company management being spoken by the new boardmembers, all of whom promised to bring that perspective to the troubled district. The four new members, Peter Maier (a consumer lawyer), Steve Sundquist (formerly with Russell Investment Group), Sherry Carr (finance manager at Boeing), and Harium Martin-Morris (also a Boeing executive), <a href="http://www.crosscut.com/seattle-schools/1856/">all ran on the same basic platform</a>: it takes experience with big business to handle a huge budget like the School District's. This experienced team was cast in the role by an informal coalition of school activists, with some helpful guidance from the Mayor's office. Tue, 01 Apr 2008 10:24:01 PDT Crosscut From Jim Crow to John Lovick http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/10526/From+Jim+Crow+to+John+Lovick/ Snohomish County's new elected sheriff is African-American, which is worth noting, hopefully, only for a moment. Mon, 07 Jan 2008 05:00:01 PST Crosscut Port in a storm of its own making http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/10110/Port+in+a+storm+of+its+own+making/ The state Auditor's new report on the Port of Seattle finds rats in the rat's nest of local governments. Thu, 20 Dec 2007 16:00:01 PST Crosscut Beyond Proposition 1: A new consensus is emerging http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9945/Beyond+Proposition+1%3A+A+new+consensus+is+emerging/ A group headed by Norm Rice and John Stanton is gathering allies for a more rational and practical approach to the region's transit needs. Both supporters and opponents of the failed Proposition 1 are part of the effort. Tue, 18 Dec 2007 05:00:01 PST Crosscut Sizing up the Proposition 1 vote, precinct by precinct http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9764/Sizing+up+the+Proposition+1+vote%2C+precinct+by+precinct/ Voters were resisting a plan that was Seattle-centric and premised on the expectation that most people would become affluent professionals working in dense urban settings. This skeptic of rail transit also suggests how to recraft the proposal. Wed, 12 Dec 2007 05:00:01 PST Crosscut Richard Conlin is the likely next president of the Seattle City Council http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9670/Richard+Conlin+is+the+likely+next+president+of+the+Seattle+City+Council/ It's the post he thought he had in 2006. This time, with no active rivals, it's likely his. Wed, 05 Dec 2007 13:00:01 PST Crosscut The political legacy of Turk the Magic Genie http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9543/The+political+legacy+of+Turk+the+Magic+Genie/ He's the latest of a long line of characters who have run for office. Turk lost up in Snohomish County. But some of the Northwest's clown princes have actually gotten elected. And some of <i>them</i> have served the people very well. No joke. Sat, 01 Dec 2007 00:00:01 PST Crosscut Tax-reduction redux http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9442/Tax-reduction+redux/ Once again, Washington lawmakers are about to make law from flaw, correcting what Tim Eyman got wrong but embracing what voters clearly want: a crimp on taxation. Wed, 28 Nov 2007 05:00:01 PST Crosscut Is Tim Eyman ripe for the Oklahoma treatment? http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9315/Is+Tim+Eyman+ripe+for+the+Oklahoma+treatment/ Given the rivalry with Oklahoma City over the Sonics, we're not too likely to emulate politics from Oklahoma, but here's one political ploy that may be worth borrowing, particularly now that Tim Eyman, the initiative king, is riding high again. Attention John Ladenburg, Pierce County Executive who is gearing up to challenge Rob McKenna for Attorney General in 2008. Here's an Oklahoma six-shooter. Wed, 21 Nov 2007 14:03:01 PST Crosscut The unseemly scramble for freed-up taxes, post-Proposition 1 http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9119/The+unseemly+scramble+for+freed-up+taxes%2C+post-Proposition+1/ Defeat Proposition 1, as happened last week, and you leave a lot of taxing authority on the table. Not surprisingly, local governments are pouncing. Their greediness perhaps got out of hand this week, with the Metropolitan King County Council launching a county ferry system, jacking up bus fares, and wading into programs to rebuild levees and help mental health. In what's called "Tax Hike Tuesday," the Port of Seattle also got into the frenzy, approving a $78 million property tax levy, in a kind of premature celebration of the likely departure of its one anti-tax commissioner, Alec Fisken, who appears to have been defeated. Grab it now, was the mantra. Wed, 14 Nov 2007 11:00:01 PST Crosscut Gov to Seattle: You dithered away your chance http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9082/Gov+to+Seattle%3A+You+dithered+away+your+chance/ That was fast. Just a week after the voters nixed Proposition 1 for roads and transit, Gov. Chris Gregoire <a href+"http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/transportation/339358_bridge13.html" target_blank">announces she's taking control of 520 bridge planning.</a> Seattle is about to pay a price for its dithering -- loss of local control. A similar theme was sounded in <a href="http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/virgin/339352_virgin13.html" target_blank">Bill Virgin's column</a> in today's P-I, suggesting a divestiture of authority for Sound Transit, handing over the controls for Sounder Commuter Rail to Amtrak and bringing on some private transit services. Is the corpse about to be carved up? Tue, 13 Nov 2007 10:25:01 PST Crosscut The yearning for a strongman http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/9017/The+yearning+for+a+strongman/ Seattle's post-election blues rekindle a desire for bigger government, run by a big boss. But we've done very well without either, thank you. Tue, 13 Nov 2007 05:00:01 PST Crosscut Why voters expelled the Seattle School Board class of 2003 http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/8949/Why+voters+expelled+the+Seattle+School+Board+class+of+2003/ Riding in on overreaction to a financial crisis, these reformers were so wrapped up in their various political agendas that they lost sight of the basics of educating kids. They paid a price in this week's election. Fri, 09 Nov 2007 00:00:01 PST Crosscut Let's hear it for election 'malaise' http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/8946/Let%27s+hear+it+for+election+%27malaise%27/ Not everyone is glum about the outcome of Tuesday's election, but you would hardly know that from some of the analysis. John Arthur Wilson is right, I believe, that there is no sign of a large populist uprising out there, but I wouldn't, as he says, say the election reflected <a href="http://crosscut.com/politics-government/8917/Not+anger%2C+disillusionment%3A+deciphering+the+voters/" target="_blank">"disillusionment."</a> You know, it is possible that a "no" vote on a bad ballot measure, like Prop. 1, is a <i>positive</i> thing. Thu, 08 Nov 2007 16:51:01 PST Crosscut How to fund transportation without raising taxes http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/8944/How+to+fund+transportation+without+raising+taxes/ David Brewster makes a good catch on the "private entities" reference in Gov. Christine Gregoire's comments on life after Prop 1. In talking with both House Speaker Frank Chopp and King County Executive Ron Sims, they have both assured that they are opposed to privatization of road projects — and Chopp was the hero of anti-privatizers on the new Tacoma Narrows Bridge project. But many regional transportation wonks aren't convinced Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) are a bad idea. Thu, 08 Nov 2007 13:00:01 PST Crosscut Not anger, disillusionment: deciphering the voters http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/8917/Not+anger%2C+disillusionment%3A+deciphering+the+voters/ Polls indicate a surge of resignation about government following the Hurricane Katrina non-performance. That, more than populist rage, seemed to be driving the recent election. To fix it, better to start outperforming expectations. Thu, 08 Nov 2007 05:00:01 PST Crosscut Ballot measures update: I-960 and R-4204 http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/8918/Ballot+measures+update%3A+I-960+and+R-4204/ After a day on post-election clean-up, I can provide a couple of updates on two of Washington's statewide ballot measures. Wed, 07 Nov 2007 18:16:01 PST Crosscut The last election day http://www.crosscut.com/2007-election/8911/The+last+election+day/ When I walked out of my old polling place Tuesday morning, Nov. 6, I felt depressed. Not just because there were so many complex ballot issues (all those constitutional amendments with virtually no public discussion) or because, for the first time that I could remember, I didn't see Bonnie Shride, a longtime poll worker who died earlier this year. No, as I walked out I realized that I had just participated in my last real election day. I started going to the polls with my mother when I was a little kid. I’ve always valued the ritual. I know people say we don’t have time for these little rituals any more. Give me a break. This is a society that has elevated Super Bowl Sunday to a national event, a society in which adolescents rent limos for high school dances. We have plenty of rituals. Voting just happens to be one on which we no longer want to waste our time. Wed, 07 Nov 2007 14:59:01 PST Crosscut