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2009 Seattle mayoral election

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2009 Seattle mayoral election
← 2005
November 3, 2009 (2009-11-03)
2013 →
Turnout54.99%
 
CandidateMike McGinnJoe Mallahan
PartyNonpartisanNonpartisan
Popular vote105,49298,302
Percentage51.14%47.65%

Mayor before election

Greg Nickels

Elected mayor

Mike McGinn

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The2009 Seattle mayoral election took place November 3, 2009. IncumbentSeattle MayorGreg Nickels sought election to a third term as the position of Seattle mayor has no term limits but finished third in the August 18, 2009 nonpartisan primary election.[1] The general election was instead between Joe Mallahan andMichael McGinn.[2] McGinn beat Mallahan in the election with 51%.

Background

[edit]

In a November 2008 poll of likely Seattle voters, 31% of voters approved of Nickels's performance as mayor while 57% disapproved.[3] A January 2009 poll found a net job approval of minus 33.[4]

Nickels' administration was faulted for not doing enough to prevent theSeattle SuperSonics NBA franchise fromrelocating to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[5] Nickels was also heavily criticized for the city's policy of not using salt for snow removal due to potential environmental concerns, which contributed to the city's congested traffic in December 2008 after one of the greatest snowfalls in the city since 1996.[6] TheProposed replacement of the Alaskan Way Viaduct and a tax on plastic bags at grocery stores were also major issues of the campaign.

Primary candidates (in alphabetic order)

[edit]

Campaign finances

[edit]
CandidateTotal contributions[11]
Joe Mallahan$806,378
Greg Nickels$596,510
Mike McGinn$222,570
Jan Drago$157,993
James Donaldson$51,906
Norman Zadok Sigler$14,625
Elizabeth Campbell$2,371
Kwame Wyking Garrett$0

Primaries

[edit]

Early polling

[edit]

A poll conducted on August 12 showed incumbentGreg Nickels in the lead with 24 percent voter backing. While Nickels had a significant lead over all other candidates, the undecided voter percentage of 26 percent indicated room for any candidate to take the lead in the primary held on August 18. In second place after Greg Nickels wasMike McGinn with 16 percent. And in third place,Joe Mallahan with 14 percent. The survey polled 500 people with a margin of error of + or - 4.3 percent.[12]

Primary results

[edit]

The primary election was held on August 18.[11] The final results were posted on September 2,[13] and showedMike McGinn in first place with 27.7 percent of the popular vote, narrowly leadingJoe Mallahan standing at 26.9 percent. IncumbentGreg Nickels showed with 25.4 percent. Due to Washington'stop-two primary system, this eliminated Nickels from the running. Nickels gave his concession speech on August 21 atSeattle City Hall. Mallahan and McGinn advanced to the general election in November.[2]

Primary election[11]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanMike McGinn39,09727.71
NonpartisanJoe Mallahan37,93326.88
NonpartisanGreg Nickels (incumbent)35,78125.36
NonpartisanJames Donaldson11,4788.13
NonpartisanJan Drago10,1547.20
NonpartisanElizabeth Campbell3,4852.47
NonpartisanKwame Garett1,4791.05
NonpartisanNorman Sigler1,2470.88
Write-inOthers4610.33
Turnout141,11537.16

General election

[edit]

An October 20 poll commissioned byKING-TV and conducted bySurveyUSA showed Joe Mallahan ahead with 43% to Michael McGinn's 36% with a margin of error of 4.1%. Mallahan held a lead among college graduates, Democrats, Republicans, Independents and those describing themselves as moderates and conservatives. McGinn was shown to hold a lead among Asian-Americans, younger voters and those that describe themselves as liberals.[14] McGinn changed his position on the Deep Bore Tunnel that same day, claiming "If I'm elected mayor, though I disagree with this decision, it will be my job to uphold and execute this agreement. It is not the mayor's job to withhold the cooperation of city government in executing this agreement."[15] It was enough to push McGinn ahead of Mallahan by election day.[citation needed]

Mallahan conceded on November 9 after his deficit grew to nearly 5,000 votes.[16]

General election[11]
PartyCandidateVotes%
NonpartisanMike McGinn105,49251.14
NonpartisanJoe Mallahan98,30247.65
Write-inOthers2,4921.21
Turnout206,28654.99

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Seattle Campaigns". .seattle.gov. RetrievedApril 27, 2010.
  2. ^ab"Lynnwood's newest detox facility will reach capacity right away".MyNorthwest.com. RetrievedJuly 13, 2017.
  3. ^Erica C. Barnett (November 3, 2008)."And Now for Some Election News". The Stranger. RetrievedJanuary 7, 2009.
  4. ^"Blog Archive " Seattle Mayor Net Job Approval at Minus 33". SurveyUSA. January 22, 2009. RetrievedApril 27, 2010.
  5. ^Jim Brunner (July 6, 2008)."The deal: What was the city thinking?".The Seattle Times. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2009.
  6. ^Emily Heffter (January 1, 2009)."After storm of criticism, Seattle mayor reverses no-salt policy for snow".The Seattle Times. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2009.
  7. ^"James Donaldson to run for Seattle City Council". InsideHoops. Archived fromthe original on February 23, 2012. RetrievedApril 27, 2010.
  8. ^http://jandragoformayor.com/press_display.php?id=918[permanent dead link]
  9. ^Heffter, Emily (May 6, 2009)."Unknown Seattle mayoral candidate gives $200,000 to his campaign".Seattle Times.
  10. ^"Michael McGinn for Seattle Mayor". Mcginnformayor.com. December 31, 2009. Archived from the original on March 27, 2009. RetrievedApril 27, 2010.
  11. ^abcd"2009 Election Report January 21, 2010"(PDF).www2.seattle.gov. Seattle Ethics And Elections Commission. RetrievedApril 22, 2020.
  12. ^"Lynnwood's newest detox facility will reach capacity right away".MyNorthwest.com. RetrievedJuly 13, 2017.
  13. ^"Results - King County Elections". Your.kingcounty.gov. RetrievedApril 27, 2010.
  14. ^"Results of SurveyUSA Election Poll #15920". SurveyUSA.
  15. ^"Seattle mayoral candidate McGinn backs off tunnel position". Seattle Times.
  16. ^"Mallahan concedes Seattle's mayor race to McGinn". RetrievedJuly 13, 2017.
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