I ran out of time to make one more general observation.
- The number of candidates had a big effect on at least two of the races.
- In the mayor's race, Dan Corbin won with 47% of the vote. If the 23% garnered by Nellis, Estrada and Butchard were in play, the contest would probably have been much closer.
- The huge field vying for at-large seats on the council resulted in a very splintered vote. Only 16% of ballots mentioned the front-runner, Elizabeth Blackstone. 14% mentioned Jonathan Okray and less that 11% Jared Foster. Well over half of voters didn't vote for any of the successful candidates.
- Everyone elected (with the exceptions of Gilmore and Segarra) got in with a minority of the vote. This puts a lot of pressure on those elected to gain the approbation of the 4,200 or so people who care about city government.
One comment on at-large percentages. The data you mentioned is for all votes, not all voters. Blackstone was selected by 40.5% of voters, Okray 34.4%, and Foster 27.2%. While still not majorities, this is a lot more respectable, especially given the number of candidates.
ReplyDeleteThanks for pointing out my error, baba. The percentages reported by the city were
ReplyDelete(number of votes for a candidate)/(total number of votes for all candidates). Since we could pick up to three, your numbers are much closer than mine.