Twenty-two-year-old Gus Pedrotty makes a name for himself. Ricardo Chaves got taken. Ken Sanchez survives ART. Wayne Johnson looked pathetic. So-called political expert gushes about pathetic 29 percent voter turnout.
BY DENNIS DOMRZALSKI
Way to go Gus!
Yeah, there's going to be a runoff
election on Nov. 14 between Tim Keller and Dan Lewis, but you already
know that. And it doesn't take much so-called analysis from alleged
experts to figure that Keller's going to be the next mayor.
So instead of projecting and pretending
to be deeply insightful about something so obvious, I'll give you my
take on last night's winners and losers.
And that biggest winner is Gus
Pedrotty. The 22-year-old UNM graduate got 6.85 percent of the vote
– OK, let's round it up to 7 percent. That's a hell of a showing
for a kid who basically had no money, name recognition, campaign
staff or money.
What Gus does have is energy, youth and
passion and ideas His energy and passion are infectious, and at
22-years-old, he just turned himself into a somebody in this
community. Now, that might not be saying much considering the
pathetic state of this city, but being a somebody at 22 is a hell of
an accomplishment.
And, get this: On election day, Gus got
more votes that Wayne Johnson, the Republican Bernalillo County
commissioner in the race who raised hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Damn good job, Gus.
Here are some other winners:
- The city of Albuquerque and its sick
economy. That's because the paid sick leave ordinance was defeated,
and defeated by the narrowest of margins: 718 votes. The seven-page
proposed law would have crippled small businesses, stifled
entrepreneurship and turned the city into a lawsuit hellhole.
Since we're already an economic
hellhole, we didn't need this strange law, which would have amounted
to an ATM for lawyers.
- City Councilor Ken Sanchez. I thought
Sanchez was toast based on his support of the hated Albuquerque Rapid
Transit project. But Sanchez won the election outright with 51.82
percent of the vote.
- Bot Cornelius, the political
“consultant” who took 81-year-old Ricardo Chaves' money. Chaves
loaned his campaign $500,000 and spent about $300,000. Cornelius was
paid $175,000 for his alleged consulting. And what did that $175,000
get Chaves? A massive 475 votes – you read right – or 0.49
percent of the total.
Good job, Bob.
-
Tim Keller. The smiling auditor smiled his way through the campaign
without ever furrowing a brow, not even when answering questions
about Albuquerque massive crime increase. Some in the chattering
classes figured that Keller would top out at around 25 or 30 percent.
But, apparently people like his smile and he got basically 40 percent
of the vote. And that's in an eight-person race. It was an impressive
showing.
Losers
- Brian Colón
and the people who contributed to his campaign. The lawyer and former
chair of the state Democratic Party raised more than $825,000 for the
campaign. And for that he got 16.38 percent of the vote. It looks
like Colón's
political career is over.
-
Wayne Johnson. What the hell was wrong with him? He's a Republican
and he spent the entire campaign attacking, well, another Republican,
Dan Lewis. I'd like to find the genius who advised Johnson to rip a
fellow Republican instead of a Democrat. The attacks on Lewis
backfired and Johnson got a massive 9.63 percent of the vote.
Whatever
it is that drove Johnson to attack Lewis, I don't know. But it made
Johnson look sleazy and pathetic. And it's another example of how
inept and stupid Republicans can be.
-
Ricardo Chaves. As I said earlier, he spent around $300,000 and got
475 votes. You do the math.
-
Dan Lewis. Even though he came in second with 23 percent of the vote
and will be in the Nov. 14 runoff with Keller, I have to say he lost.
Why?
Because
he was one of the first people to announce for mayor and he spent the
entire campaign talking about crime. That should have been a winning
strategy because 99 percent of city residents think crime is the most
important issue. But Lewis couldn't connect with voters. Maybe it's
because he's a Republican and because people are holding Mayor
Richard Berry's failed eight years in office against all Who knows.
-
Democracy and a political blogger. Blogger Joe Monahan gushed in his
blog this morning about the high voter turnout. Really?
There
were 96,971 votes cast for mayor, or about 29 percent of registered
voters. Joe, 29 percent is pathetic! I'll say it again, a 29 percent
voter turnout is pathetic.
It's
even worse when you consider that the city is in the middle of an
epic crime wave. We're being assaulted, robbed, burglarized and shot,
and our cars are being stolen at record rates and numbers, and only
29 percent of the registered voters went to the polls. Anyone who
raves about a 29 percent voter turnout is out of it.
-
The NAIOP and Chamber of Commerce crowd. These lovers of Mayor
Berry's ART project were basically behind Johnson and Colón.
And they lost.
-
Public campaign financing. Keller boasted constantly about how he
hated big money in politics and how he was the only publicly financed
candidate. But the PAC, or Measure Finance Committee, formed on his
behalf raised hundreds of thousands of dollars from big-money
organizations. Talk about hypocrisy.But I guess progressive big money is more equal than conservative big money. Talk about hypocrisy.
Here
are the vote totals and the percentages:
Tim
Keller 38,156 39.35 percent
Dan
Lewis 22,238 22.93 percent
Brian
Colón 15,884 16.38
percent
Wayne
Johnson 9,342 9.63 percent
Gus
Pedrotty 6,638 6.85 percent
Michelle
Garcia Holmes 3,748 3.87 percent
Susan
Wheeler-Deichsel 490 0.51 percent
Ricardo
Chaves 475 0.49 percent
Sick
leave ordinance:
For 45,333 49.61
percent
Against 46,051 50.39
percent
2 comments:
uh, okay.
Lewis: Endorsed by the NRA, fundamentalist pastor whose church declares that everything in the Bible, old and new testament, is indisputably true, supports a land developer who has no principles except that he wants Albuquerque to give him lots of water so he can make a mint out of a development that is unsustainable, opposes legal rights for gays and lesbians, and is a strong supporter of Trump, etc.
Keller: Smart, progressive, pragmatic, green, track record of hard work and accomplishment. A dream candidate.
All you can say is that Keller smiles too much, and Gus is who we should have voted for. Well, Gus does share your twisted sense of politics anyway. He is not endorsing Keller, says he is afraid that it would hurt his job prospects. Didn't get that offer from Keller is was angling for? Let me guess, you voted for Nader in 2000 and Stein last year.
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