There was another good map Publicola put up today from Seattle Ethics & Elections, showing where donors to each campaign live. For McGinn and Murray both, the area from which the largest total donations came (28%) was...."Out of Seattle". Wacky. http://www.seattlemet.com/news-and-profi…
It's also not true, exactly, that the largest chunk of donations came from outside Seattle. That suggests most donations came from outside the city if you're looking at a binary of (a) donations from inside Seattle or (b) donations from outside Seattle. That isn't what the SEEC pie chart depicts. The chart compares everything outside of Seattle to several individual neighborhoods in the city. It's not surprising that everything outside the city has a plurality of donations compared to city segments. And, for what it's worth, 28 percent from outside the city limits is pretty common. Not weird at all.
On a more serious note: Did West Seattle voters really support the tunnel? Or did they support the Viaduct (like a plurality of the voters did)? I would guess that the only folks who heartily supported the tunnel were those who lived close to the viaduct (tunnel = less noise). I think West Seattle went for Murray because Murray campaigned there (as the Seattle Times reported) and because West Seattle residents are unhappy with the status quo. It is unfair to blame the mayor for the traffic mess that exists in West Seattle right now, but voters are often stupid and vote for an alternative, just because.
West Seattle is a "more tradtionally conservative or wealthier part of town?" Yeah, right, Dominic, and you're a member of the Westboro Baptist Church.
@9 That was a bullshit vote. You could vote "yes" for both, "no" for both or "yes" for one and "no" for the other. (As I recall the Stranger's suggestion was "no" and "hell no", which is how I voted.) Several people I know returned their ballots without voting for anything. The result of that "public vote" was a lot of money spent and no significant results whatsoever.
http://www.seattlemet.com/news-and-profi…
It's also not true, exactly, that the largest chunk of donations came from outside Seattle. That suggests most donations came from outside the city if you're looking at a binary of (a) donations from inside Seattle or (b) donations from outside Seattle. That isn't what the SEEC pie chart depicts. The chart compares everything outside of Seattle to several individual neighborhoods in the city. It's not surprising that everything outside the city has a plurality of donations compared to city segments. And, for what it's worth, 28 percent from outside the city limits is pretty common. Not weird at all.
On a more serious note: Did West Seattle voters really support the tunnel? Or did they support the Viaduct (like a plurality of the voters did)? I would guess that the only folks who heartily supported the tunnel were those who lived close to the viaduct (tunnel = less noise). I think West Seattle went for Murray because Murray campaigned there (as the Seattle Times reported) and because West Seattle residents are unhappy with the status quo. It is unfair to blame the mayor for the traffic mess that exists in West Seattle right now, but voters are often stupid and vote for an alternative, just because.
43% supporting an elevated viaduct sort of "wins"... if you forget about the majority voting "no".
I've not been able to find a district breakdown from that election, but IIRC West Seattle was more in favor of the viaduct than the city at large.