A true underdog story unfolded today in City Hall. After Tanya Woo lost a campaign supported by more than $100,000 in donations from big business interests, the new Seattle City Council dutifully obeyed the wishes of its corporate overlords by voting 5-3 to appoint her to the citywide seat left vacant by Teresa Mosqueda, effectively replacing a strong advocate for progressive taxation with an anti-tax extremist. It doesnโ€™t get more grassroots than that!

The vote comes more than a week after Tim Ceis, a corporate-PAC-wrangler and consultant to Mayor Bruce Harrell, told corporate donors to push the council to appoint Woo. The new council members apparently knew it would be a bad look to so easily fulfill the wishes of big business, or at least during the meeting they defended themselves as if it were a bad lookย 

Council President Sara Nelson, who cast the decisive vote for Woo this afternoon, asked her colleagues not to allow the โ€œweaponization of a leaked third party email distract us from what should be a celebration of making this body whole so we can go about the important work of the City.” She accused people who mentioned the letter of trying to cast doubt upon the process that happened to result in their friend getting elected.ย 

Council Member Tammy Morales, who voted for her own nominee for the position, Mari Sugiyama, voiced a different perspective. In her remarks before the vote, Morales said she felt โ€œdisappointedโ€ in the process that all along seemed like a โ€œforgone conclusion.โ€ She claimed that the nominees did not get a โ€œfair shakeโ€ because of Ceisโ€™s attempts to tip the scales toward Woo. Morales said that Seattle voters do not want corporate interests โ€œbuyingโ€ influence. They said that loud and clear during the backlash election against Amazon in 2019. So, no, Ceis. The corporate donors who backed the newbies on council did not have a right to decide who fills the vacancy, as he suggested in his letter to them.ย 

Council Member Cathy Moore, also a โ€œproudโ€ Woo supporter, pushed back. No matter how journalists report her vote for Ceisโ€™s darling, no one bought her vote, she said.ย 

Regardless of who put Wooโ€™s name in the councilโ€™s ear, one thing is clear: This is a solidly conservative City Council. Nelson, once a conservative outcast, got elected council president and will likely lead a strong conservative bloc with Council Members Rob Saka, Maritza Rivera, Bob Kettle, and now Woo, who gives them a five-person majority. Like any other conservative majority, that means they will support austerity measures to preserve the wealth of corporations, bend over backwards to hire more cops that do not exist, promote sprawl and NIMBYism in its housing planning, and to roll back important protections for workers and renters in Seattle.

Wooโ€™s appointment also sends an obvious โ€œfuck youโ€ message to Morales and to the progressives she represents. Woo lost to Morales, making the incumbent the only purely labor-backed candidate to win a seat in 2023. Now, not only is she a minority on the council, but her colleagues undermined her victory by giving the person she beat a consolation prize. Not to mentionโ€”though Morales mentioned it on the daisโ€”Saka also nominated another one of her former election rivals. Morales agreed to play nice with the new council despite their differences, but they arenโ€™t making it easy for her!

The vote split in itself may reveal challenges to come. While Nelson, Saka, Rivera, Moore, and Kettle voted together, Council Members Dan Strauss, Joy Hollingsworth, and Morales all voted for their initial nomineesโ€”Vivian Song, Linh Thai, and Sugiyama, respectively. If progressives hope to win anything or even defend what the last council already won, these three will have to work together and whip some fucking votes.ย 

Hannah Krieg is a staff writer at The Stranger covering everything that goes down at Seattle City Hall. Importantly, she is a Libra. She is also The Stranger's resident Gen Z writer, with an affinity for...

29 replies on “Total Corporate Takeover of Council Now Complete”

  1. If weโ€™re channeling what the voters/people want, Woo got the most votes of any of those candidates. Filling a vacancy left by an elected official canโ€™t ever be perfect, but the rules were duly created by a democratic process. Godspeed, new council. Itโ€™s a tough time to lead.

  2. @1 Woo got more votes than people who didn’t run, wow great point incredible logic

    At least Hollingsworth showed some spine. Hopefully this doesn’t mean the cabal primaries her next time around.

  3. Wooโ€™s appointment also sends an obvious โ€œfuck youโ€ message to Morales and to the progressives she represents

    Iโ€™m glad to hear the message was received and understood. Now letโ€™s start repairing the damage done by a decade of progressive policies.

  4. It must be exhausting for you to come up with progressively more ridiculous statements in each piece you write. “Promote sprawl”? Seriously? I must have missed those hundreds of empty acres of land out there in the parts of the city you never visit.

  5. I voted for Morales and Tanya Woo, (in different elections) so I see this as great for District 2.

    As much as the Stranger is dumping on Tanya Woo, she will have to run as a citywide representative in 1 year, which means a 1 issue campaign is much less likely to work citywide.

    But having voted for her, I donโ€™t think she was the best selection, in this case. This just proves the council members are not strategic thinkers.

  6. Woo hoo! Thank you for delivering a big fuck you to Morales and putting a stake in the failed and extreme leftist movement that destroyed Seattle.

  7. @2 you beat me to it. Ha Ha ha Ha Ha Ha. I’m pretty sure hannah is on reddit too and she’s easy to see….Lower case name on purpose. The Stranger’s main advertising comes from the non profits that dole out the cities money given to them. Except their money is going to the people in charge and The Stranger.

  8. The Stranger calls a five alarm fire over the fact that the city (with the exception of Morales district) voted for an alternative approach to governing the city. Now they are mad that the city council wonโ€™t give the middle finger to those same voters? That Woo happens to live in Moralesโ€™ district doesnโ€™t mean the rest of the city doesnโ€™t approve.

    But watching poor Hannah and the Stranger melt down over the at least temporary suspension of their glorious revolution is hilarious ๐Ÿ˜€

  9. Outrage, whine, and victimhood; outrage, whine, and victimhood…. little did we know just how similar the MAGA’s and the SA’s (terrible acronym btw) would be the same…

  10. @12 — nobody. They’re all liberal Democrats. Calling them conservatives is a flat out lie. My sense is that the constant repetitive dishonest badmouthing of them is part of a broader editorial choice by The Stranger that will eventually lead to them refusing to endorse Biden using the same tactics. Which will of course be a de facto endorsement of Donald Trump.

    We’ll see. I’m not optimistic.

  11. I like how anyone who isnโ€™t โ€˜progressiveโ€™ (whatever that means) is by default, a conservative.

    Thatโ€™s an awfully binary way to look at things.

  12. I have trouble not guffawing out loud when reading anything written by Hannah. “Conservative” “extremist” “cooperate overloads” Shrill screeching of buzzwords gets exhausting to hear. This council is not conservative – as another commentator noted – they are centrist democrats. The fact that she is hating on anyone less “progressive” than her and her politics makes her an extremist. And Morales is just awful – useless extreme left-winger who can’t form consensus and gets nothing done but whine.

  13. The Stranger stopped being relevant some time ago, so I guess this increasingly clownish behavior isn’t really hurting them. Dead cat can only bounce so many times.

  14. @14 Your “morales is trash” comment crosses the line of human decency. When I last had the chance, I voted against Morales (2019). Yet I respect her for stepping up to serve the public. I think she’s wrong on some issues, but at least she gives a sh#t. She is not trash.

  15. Hannah, you must think your readers are complete morons to believe that the new council is ‘conservative’.

    We are not that dumb or gullible.

    Every single Seattle Council Member is a liberal Democrat.

    Teresa Mosqueda abandoned the “progressives” and socialists mission in Seattle for her pure selfish ambition (hardly socialists)

    But feeding readers crap to eat, will make us sick and kill The Stranger.

  16. @ 22, completely agree. I can’t believe they still have sponsors but then again, so do the Maga folks. Two sides of the same “sky is falling” mentality when things don’t go their way.

  17. “This is a solidly conservative City Council.” – Someone who apparently doesn’t understand the meaning of the word or the damage an actual genuinely conservative council would do.

    Introducing a section called “the work history of the right wing council’s staff”

    Development Coordinator at Refugee Womenโ€™s Alliance

    The Peace Corps

    UNโ€™s World Food Programme

    Early learning and child welfare policy expert

    State Senator Reuven Carlyle

    Navos Mental Health Solutions

    US Rep Pramila Jayapal

    U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen

    Nevada Conservation League

    City of Las Vegas

    Director of Government Relations at the Evergreen State College

    Senate Majority Leader Sharon Nelson

    2012 Marriage Equality Washington

    Representative Vandana Slatter

    Korean American Coalition

    Washington Senate Democratic Caucus

    International Press Institute (IPI)

    Cityโ€™s ARTS office

    Director of the Port of Seattleโ€™s Office of Social Responsibility

    Executive Director of InterIm Community Development Association

    Cityโ€™s Legislative Department

  18. F*cking hell, Hannah. The current Seattle City Council is in no way conservative. This clickbaity, dare I say Faux Nooz style “journalism” sh*t of yours needs to stop.

  19. The Stranger lying and calling liberal Democrats โ€œanti-tax extremistsโ€ is pretty rich, given their history of supporting anti-tax extremist Tim Eyman. The Stranger endorsed and celebrated the passage of an Eyman initiative intended to kill light rail.

    โ€œSound Transit: Shaky YearAfter a year like 2002, maybe even diehard Sound Transit chair Ron Sims sees the handwriting on the wall, even if he’s way too proud to admit it. For one thing, voters passed Eyman’s I-776, despite the opposition of every area newspaper (except The Stranger). If the initiative passes legal muster, it will cut 20 percent of Sound Transit’s budget and kill light rail for good.โ€

    http://www.thestranger.com/news/2002/12/25/12917/2002-rocked

    Howโ€™s the stone throwing going from the glass house?

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