This Week in the Mercury

Shaking Behind the Scenes

News

Shaking Behind the Scenes

City Quake Tour Dances Around Fears Over Portland's Harbor Wall—and Bridges


A Field Guide to Portland Canvassers

Feature

A Field Guide to Portland Canvassers

How to Spot and Identify Donation Gatherers in the Wild



Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Heavyweight City Union Gets Behind Smith, Nolan, and Novick in Portland Races

Posted by Denis C. Theriault on Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 9:20 PM

Less than a week after Eileen Brady drew the first official union endorsement in this year's race for mayor—a nod from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers' Local 48—another influential union has picked sides ahead of the May primary.

AFSCME's Local 189, which counts nearly 1,000 city employees among its ranks, officially voted tonight to endorse State Representative Jefferson Smith.

The Smith pick is probably just a glancing blow for Brady, who fought hard for AFSCME's approval but can still fall back on her fundraising lead and her endorsement from the Portland Business Alliance. But it's a big deal for Smith, who’s been dogged by concerns he’s “unelectable” and has had to play catch-up with campaign cash after his late entrance in the race—something that won't get easier once he takes time off for a special legislative session in Salem starting February 1. It also wasn't all that unexpected. (Look for more analysis in this week's Hall Monitor, due on some newsstands and online as early as tomorrow.)

From AFSCME's statement (PDF):

"Eileen is an interesting candidate, she reached out to our members and our many of our members liked her. In the end we felt she was untested and were looking for a candidate with a history of standing up for working people," commented Local President, Deb Hussey.

Members also appreciated that Charlie Hales was willing to reach out and participate in the endorsement process have conversations with them. However, many of the members were seeking a change in leadership that would take the City in a new direction.

With the City's weak Mayor structure, a Mayor needs to be able to build consensus with four other strong personalities. As a State Representative Jefferson Smith has a proven track record of consensus building, without compromising on important issues such as protecting voting rights, and creating transparency in government. He has shown through his work to limit middle management and focus budgets on front line services that he is willing to challenge the status quo.

"Jefferson has been working with us in the legislature to move a progressive agenda protecting voting rights and creating transparency in government. Additionally, he carried the bill that directed state agencies to cut middle management and direct the budget to go to front line services. With potential cuts on the horizon at the City, this resonates with our members. We are confident that he will bring that forward thinking to the City of Portland too and look forward to working with him," said Political Action Committee Chair and Local Vice President, Mark Gipson.

The union also picked Steve Novick to replace Randy Leonard (with a polite nod to the activists mounting longshot bids against him) and State Representative Mary Nolan over incumbent Commissioner Amanda Fritz—acknowledging the decision was close, thanks to some passionate advocacy on Fritz's behalf courtesy of members who work for Fritz in the Bureau of Emergency Communications and Office of Neighborhood Involvement. Nolan, a former House majority leader in Salem and union friend, was still the odds-on favorite.

 

Comments (5) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
1
Congratulations to Jefferson, Steve, and Mary. We can only hope and vote that these three people get to work together to help move our city forward! Thanks AFSCME for making the best decision possible!
Posted by Robert Corwin on January 24, 2012 at 9:36 PM · Report
2
Hmm, an interesting slant to the author's commentary. The PBA provides money and an endorsement by the monied interests, but AFSCME is a much more boots-on-the-ground kind of endorsement, that will translate much better into retail electoral support. And on the cash tip, Brady may have outraised the others but she's also outspent them, such that they all have about the same cash on hand at the moment. I also wonder whose concerns of unelectability were spoken to the Merc? For a late entrance, he's rapidly closing on Brady's extra-months contributor lead, up to nearly 1200 in just over four months. It's true being in session in Feb will cost him some, but he made a point NOT to quit his current job and leave his constituency (and Democrats) shorthanded or with a quick appointee at best. I like that kind of dedication.

I think they made three strong choices. Proven track record is right!
Posted by torridjoe on January 24, 2012 at 11:05 PM · Report
3
Agreed Joe, and while in session he may further impress with his abilities in governance. I personally am glad that we still have him in Salem and think it will be a loss for the state on some levels his becoming mayor. But as a resident of Portland, I am so happy that he chose to lead us here!
Posted by Robert Corwin on January 25, 2012 at 10:22 AM · Report
4
Weak mayor form of government? We have a commission government. Those are not at all the same thing. A weak mayor doesn't oversee any bureaus.
Posted by ($8239f8h248cerfehjf23@&*@ebdjhb23f237OCDBO#BD*(# on January 25, 2012 at 11:28 AM · Report
5
The only Brady I'm supporting is Tom Brady....pretty sure he did'nt lie/embelish his achievements.
Posted by The Showstopper on January 25, 2012 at 2:07 PM · Report

Add a comment

/images/adoftheweek.gif

ad of the day

The Handyman Pro - Your Honey-Do Specialist
Don’t let our name fool you. The Handyman Pro, LLC is a repair and remodel service provider with over 25-years experience. We cover all aspects of construction and repairs for residential and commercial clients.go


post an ad

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC

115 SW Ash St. Suite 600
Portland, OR 97204

Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Production Guidelines | Terms of Use