2006 Richmond, California city election

2006 Richmond, California city election

The Richmond, California 2006 city election decided the mayor, four council members, and one measure submitted to the voters of Richmond, California on November 7, 2007. [http://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/DocumentView.asp?DID=977.pdf Official results of the 2006 Municipal Election Held on November 7, 2006] , Richmond website, retrieved August 2, 2007] The election also elected the first Green Party mayor of this city, and made Richmond the largest city in the United States to have a Green mayor. [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/11/09/BAGNJM99AH1.DTL&type=politics Green Party likely to win in Richmond mayor's race] , "San Francisco Chronicle", by Jason B. Johnson, Peter Fimrite, Novermber 9, 2006, retrieved August 2, 2007] Furthermore it unseated an incumbent mayor from a major political party by one from a minor third party.

Mayoral race

The mayor's race was a three-way contest between incumbent mayor Irma A. Anderson, former council member Gary Bell (both Democrats), and council member Gayle McLaughlin, a Green. In 2004, McLaughlin had become the first member of the Green Party to win a seat on the Richmond city council. This is attributed to her door-to-door campaigning and the fact that ballots for Richmond city offices do not mention political party. McLaughlin won with 37.2 percent of the votes, followed by Anderson with 36.1 and Gary Bell 26.1. becoming the first Green mayor of a major California city (a feat nearly achieved by Matt González in the 2004 San Francisco mayoral election). Those who decided to vote by mail had to pay an additional US$.63 instead of having it mailed for free as is the custom. [http://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/DocumentView.asp?DID=869.pdf Attention Voters!!] , Richmond website, by City Clerk Diane Holmes, August 18, 2006, retrieved August 2, 2007]

Gayle McLaughlin

McLaughlin was endorsed by councils and local chapers of several labor unions including: the AFSCME, International Union, and SEIU. Organizations such as the Sierra Club, local Green Parties, Richmond Greens, Alameda County Greens, Contra Costa County Greens, and political groups such as the Mexican American Political Association (MAPA), the Richmond Progressive Alliance were among McLaughlin's supporters. [http://www.gaylemclaughlin.net/endorse.htm#individuals Individuals] , Gayle McLaughlin official website]

Irma Anderson

Irma Anderson, the prior mayor of Richmond, was endorsed by Dianne Feinstein, Phil Angelides, Loni Hancock, and John Gioia.

Gary Bell

Gary Bell, a banker, had been a council member from 2000 to 2005. He said it was important that residents "feel that their opinion or point of view is heard" Voter Information Pamphlet, by Clerk of the city of Richmond: Diane Holmes, August 18, 2006] . His campaign slogan was "No more politics".

City council race

2006's election was considered important because it was the last election for a nine member council. As of the 2007 election, the number of council members decreased to five.

The results for the four-year seats were as follows:

Jim Rogers 9,295María T. Viramontes 9,033Ludmyrna “Myrna” López 7,864"(these three were elected)"

Courtland "Corky" Boozé 7,382
James “Jim” Jenkins 4,825
Richard Griffin 4,678

Tony Thurmond

Tony Thurmond was unopposed in running for a short (2-year) term for a vacancy created by a resignation.

Measures

There was only one measure on the ballot that year. In the past several elections, the city's voters had been reluctant to pass any measures at the city level.

Measure T

Measure T's purpose was to raise $10 million in additional annual revenue for the purpose expanding city services.

Notes

External links

* [http://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/index.asp?NID=715 2006 Election Information] at the Richmond website
* [http://www.gaylemclaughlin.net/index.html Gayle McLaughlin] official site
* [http://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/index.asp?NID=294 Irma Anderson] city of Richmond profile


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