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Thursday, August 03, 2006

Backlash

With about 95% of the precincts now reporting, Gracie Porter looks like the unofficial runaway winner for the Metro School Board's District 5 seat, as she is enjoying about 55% (2,573) of the vote. Her three rivals are each netting below 20% of the vote. District 5 appears to have struck back at Council member Michael Craddock's backroom attempts--in cahoots with the Davidson County Republican Party--to misrepresent their interests on the Board of Education. The 17 Council members who voted with Michael Craddock may not have listened to District 5 voters back in May; but they sure as hell ought to be able to hear them in August.


08/04/2006, 6:00 p.m. Update: Bruce Barry writes a noteable synopsis of yesterday's BoE elections, including a dressing-down of what appears to me to be the Chamber of Commerce PAC's naked attempt to flex its post-election influence over our BoE.

10 comments:

  1. and Kathleen Harkey goes down in flames in district 8 where people were tired of the status quo and upset with her attempts to go around the system in placing a magnet school student.

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  2. Two things that I hope to see from this election:

    1. A less divisive board that works to fix that which needs fixing and preserve that which works.

    2. Increased participation from the community at large. Even though I personally felt that Mrs. Brooks was not the right person for the job, her candidacy and blog have raised the community's awareness about the board and the system as a whole. Hopefully the community won't tune out now that the controversy is over.

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  3. to mnbvcxz, great comment. I agree completely

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  4. Don't worry Mark. I plan to hold Gracie Porter held to the same standard as Kay Brooks. And every time we see her falter, it will be duly noted.

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  5. Whew! For a minute or two I was gravely worried that an anonymous commenter was not going to be watching out for our best interests!

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  6. Nobody smeared Kay Brooks, she immolated all by herself.

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  7. I believe the "smearing" being referred to is when I asked Mrs. Brooks (on her blog) to post her children's test scores by way of comparison to Ms. Porter's test scores that she so eagerly posted. Or when I asked if she had any substantive reforms to propose, rather than continuously saying that the system is broken (no6 exactly a surprising revelation). If that is smearing, then I am indeed guilty.

    I stand by my original comment above: I didn't feel that Mrs. Brooks was the right person for the job; however, her choice to run for the position has brought a great deal of needed attention to the school board races that will hopefully continue now the politicking is over.

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  8. Dont worry Mike, we got you covered. This will give you a little more time to finally figure out if Lincoln Davis was serious or not.

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  9. Davis's vote showed his seriousness.

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