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Bringing you cola for the people, PubliCola is named after Publius Valerius PubliCola, the alias for the authors of the Federalist Papers—the original bloggers.

The first online-only news site in state history to get media credentials to cover the state capitol and Seattle city hall, PubliCola has been called a “must-read” by the Seattle Post Intelligencer and a hot “New Media Mover and Shaker” by Seattle Magazine—which also cited our own Erica C. Barnett as the city's No. 1 news nerd.

Mayor Nickels Officially Begins Campaign

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Mayor Greg Nickels held his official kickoff this morning at the Westin Hotel downtown.

Four-hundred fifty people showed up for the standard ballroom breakfast (the campaign raised about $50,000, campaign staffers say), which was impressive for a mayor with such lousy approval ratings and reelect numbers. 

Judging from Nickels’ speech (which was more confident, laid-back, and compelling than I’ve seen him in months), Team Nickels is positioning the mayor as the progressive in the race.

Nickels started by reminding everyone about his first run in 2001, when he defeated “the more conservative” former Seattle City Attorney Mark Sidran by “not backing off my progressive agenda,” which Nickels defined as pushing light rail. 

(It’s funny to note that Sidran has since cheered Mayor Nickels, saying Nickels has adopted Sidran’s agenda. Nickels’ crackdown on nightlife definitely lends credence to that idea. Sidran told me today: “Substantively, there’s not very much difference between Nickels and Sidran.” Sidran said it’s more about style. “Greg tells Seattle’s weenie liberals what they want to hear and then does what he needs to do get stuff done. I don’t have any problem with that. In the 2001 race he said he was going to do things the Seattle Way like George Benson [the popular, longtime City Council Member], but I think even Greg would have to concede that’s not exactly what he’s turned out to be like.”)

Nickels checked off items he’s completed on his progressive to-do list: 

Light rail will will open, he said, in “26 days, two hours, and 36 minutes.” 

He boasted about signing an executive order mandating that Seattle recognize gay marriages from other jurisdictions.

He said he “sent the message to the world that there was intelligent life [in the U.S.]”  by getting 956 mayors across the country to thumb their noses at the Bush administration and support the Kyoto Protocols, which mandate reductions in greenhouse gases.

Other progressive achievements Nickels hyped: Passing the housing levy in 2002 and putting a new levy on the ballot this year; creating the bike master plan, which he said will increase biking in the city by a third; retrofitting city buildings to make them green; and taking down the “ugly, noisy, and dangerous Alaskan Way Viaduct” to open up the waterfront. (He didn’t mention that he supports replacing the viaduct with a tunnel, which limits the “progressive” bent of his plan—the tunnel, unlike the greener surface/transit plan, is just as servile to car culture as the elevated highway.)

Nickels closed by  acknowledging his snowstorm screwup (“there’s a couple of weeks in December I want to take back”). However, he added defensively and sarcastically that the city would be ready for the next one– which he predicted will happen again “once in the next 20 years.”

The snow storm debacle actually queued up the funniest line of the morning. Nickels’ guest speaker, U.S. Sen. Mark Begich, who knew Nickels when he was mayor of Anchorage before ousting Ted Stevens to become a senator in Alaska, said he’d be happy to send Anchorage’s street maintenance crew down to help Seattle out. However, Begich treaded on some uncomfortable ground when he started obliviously going on about how he and Nickels had similar sons. Evidently, Begich wasn’t familiar with Jacob Nickels’ legal troubles, 

Nickels concluded his speech saying he was “far and away, the most qualified candidate.” 

PubliCola coverage of Mike McGinn’s kickoff, Jan Drago’s kickoff, and Joe Mallahan’s announcement, here, here, and here.


  • http://www.dougsdoodles.com/ DOUG.

    I hope Nickels loses. He can then spend more time as Chairman of the Board at Sound Transit, which appears to be his greatest accomplishment as Mayor of Seattle.

  • http://www.dougsdoodles.com/ DOUG.

    I hope Nickels loses. He can then spend more time as Chairman of the Board at Sound Transit, which appears to be his greatest accomplishment as Mayor of Seattle.

  • http://www.dougsdoodles.com DOUG.

    I hope Nickels loses. He can then spend more time as Chairman of the Board at Sound Transit, which appears to be his greatest accomplishment as Mayor of Seattle.

  • Fnarf

    Say, how’s that Kyoto compliance coming along? Oh, yeah, we’re nowhere near meeting it. Just like the places that DIDN’T brag about signing on.

  • Fnarf

    Say, how’s that Kyoto compliance coming along? Oh, yeah, we’re nowhere near meeting it. Just like the places that DIDN’T brag about signing on.

  • Fnarf

    Say, how’s that Kyoto compliance coming along? Oh, yeah, we’re nowhere near meeting it. Just like the places that DIDN’T brag about signing on.

  • David

    @1 …. that’s a pretty amazing accomplishment.

  • David

    @1 …. that’s a pretty amazing accomplishment.

  • David

    @1 …. that’s a pretty amazing accomplishment.

  • Jeff

    @1 If Nickels loses, how could he continue to participate in the Sound Transit Board?

  • Jeff

    @1 If Nickels loses, how could he continue to participate in the Sound Transit Board?

  • Jeff

    @1 If Nickels loses, how could he continue to participate in the Sound Transit Board?

  • J.R.

    @4: He wouldn’t. Nickels is an ex-officio member of the ST Board, which means he is a board member as a consequence of being Seattle Mayor. No job, no ST Board seat.

  • J.R.

    @4: He wouldn’t. Nickels is an ex-officio member of the ST Board, which means he is a board member as a consequence of being Seattle Mayor. No job, no ST Board seat.

  • J.R.

    @4: He wouldn’t. Nickels is an ex-officio member of the ST Board, which means he is a board member as a consequence of being Seattle Mayor. No job, no ST Board seat.

  • swatter

    Pretty amazing list of reasons not to vote for the gent. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

  • swatter

    Pretty amazing list of reasons not to vote for the gent. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

  • swatter

    Pretty amazing list of reasons not to vote for the gent. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

  • Jenster

    You couldn’t resist including the gossipier side of things could you Josh. How is Jacob Nickels’ legal past relevant to anything Sen. Begich was saying-which was by the relating how mayor’s understand local government better than most politicians. The crowd certainly did not make connection. You should stick to reporting the facts. Pushing your tabloid tidbits only dumbs down your reporting. BTW..
    How was the free breakfast?

  • Jenster

    You couldn’t resist including the gossipier side of things could you Josh. How is Jacob Nickels’ legal past relevant to anything Sen. Begich was saying-which was by the relating how mayor’s understand local government better than most politicians. The crowd certainly did not make connection. You should stick to reporting the facts. Pushing your tabloid tidbits only dumbs down your reporting. BTW..
    How was the free breakfast?

  • Jenster

    You couldn’t resist including the gossipier side of things could you Josh. How is Jacob Nickels’ legal past relevant to anything Sen. Begich was saying-which was by the relating how mayor’s understand local government better than most politicians. The crowd certainly did not make connection. You should stick to reporting the facts. Pushing your tabloid tidbits only dumbs down your reporting. BTW..
    How was the free breakfast?

  • seabos84

    the seattle times article from today says there are 8 candidates?

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2009367125_donaldson22m.html

    um – thanks for the reporting, and I am NOT being snarky etc.

    who are the others? or, you guys playing the local version of NYT / WAPO, deciding who is viable and electable and frontrunner-ish?

    rmm.

  • seabos84

    the seattle times article from today says there are 8 candidates?

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2009367125_donaldson22m.html

    um – thanks for the reporting, and I am NOT being snarky etc.

    who are the others? or, you guys playing the local version of NYT / WAPO, deciding who is viable and electable and frontrunner-ish?

    rmm.

  • http://LOMG!!! seabos84

    the seattle times article from today says there are 8 candidates?

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2009367125_donaldson22m.html

    um – thanks for the reporting, and I am NOT being snarky etc.

    who are the others? or, you guys playing the local version of NYT / WAPO, deciding who is viable and electable and frontrunner-ish?

    rmm.

  • Trevor

    Question: this whole mayoral proclamation about kyoto protocols. Has one single business practice changed as a result? Has anything substantive resulted from it in terms of actual reductions of greenhouse gases? I’m glad Nickels did this PR campaign for doing something on global warming. But has anyone actually done anything concrete as a result? Not a rhetorical question. I frankly do not know, have never seen any evidence that this “change” has produced real change.

  • Trevor

    Question: this whole mayoral proclamation about kyoto protocols. Has one single business practice changed as a result? Has anything substantive resulted from it in terms of actual reductions of greenhouse gases? I’m glad Nickels did this PR campaign for doing something on global warming. But has anyone actually done anything concrete as a result? Not a rhetorical question. I frankly do not know, have never seen any evidence that this “change” has produced real change.

  • Trevor

    Question: this whole mayoral proclamation about kyoto protocols. Has one single business practice changed as a result? Has anything substantive resulted from it in terms of actual reductions of greenhouse gases? I’m glad Nickels did this PR campaign for doing something on global warming. But has anyone actually done anything concrete as a result? Not a rhetorical question. I frankly do not know, have never seen any evidence that this “change” has produced real change.