Monthly Archives: November 2011

Where are the Election Night Parties for King County Democrats Tonight?

King County Election Night Parties: November 8, 2011

If you want to share the results and the evening with your political friends here is a list of some of the King County  Election Night Parties for  candidates and issues endorsed by Democrats.

NO on 1125
Where: Fadó Irish Pub and Restaurant (801 1st Ave, Seattle, WA 98104)
When: Starts at 7 PM

NO on 1183
Where: Fx McRory’s (419 Occidental Ave S, Seattle, WA 98104)
When: Starts at 7 PM

YES on 1163
Where: King Street Bar and Oven (170 S King St, Seattle, WA 98104)
When: Starts at 7 PM

Richard Mitchell for King County Council
Where: Crossroads Bar & Grill (15600 NE 8th St, Bellevue, WA 98008)
When: Starts at 7:30 PM

Claudia Balducci, John Stokes, John Chelminak (Candidates for Bellevue City Council)Where: Tap House Grill (550 106th Ave NE, Bellevue, WA 98004)
When: Starts at 7 PM

Streets for All Seattle (Yes on Proposition 1)
Where: Great Nabob (819 5th Ave N, Seattle, WA 98109)
When: Starts at 7 PM

Jean Godden, Seattle City Council
Where: Farestart (700 Virginia St, Seattle, WA 98101)
When: 7:30 PM

Bobby Forch, Seattle City CouncilWhere: The Diller Room (1224 1st Ave, Seattle, WA 98101)
When: 7:30 PM

Families and Education Levy – Seattle
Where: Elysian Fields (542 1st Ave S, Seattle WA 98104)
When: 7:30 to 9:30

Jessica Greenway for Kirkland City Council
Where: Greenway home – 110 15th Ave
When: 7:30 PM

Kate Martin for Seattle School Board
Where: Rosita’s (7210 Woodlawn Ave NE, Seattle)
When: 7 PM

Joe McDermott for King County Council
Where: West 5 (4539 California Ave SW, Seattle)
When: 8 PM

Dean Willard for Port CommissionerWhere: Fado Irish Pub and Restaurant (801 1st Ave S, Seattle)
When 7:30 PM

MDC Election Night Party with Pete Holmes
Where: Arctic Club (700 3rd)
When 5-8:30 PM

Bruce Harrell for Seattle City CouncilWhere: Four Seasons Restaurant (714 S King St, Seattle)
When: 7 – 10 PM

32nd District Democrats Election Night Party
Selena’s Mexican Kitchen (14622 15th Ave NE)
When: 7 – 9:30 PM

Where are Drop Boxes for Ballots in King County – Nov 8, 2011?

Election Day is upon us Tuesday, Nov 8, 2011. 
What if you first realize after 5 PM that you forgot to mail your ballot?
Well there is one last thing you can do. Put it in a dropbox for voting by 8 PM!
You can also put it in a mail pickup box by 5 or 6 PM depending on the location. Ckeck for the last pickup time before you put it in a Post Office Pickup Box. It must have a stamp on it.
King County Elections Dropbox locations (no stamp needed) are listed below:

You can also go to King County Elections for locations and maps of drop boxes.Locations include:
Crossroads Shopping Center
15600 NE 8th Street
Bellevue, WA 98008
Federal Way City Hall
33325 8th Avenue South
Federal Way, WA 98003

Issaquah City Hall
130 East Sunset Way
Issaquah, WA 98027
King County Elections
919 SW Grady Way
Renton, WA 98057
Lake Forest Park City Hall
17425 Ballinger Way NE
Lake Forest Park, WA 98155Regional Justice Center
401 4th Avenue N.
Kent, WA 98032
Redmond City Hall
15670 NE 85th Street
Redmond, WA 98052
Tahoma School District Office
25720 Maple Valley-Black Diamond Rd SE
Maple Valley, WA 98038
King County Administration Building
500 4th Avenue
Seattle, WA 98104
Magnuson Park
6344 NE 74th Street
Seattle, WA 98115
Ballard Branch Library
57th Street & 22nd Avenue NW
Seattle, WA 98107
Remember -all ballots must be placed in Balot Drop Boxes by 8 PM today

Why Initiative 1053 needs to be Overturned by the Courts

The 2/3 vote requirement rule for the Washington State Legislature to act on revenue measures  imposed by Tim Eyman’s Initiative 1053 needs to be overturned. Everyone acts as if it is law, including most of the Washington State Legislators, but it is unconstitutional. The issue is before the Washington Court system and needs to be resolved.

I-1053 has created a crisis for our state. It  has limited the options of our state government to address our current  financial crisis. The result is that the state is being forced to continue to cut basic services like education and health care. It is driving the crisis into a downward spiral.

The state has already cut it’s budget by $10 billion and is facing another $2 billion in cuts just to balance its current budget.

The I-1053 campaign is just another example of misguided anti-government legislation that unfortunately has an opposite effect from what many voters thought they were voting on. They bought the rhetoric thinking it was good for the average citizen in this state.

However it was  Big Business and Corporate interests in this state that saw the measure for what it was – another opening to consolidate their power over the State Legislature. Corporations like the Bank of America and BP saw that this so called rule gave them virtual immunity from the threat of seeing their special interest tax exemptions being repealed once Eyman’s definition of a tax increase included repeal of tax exemptions. Voters missed this.

The Legislature over the years has passed special interest tax exemptions with a simple majority vote of 50%. These tax exemptions now exceed revenue from collected taxes. These tax exemptions are really expenditures of state money that if not in place could be used for other purposes like educating our youth and creating jobs. I-1053 has essentially grandfathered existing tax exemptions in permanently. That is because a 2/3 vote in both houses is needed to repeal them. This is almost impossible to do, considering that special interests only need to secure the votes of 17 Legislators out of 147 to stop a revenue measure being passed.

I-1053 also makes it almost impossible to raise any taxes on business. So the State is left with essentially one option to pay its bills and balance the budget – cutting programs.  Unfortunately for Washington residents, cutting means ending services and jobs  that benefit the majority of Washington voters, especially the middle class and working families.

It’s time to take back the Legislature from the special interests and reject the 2/3 voting requirement. There is a basic constitutional issue here.  What has happened is that on revenue issues, I-1053 is saying that if Legislators are for revenue increases or repealing tax exemptions, their vote only counts as half a vote, rather than a full vote, in trying to pass measures. Nothing in the Constitution says that this is the case or that this is allowed.

I-1053 was an initiative, not a constitutional amendment.  You can not change the constitution with an initiative.  The Washington State Constitution says that bills shall be passed by majority votes, not by 2/3 votes. I-1053 is unconstitutional and the courts need to reject it so the state can address it’s financial problems without special interests calling the shots.

The people also need to reject any further measures by Eyman trying to reaffirm I-1053. He will be running another one in 2012.  The reason for this is that for the first two years  after an initiative is passed, it takes a 2/3 vote of the Legislature to amend it. After that it is a majority vote.   By passing another 1053 type initiative, it would extend for two more years the inability of the Legislature to amend the 2/3 vote requirement. Voters need to understand that I-1053 style initiatives requiring a 2/3 vote to pass revenue measures benefits special interests a lot more than the average voter.

It’s time to reject the 2/3 vote requirement and take back the Legislature from the special interests.