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Flynn's Harp: Nickels will enliven Secretary of State race (1-18-12)
Posted on 1/19/2012
by Mike Flynn
Former Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels’ likely decision to seek the Democratic nomination for Washington Secretary of State may represent a sobering reality to the three Democrats already announced and campaigning. But it’s also a bit of cold water on the hopes of those who figured he’d seek to regain the city’s top elected position next year from “the accidental mayor.”
While Nickels has given himself until Valentine’s Day to make up his mind about a race that he says he didn’t really begin to contemplate until “over the Holidays,” it was clear during a telephone interview that he’s already thinking about what he would seek to accomplish in the office. The chances that he will decide not to run are remote.
Wyman notes that she has “already demonstrated the ability to perform the functions of the Secretary of State’s position, like elections supervision and business filings, at the county level.” She, of course, has the endorsement from Reed to replace him.
If the others of both parties hoping to succeed Reed were taken aback by the prospect of campaigning against Nickels, many Seattleites who were hoping he would seek to reclaim the mayor’s job in 2013 were surprised and disappointed. There was a sense on the part of business leaders and others that Nickels, who actually finished third in the 2009 primary, was merely supposed to be getting a signal from many who wished to send him a message about a perceived arrogance, not oust him from the job.
For those, who had no interest in having Mike McGinn as mayor but didn’t care for businessman Joe Mallahan, it was an interesting lesson in not wasting your vote to send messages. So as McGinn’s relations with the City Council, the governor and the business community have soured, many took to referring to him as “the accidental mayor” and were awaiting Nickels’ effort to win back the office.
Since being rejected by the voters, which Nickels describes as “a very humbling experience that gives you a different perspective on things,” he has had a teaching fellowship at Harvard, served as a public delegate to the United Nations and traveled to the Ukraine to advise mayors there.
He describes those experiences as “two years of experimenting” to determine what he’d do next. Now, he says, the role of Secretary of State would be “a logical continuation” of his 35-year love affair with public service.
Drew became the first Democrat in memory to be elected to her east King County seat in 1992, unseating eventual GOP gubernatorial candidate Dino Rossi before losing to him four years later. She has since been involved in higher education at the UW Bothell campus, wrote the state’s ethics law, worked closely with tribes and been involved in governmental reforms efforts.
The two Democratic legislators, Kastama and Hudgins, would have expected to draw from a traditional base of financial support for Democrats in a down-ballot contest that stands to draw less attention than the high-visibility race for the open gubernatorial seat, for president, U.S. Senate and congressional races.
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