Basic process of the at-large city council race
Posted: Mon Jun 05, 2017 1:30 pm
I run into questions about this often, so it seems worth posting here at least once.
As established in the city charter, mostly Article XIX Section 2…
Lakewood has three at-large city council members. These members are elected by the city as a whole. All at-large members serve concurrent four-year terms; every at-large seat comes up for election in the same year. This is the year for that. (The mayor, and four ward representatives on council, are elected in other odd-numbered years, e.g. 2019.)
Our local races are officially nonpartisan, and up to six at-large candidates will appear in a common candidate pool on November's ballot. Voters may vote for up to three. The first-, second- and third-place finishers in vote count are elected.
If more than six candidates file valid signatures and other paperwork with the Board of Elections by the deadline (some time later this month, I think), then there is a primary on the second Tuesday in September. The top six candidates in that primary are then advanced to the general election.
The most recent candidate list from the Board of Elections (page 37) shows six candidates who have pulled or completed petitions. This includes all incumbents and declared new candidates. It is possible to take out petitions anonymously; if anyone has seen a petition for a candidate not on that list, you have quite a potential scoop. But otherwise, at present it looks like voting in the at-large race will just be November's general election.
Hope this is some help.
As established in the city charter, mostly Article XIX Section 2…
Lakewood has three at-large city council members. These members are elected by the city as a whole. All at-large members serve concurrent four-year terms; every at-large seat comes up for election in the same year. This is the year for that. (The mayor, and four ward representatives on council, are elected in other odd-numbered years, e.g. 2019.)
Our local races are officially nonpartisan, and up to six at-large candidates will appear in a common candidate pool on November's ballot. Voters may vote for up to three. The first-, second- and third-place finishers in vote count are elected.
If more than six candidates file valid signatures and other paperwork with the Board of Elections by the deadline (some time later this month, I think), then there is a primary on the second Tuesday in September. The top six candidates in that primary are then advanced to the general election.
The most recent candidate list from the Board of Elections (page 37) shows six candidates who have pulled or completed petitions. This includes all incumbents and declared new candidates. It is possible to take out petitions anonymously; if anyone has seen a petition for a candidate not on that list, you have quite a potential scoop. But otherwise, at present it looks like voting in the at-large race will just be November's general election.
Hope this is some help.