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Seattle is set to elect a slate of shitlib retards in November:

RIP evan and MPA: Results from the 2025 Washington state ...
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  08/06/25


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Date: August 6th, 2025 3:45 PM
Author: ,.,..,.,..,.,.,.,..,.,.,,..,..,.,,..,.,,.


RIP evan and MPA:

Results from the 2025 Washington state primary were being tallied and recorded Tuesday night as voters decided the races for Seattle mayor, Seattle city attorney, spots on the Seattle City Council, and the Seattle School Board.

Below are the results from Tuesday night’s primary election. These results were last updated at 5:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Washington uses a top-two primary system in local elections, meaning the two candidates who received the most votes in the primary will advance to the general election in November.

Seattle mayoral race

Katie Wilson, the co-founder and executive director of the Transit Riders Union, received the most votes for mayor with 44,457 votes (46.2%), leading incumbent Bruce Harrell by 1,297 votes (43,160 votes, 44.9%). No other candidate received more than 5,000 votes.

Seattle voters haven’t reelected their mayor in some time. If Harrell wins, he would become Seattle’s first two-term mayor since Greg Nickels in 2009.

Joe Mallahan, former vice president of business development at T-Mobile, finished third in the race.

Seattle City Attorney

Erika Evans, a former assistant U.S. attorney, leads incumbent Ann Davison by 14 points after receiving more than 50% of the vote. Evans finished with 48,290 votes (51.1%) while Davison tallied 35,136 votes (37.2%). Similarly to the mayoral race, no other candidate registered more than 7% of the vote.

Seattle City Council

Three spots, positions No. 2, No. 8, and No. 9, were on the ballot this primary election cycle.

Eddie Lin, a lawyer for the City of Seattle who mainly represents the Office of Housing, leads the pack for position No. 2 with 5,266 votes (45.7%), followed by Adonis Ducksworth with 3,528 votes (30.6%), Jeanie Chunn with 1,443 votes (12.5%), and Jamie Fackler with 1,203 votes (10.4%).

Lin was recently endorsed by The Stranger.

The D2 council seat is up for election due to Tammy Morales’ early resignation. Mark Solomon filled the seat as a temporary replacement, but did not run for re-election.

The position No. 8 seat on the Seattle City Council has been a one-sided race from the jump. Alexis Mercedes Rinck, the incumbent, leads with more than 75% of the vote (68,078 votes). Rachael Savage received 13,503 (14.9%) while no other candidate topped 5,000 votes.

Sara Nelson, who was unanimously elected Council President in January 2024, trails Dionne Foster, an adjunct faculty member for social work with the University of Washington (UW), by nearly 14,000 votes after Foster received 53.7% of the votes. Foster was also a former policy advisor for Seattle.

Seattle School Board

Joe Mizrahi (67.4% of the total vote) and Vivian Song (72.3% of the total vote) are leading their respective races for a spot on the Seattle School Board significantly, while the battle for District No. 2 is neck and neck. Kathleen Smith (44.8%) leads Sarah Clark (43.6%) by less than 200 votes.

More ballot counts will be released in the coming days, and the Secretary of State will certify the final election results on Aug. 22.

https://mynorthwest.com/mynorthwest-politics/seattle-primary/4119332

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5759237&forum_id=2#49162521)