The most significant local races this year are not the three for the Portland city council, where the outcomes will make little difference in the city's general political tenor, but the three for the Clackamas County Commission, where the results may cause the county to do a political about-face.
Four politically experienced candidates are running for chair of the commission. Paul Savas is an incumbent commissioner with many years of service on government boards. Charlotte Lehan and John Ludlow are former mayors of Wilsonville. Dave Hunt has served five terms in the Oregon House including one as speaker of the house. My capsule and likely unfair summary is that Mr. Savas is the centrist, Ms. Lehan is the most aligned with Metro, Mr.Hunt is the most aligned with TriMet, and Mr. Ludlow is the least aligned with Metro and TriMet. The catch to recommending one of these four capable candidates is that the winner's effectiveness will depend on the outcome of the other two races.
Position 3 has three candidates: Jeff Caton, Jim Knapp, and Martha Schrader. Mr. Caton works for the Bonneville Power Administration and has a business and finance background. He has not held elective office. Mr. Knapp has served on several government volunteer boards. Ms. Schrader served six years as a county commissioner and two years in the state Senate.
Position 4 has four candidates: Jamie Damon, Dan Holladay, Tootie Smith, and John Swanson. Ms. Damon is the incumbent, appointed in 2011 to fill a vacancy. Mr. Holladay is a former Oregon City councilor and former Oregon City school board member. Ms. Smith served two terms in the Oregon House and is now a lobbyist. Mr. Swanson is chief of staff for state Senator Chuck Thomsen.
In an ordinary election the result would be a tossup between Mr. Hunt (who has union and Realtor backing) and Ms. Lehan (who has the support of the government insiders). Ms. Schrader (backed by unions and the Realtors) would win her race handily, and Ms. Damon (backed by unions and the Realtors) would win her race, though not by as wide a magin as Ms. Schrader.
This is not, however, an ordinary election. When Mr. Knapp led the petition drive to put the $5/year license fee for the Sellwood Bridge on the Clackamas County ballot two years ago, he created an organization -- perhaps "network" is the better word -- of conservative activists. That network formed the base for this year's petition drive against Clackamas County's promised $25 million contribution to Milwaukie light rail, and resulted in Mr. Ludlow, Mr. Knapp, and Ms. Smith all running for the county commission this year. It also resulted in the Oregon Transformation Project PAC giving large sums to the three candidates ($44,000 to Mr. Knapp and Ms. Smith this year, and $115,000 to Mr. Ludlow), upending the traditional world of campaign finance. (Mr. Ludlow's contributions this year are 25% more than Mr. Hunt's, three times Ms. Lehan's, and four times Mr. Savas's.) The Oregon Transformation Project also rented a billboard along Interstate 205 in support of Messrs. Ludlow and Knapp and Ms. Smith as a slate.
It seems to me that the commission should reflect the diversity of thought that has developed in Clackamas County. For that reason I am recommending that any late voters who read this vote for Paul Savas as chair -- he is likely to be the most balanced and impartial among the four candidates -- and Martha Schrader and Tootie Smith for the other two seats. It would be a mistake for Clackamas County voters to elect all of the Ludlow-Knapp-Smith slate, but it would also be a mistake to elect none of them.
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