New King County Executive will help protect environment
Dow Constantine handily defeated Susan Hutchison on Tuesday in a rancorous race for King County executive.
Riding a late-breaking wave of liberal support, Dow Constantine
handily defeated Susan Hutchison on Tuesday in a rancorous race for
King County executive.
The two candidates spent a record amount
with Constantine hammering at Hutchison, a former TV news anchor, as an
inexperienced right-winger and Hutchison bashing Constantine, a
Metropolitan King County Council member, as an entrenched politician
who mismanaged the county.
Constantine declared an "overwhelming
victory" to a rowdy crowd at The Edgewater Hotel in Seattle. Voters
weren't looking for just any change, he said. "They were looking for
change consistent with King County."
Speaking to applauding fans
at the Hyatt Regency in Bellevue, Hutchison said she wouldn't concede
Tuesday night. "We've had a terrific weekend, and we are going to wait
the interminable wait, as the ballots come in."
With almost 40
percent of the expected votes counted, Constantine held a 57-43 percent
edge. Hutchison would have to see a remarkable reversal of those
results to make a comeback.
The two candidates spent much of the
race arguing about who would be the better person to clean up the
county's budget, which is projected to face a $110 million shortfall
over the next two years.
Capitalizing on name recognition from
her 20-year career as a KIRO-TV anchor, Hutchison won the Aug. 18
top-two primary election, beating seven opponents, including two
Democratic state lawmakers and two Democratic members of the County
Council.
Party lines
But the primary revealed a potential
pitfall for Hutchison. Although countywide races were made nonpartisan
by a voter-approved initiative in 2008 and Hutchison insisted she was
nonpartisan, she had strong ties to Republicans. And her four
Democratic rivals in the primary grabbed 62 percent of the vote to her
33 percent.
If Constantine, a pro-abortion-rights, pro-labor,
pro-transit Democrat, could collect most of the left-leaning votes in
the general election, he would win in King County, where 70 percent of
the electorate marked their ballots for Barack Obama last year.
Constantine
set out to paint Hutchison as an arch-conservative who had contributed
to anti-abortion candidates such as Mike Huckabee and George W. Bush.
He and union and abortion-rights allies accused Hutchison of running a
"big wink" campaign: pretending to be moderate when she was actually
King County's version of Sarah Palin.
Hutchison appeared to
blunt some of the attack by coming out in support of Referendum 71 and
the state's "everything-but-marriage" law for gay couples. She also
opposed Initiative 1033, Tim Eyman's latest tax-limiting ballot measure.
Turnaround in race
In early October Hutchison still held a small lead, according to a KING-TV poll.
But then things started to change.
Constantine,
the first county-executive candidate to run a $1 million campaign,
raised about $300,000 more than Hutchison, and he spent about $100,000
more on TV time than she did through Oct. 27. He pounded away at
Hutchison's values, saying she was too conservative for King County.
His
TV bombardment seemed to catch fire with late undecided voters who
began tuning in to the race when ballots went out on Oct. 14.
Those
voters were swayed by Constantine's "values" campaign, said John Wyble,
who ran state Rep. Ross Hunter's unsuccessful primary campaign for
county executive.
"Dow has more money, and at some point that starts to matter," Wyble added.
The
race flipped shortly after ballots went out, said Constantine spokesman
Sandeep Kaushik. "That's when we ramped up our TV, field operations and
phone banks."
At the same time, campaigns for R-71 and against I-1033 brought out more liberal voters who sided with Constantine.
"Democrats came home" to Constantine after flirting with Hutchison, Kaushik said.
On
Election Night, Hutchison told her supporters they had "already changed
the culture of the county" with their push for reform.
She said
there are things she would have "tweaked" in how she ran the campaign,
as a first-time candidate. "I had a gigantic learning curve; I've never
run a campaign before," she said. "Those who have been through this
before would have had a better instinct, especially at the beginning."
Constantine credited Hutchison with running a "very vigorous, very strong" campaign.
He
took up the reform challenge from her camp: "To her supporters I say
this: Give us a chance. I share your concerns about King County. I have
made it clear. I'm bringing reform to King County. You watch us. We're
going to do it."

