Otros Candidatos
There are six other candidates in the race for Seattle City Council from District 3. Andrew Ashiofu's name may be familiar to voters, as he ran last year for state Legislature. He serves as the chair of the Washington State Stonewall Democrats, co-chair of the Seattle LGBTQ Commission, and board member for People Of Color Against AIDS Network (POCAAN) and Gay City. He has also served on the King County HIV Planning Council, the Harborview Madison Clinic Community Advisory Board, and the Washington State Department of Health COVID Vaccine Implementation Council.
In our interview with Ashiofu, he described how being HIV-positive and formerly unhoused has motivated him to fight for the most vulnerable of the district. He stated that the city needs to reduce the timeline to build housing and that a housing-first policy would alleviate the issues of people needing to live on the streets. While he shared many similar progressive views as his opponents, Ashiofu mentioned a few unique specifics - adding sanitation centers that the houseless could use, as well as harm reduction centers and more civilian investigators to police oversight.
Deputy prosecuting attorney Efrain Hudnell works for the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s office. There are several positives about Hudnell's platform, including investing in alternatives to policing, supporting more therapeutic courts instead of jail time, and shifting away from surface parking lots to promote more commercial and residential housing.
The biggest problem with Hudnell's record is that he joined the right-wing Federalist Society in 2017 as a law student at Seattle University. The organization is centered around conservative lawyers and is viewed as a pipeline for conservative Supreme Court justices, including Roberts, Alito, and Gorsuch, the latter appointed in the very year Hudnell chose to join. Hudnell left the organization in the Spring of 2018, stating that a paid trip to see Clarence Thomas opened his eyes to the group's privileged, conservative agenda.
Democratic socialist candidate Ry Armstrong is a queer artist and climate activist running to be the first openly queer candidate to represent District 3 (Ashiofu and Hollingsworth are also LGBTQ+), as well as the first openly nonbinary council member. They have high ambitions for the city, including establishing Seattle as a “right to shelter” and carbon-neutral city.
Their community experience includes serving as executive director of a small LGBTQ-focused nonprofit. While some of Armstrong's plans are interesting, like taxing corporations for carbon emission pollution, others are questionable, like asking the federal government to donate a retired battleship to retrofit into thousands of units of housing. Other ideas with uncertain prospects for funding include a mandate that Seattle provide shelter to anyone who needs it through a hotline and if the city cannot, it would be liable to fine itself. Though not easily funded, much of Armstrong's agenda is progressive, including seeking more affordable housing, rent control, alternatives to traditional policing, and more. For their ambitious agenda, they've been endorsed by the Seattle Green Party, King County Young Democrats, Green Party Washington, and Moms Demand Action among other organizations.
Like Armstrong, cannabis producer Alex Cooley has good intentions in seeking alternatives to filling up our jails with people struggling with addiction and wanting to expand housing. But his desire to legalize all drugs and dedicate one million square feet to the unhoused in the form of a state park are likely nonstarters for public policy.
Shobhit Agarwal describes himself as a first-generation gay immigrant from India who serves on the board for Trikone NW, a South Asian LGBTQ group. He wants to see more racially diverse police officers and to expand low-income housing through social housing, though this initiative will likely need additional funding to kickstart it, and Agarwal makes no mention of raising revenue for this or other programs. He also adds that he wants to "compartmentalize" homelessness, though he offers no details as to what that means.
Public defender Bobby Goodwin is running to erase graffiti, stamp out ticket scalping, increase prosecutions, and increase mental health care access.
Neither Goodwin nor Agarwal has significant organizational endorsements or political experience.
There are six other candidates in the race for Seattle City Council from District 3. Andrew Ashiofu's name may be familiar to voters, as he ran last year for state Legislature. He serves as the chair of the Washington State Stonewall Democrats, co-chair of the Seattle LGBTQ Commission, and board member for People Of Color Against AIDS Network (POCAAN) and Gay City. He has also served on the King County HIV Planning Council, the Harborview Madison Clinic Community Advisory Board, and the Washington State Department of Health COVID Vaccine Implementation Council.
In our interview with Ashiofu, he described how being HIV-positive and formerly unhoused has motivated him to fight for the most vulnerable of the district. He stated that the city needs to reduce the timeline to build housing and that a housing-first policy would alleviate the issues of people needing to live on the streets. While he shared many similar progressive views as his opponents, Ashiofu mentioned a few unique specifics - adding sanitation centers that the houseless could use, as well as harm reduction centers and more civilian investigators to police oversight.
Deputy prosecuting attorney Efrain Hudnell works for the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s office. There are several positives about Hudnell's platform, including investing in alternatives to policing, supporting more therapeutic courts instead of jail time, and shifting away from surface parking lots to promote more commercial and residential housing.
The biggest problem with Hudnell's record is that he joined the right-wing Federalist Society in 2017 as a law student at Seattle University. The organization is centered around conservative lawyers and is viewed as a pipeline for conservative Supreme Court justices, including Roberts, Alito, and Gorsuch, the latter appointed in the very year Hudnell chose to join. Hudnell left the organization in the Spring of 2018, stating that a paid trip to see Clarence Thomas opened his eyes to the group's privileged, conservative agenda.
Democratic socialist candidate Ry Armstrong is a queer artist and climate activist running to be the first openly queer candidate to represent District 3 (Ashiofu and Hollingsworth are also LGBTQ+), as well as the first openly nonbinary council member. They have high ambitions for the city, including establishing Seattle as a “right to shelter” and carbon-neutral city.
Their community experience includes serving as executive director of a small LGBTQ-focused nonprofit. While some of Armstrong's plans are interesting, like taxing corporations for carbon emission pollution, others are questionable, like asking the federal government to donate a retired battleship to retrofit into thousands of units of housing. Other ideas with uncertain prospects for funding include a mandate that Seattle provide shelter to anyone who needs it through a hotline and if the city cannot, it would be liable to fine itself. Though not easily funded, much of Armstrong's agenda is progressive, including seeking more affordable housing, rent control, alternatives to traditional policing, and more. For their ambitious agenda, they've been endorsed by the Seattle Green Party, King County Young Democrats, Green Party Washington, and Moms Demand Action among other organizations.
Like Armstrong, cannabis producer Alex Cooley has good intentions in seeking alternatives to filling up our jails with people struggling with addiction and wanting to expand housing. But his desire to legalize all drugs and dedicate one million square feet to the unhoused in the form of a state park are likely nonstarters for public policy.
Shobhit Agarwal describes himself as a first-generation gay immigrant from India who serves on the board for Trikone NW, a South Asian LGBTQ group. He wants to see more racially diverse police officers and to expand low-income housing through social housing, though this initiative will likely need additional funding to kickstart it, and Agarwal makes no mention of raising revenue for this or other programs. He also adds that he wants to "compartmentalize" homelessness, though he offers no details as to what that means.
Public defender Bobby Goodwin is running to erase graffiti, stamp out ticket scalping, increase prosecutions, and increase mental health care access.
Neither Goodwin nor Agarwal has significant organizational endorsements or political experience.