Other Candidates
There are two other candidates in the race for Spokane City Council President - Kim Plese and Andy Rathbun. Plese is a Republican who ran for Spokane County Commissioner in 2022 and lost to Democrat Chris Jordan. This year, the former printing company owner is back running for this nonpartisan position on a familiar platform. She is running, in part, because she's disappointed that the current council has supported statewide police accountability measures and mentions broadly that she will support the police department. Plese also states that she will work with regional partners on building more housing - an effort already underway through the regional homelessness coalition.
Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Andy Rathbun decided to join the race for council president hours before the deadline out of spite, stating to The Spokesman-Review that he wanted to "make [Wilkerson] squirm a bit."
Fittingly, Rathbun's campaign has some of the most vindictive and problematic policies in any candidate this year. He describes his time in the military as a time of excitement since he could bring back cases of wine from regions with armed conflict. He now complains that he cannot dodge federal taxes because of anti-discrimination laws that compel landlords to allow tenants with Section 8 vouchers. Rathbun speaks excitedly about bombing Belgrade in 1999 and his 1,500-bottle wine cellar and opposes city policies that dissuade him from opening a tenth AirBnB.
A candidate this gleeful about breaking the law on his rentals to avoid paying fees to the city but also this intense about criminalizing poverty and attacking renters should not be anywhere near city hall.
There are two other candidates in the race for Spokane City Council President - Kim Plese and Andy Rathbun. Plese is a Republican who ran for Spokane County Commissioner in 2022 and lost to Democrat Chris Jordan. This year, the former printing company owner is back running for this nonpartisan position on a familiar platform. She is running, in part, because she's disappointed that the current council has supported statewide police accountability measures and mentions broadly that she will support the police department. Plese also states that she will work with regional partners on building more housing - an effort already underway through the regional homelessness coalition.
Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Andy Rathbun decided to join the race for council president hours before the deadline out of spite, stating to The Spokesman-Review that he wanted to "make [Wilkerson] squirm a bit."
Fittingly, Rathbun's campaign has some of the most vindictive and problematic policies in any candidate this year. He describes his time in the military as a time of excitement since he could bring back cases of wine from regions with armed conflict. He now complains that he cannot dodge federal taxes because of anti-discrimination laws that compel landlords to allow tenants with Section 8 vouchers. Rathbun speaks excitedly about bombing Belgrade in 1999 and his 1,500-bottle wine cellar and opposes city policies that dissuade him from opening a tenth AirBnB.
A candidate this gleeful about breaking the law on his rentals to avoid paying fees to the city but also this intense about criminalizing poverty and attacking renters should not be anywhere near city hall.