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Monthly Archives: April 2008

Election Results, April 1st 2008

For many races in Wisconsin, April 1st was our general election. Although the presidential and congressional elections await us in November, many offices are now decided.

For the most part, especially in offices for City Council, Municipal Judge, and our School Board, incumbents prevailed. Two of three City Council seats were unopposed; the third seat was effectively unopposed as one of the candidates was unable to hold the office due to other obligations, but remained on the ballot.

All of the three school board seats up for election were uncontested.

Our serving municipal judge was elected in his own right on Tuesday night.

For the two seats on the downsized Walworth county board, one incumbent won, and one was defeated. Bankruptcy lawyer Frederick Mark Bromley defeated incumbent board member Ann Lohrmann. He won the seat by just over 120 votes.

In the other Walworth County Board race with a district in the city, incumbent Jerry Grant defeated challenger Jim Stewart by just under 50 votes.

One clear sign though, worth noting: serving Justice Louis Butler carried the City of Whitewater against challenger for the seat Michael Gabelman. Justice Butler was defeated in his bid for retention, but he prevailed in Whitewater. Butler carried few of Wisconsin’s seventy-two counties, and Walworth County was not among those supporting him.

Yet he carried Whitewater, by a good margin. This must be of concern to the self-styled conservatives of the city — Whitewater’s majority chose against the right’s avowedly conservative candidate. Following the defeat in the City of Whitewater of the (successful statewide) 2006 referenda on a marriage amendment and the death penalty, it’s clear that there’s a building majority for a different course from our past, and from other places in Wisconsin.

Although I am not always in agreement with the progressives, it’s easy to see that they are increasingly successful in town, on significant issues that affect our state. In time, they may come to shape a new direction in our city. They have not achieved that result, but the momentum is theirs.

Daily Bread: April 2, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

It’s the second day of the month, and the day after elections here in Wisconsin. I will post an assessment recap of local races this evening. For the most part, incumbents prevailed, but there were some prevailing challengers both locally and statewide.

The National Weather Service predicts today will be mostly sunny, with a high of 51 degrees. The Farmers’ Almanac concurs — they offer a forecast for mostly fair skies.

The Brewers did not play yesterday, and are undefeated.

More posts later tonight.

Daily Bread: April 1, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

It’s April 1st, traditionally a day of pranks and jokes. I’d had thought of going that route myself with a post, but I’ll refrain from that course. The forecast is for a chance of rain or snow, with a high of 39 degrees. That’s joke enough. The calendar says spring, but the weather says midwest spring.

It’s election day across the state. In Whitewater, voters have choices in municipal, county, and statewide races. These races include a contentious Wisconsin Supreme Court contest. No contest in the city is similarly heated.

The Common Council meeting typically held tonight will take place on Thursday, April 3rd at 6:30 p.m. There are no scheduled public meetings today.

At 5 p.m. tonight, the FFA will hold its alumni spaghetti dinner at the high school.

The Brewers won yesterday, in ten innings, having put a lead at risk. They beat the Cubs, so all is forgiven. I’ll debut a new, sporadic feature on Brewers baseball next week, called Ballpark. I’ll cover the Brewers season, with posts appearing about once each week.

New Environmental Website: Greenvoting.com

In Wisconsin, there are thousands of independent websites, many of them covering a single city or town, but others devoted to an issue or project. From a student-led effort at Marquette University, there’s a new environmental website called Greenvoting.com. Here’s a description of the Greenvoting.com website:

Greenvoting is sort of a hybrid between Wikipedia and Craigslist. We are a resource of information on issues related to the environment (with a focus on Wisconsin), but our information is primarily user-generated. We are also a community resource, and we invite individuals and organizations to contribute to our site, edit (yes!) our pages, and collaborate with other individuals and organizations.

We are utilizing an innovative web service provided by a company called Wetpaint, which allows users to edit web pages without any special training. It’s as easy as word processing!

Best wishes to Regina and everyone working on this new website.