Politics

Peter Steinbrueck hurls some thunderbolts at Mayor Nickels

In a supportive crowd of neighborhood activists, the former city council member lets loose a barrage of charges against NIckels' punishment/reward style of governance.

Peter Steinbrueck hurls some thunderbolts at Mayor Nickels
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by

Ted Van Dyk

In a supportive crowd of neighborhood activists, the former city council member lets loose a barrage of charges against NIckels' punishment/reward style of governance.

Former Seattle City Council President Peter Steinbrueck, until recently the prospective leading challenger to Mayor Greg Nickels in this fall's elections, let 'er rip last Saturday at a well attended Seattle Neighborhood Coalition meeting at the Salmon Bay Cafe in Ballard.

Steinbrueck, bound for Harvard this fall on a Loeb Fellowship, intends to study urban design and related issues, and then to return to Seattle restored and reinvigorated.  He expressed his regret that, after his disavowal of candidacy, no like-minded challenger had emerged to challenge Nickels.  He made clear, however, that in his judgment Nickels had to go. Among Steinbrueck's comments:

Among those attending the breakfast (mainly, neighborhood representatives from around the city) were Council candidates Rusty Williams and Bobby Forch, both running for the seat being vacated by Richard McIver.  Several of the neighborhood types related chapter-and-verse examples of Nickels administration bullying of them and their political allies.  Petitions were being circulated for signature on behalf of changing the present at-large-elected council to one elected partly by district and partly at large. I signed one of the petititions. Steinbrueck, however, said he opposed the concept and continued to favor a council elected citywide.

Steinbrueck will make another appearance on his farewell tour this coming Thursday evening at the Seattle Public Library when he leads a discussion of comparative Seattle and Vancouver, B.C. planning models.   He can be expected to throw fewer lightning bolts in this non-political setting.  But he threw enough last Saturday to get Nickels' attention.

Ted Van Dyk

By Ted Van Dyk

Ted Van Dyk has been active in national policy and politics since 1961, serving in the White House and State Department and as policy director of several Democratic presidential campaigns. He is auth