Trio of local Democrat groups join growing calls for Mayor Durkan’s resignation
Jul 17, 2020, 12:42 PM
(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
A trio of local legislative Democratic groups have joined growing calls for Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan’s resignation.
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The 36th, 37th, and 43rd District Democrats all passed resolutions this week calling on Durkan to step down.
As of tonight the @36th, @37Dems, and @43rdDems have all called on @MayorJenny to resign. Seattle deserves a Mayor who will protect our protesters and journalists from police violence and who will work to defund SPD. https://t.co/3eCW8nyseM
— 43rd District Dems (@43rdDems) July 16, 2020
“Mayor Durkan has failed to uphold the values of the Democratic Party, has failed in her responsibility to keep the people of Seattle safe, and has lost the trust of the people of Seattle,” the resolution from the 36th District Democrats reads, going on to say that if she doesn’t resign, she should instead be impeached.
The resolution cites a series of clashes between Seattle police officers and protesters in May and June, which saw SPD deploy tear gas several times in the city’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. It also accuses Durkan of “escalat[ing] the cruel and wasteful practice of ‘sweeping’ homeless encampments without providing shelter to those who are swept,” as well as withholding funding for LEAD, the city’s diversionary program for low-level offenders.
In recent weeks, at least three city councilmembers — Kshama Sawant, Tammy Morales, and Teresa Mosqueda — have also called on Durkan to resign. The mayor has stated publicly that neither she, nor Police Chief Carmen Best, have any intention of issuing their resignation.
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This comes in the wake of a judge’s ruling allowing a recall petition to move into the signature gathering phase. The petition alleges the mayor failed in her duty to rein in SPD’s use of crowd control weapons during protests on Capitol Hill.
If enough verified paper signatures are collected within a 180-day window — 25% of the total votes cast in the last mayoral election, totaling just over 56,000 — King County Elections will set a date for a special election between 45 and 90 days after certification, preferably on an already-scheduled election day.
Durkan filed a motion this week asking the judge to reconsider his ruling, arguing that as mayor, she had “no legal or constitutional duty to prescribe policies and procedures for SPD,” and that it would have violated the department’s ongoing consent decree for her to unilaterally enact crowd control policies “without court approval.”