Libby Garvey is the only Democratic candidate for the Arlington County Board. She was first elected to the Arlington County Board in 2012 and was re-elected in 2016. Garvey currently serves as the Board Chair. Before serving on the Arlington County Board, she served on the Arlington County School Board for 15 years.
During her time on the School Board, Garvey was committed to closing achievement gaps between white and minority students and oversaw marked improvements in minority students’ performance. She oversaw the building or renovation of nearly every school in the district.
Garvey challenges the notion that students from lower-income families are destined to have lower academic achievement. During her time on the Arlington County Board, she has implemented new policies designed to change those statistics.
Garvey worked to provide affordable housing for people of all income levels in Arlington. The incentive agreement that the County Board worked out with Amazon explicitly detailed plans for increasing affordable housing options for low-income families, including ten years of dedicated funding. However, local activists maintain that this housing support is nowhere near enough to offset the massive economic impact that Amazon’s developments will have on Arlington’s lower-income residents.
Garvey is a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement and has marched publicly with them in DC.
Garvey ordered the Arlington Police Department to withdraw from Washington DC and cease providing support for police in the city, after violence was used against protesters during demonstrations over the murder of George Floyd.
Garvey supported the Amazon incentive agreement, which gave Amazon a large incentive package in exchange for building their new headquarters in the county. The package included a direct payout worth an estimated $23 million and benefits worth up to $458 million due to transportation, housing and infrastructure spending over a 10-15 year period. Garvey believes that the jobs and infrastructure projects created by Amazon will be worth the city’s investment and will ultimately lead to economic growth and increased development. Garvey, along with the rest of the board, encouraged Amazon to pay its workers a living wage. Additionally, the Board invested $7 million a year for ten years in building affordable housing in and around the area directly impacted by Amazon.
Libby Garvey is opposed to the Columbia Pike Streetcar plan, and she believes that city transportation funds could be better used elsewhere, due to the high projected cost of the project.
Garvey’s opponent, Audrey Clement, is pro-environment but wants to cut the budget for the affordable housing initiative and opposes moving away from single-family occupancy zoning practices. Clement appears only to be progressive on environmental issues and otherwise favors more conservative tax and housing policies.
Libby Garvey is the more progressive choice for this race.
Libby Garvey is the only Democratic candidate for the Arlington County Board. She was first elected to the Arlington County Board in 2012 and was re-elected in 2016. Garvey currently serves as the Board Chair. Before serving on the Arlington County Board, she served on the Arlington County School Board for 15 years.
During her time on the School Board, Garvey was committed to closing achievement gaps between white and minority students and oversaw marked improvements in minority students’ performance. She oversaw the building or renovation of nearly every school in the district.
Garvey challenges the notion that students from lower-income families are destined to have lower academic achievement. During her time on the Arlington County Board, she has implemented new policies designed to change those statistics.
Garvey worked to provide affordable housing for people of all income levels in Arlington. The incentive agreement that the County Board worked out with Amazon explicitly detailed plans for increasing affordable housing options for low-income families, including ten years of dedicated funding. However, local activists maintain that this housing support is nowhere near enough to offset the massive economic impact that Amazon’s developments will have on Arlington’s lower-income residents.
Garvey is a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement and has marched publicly with them in DC.
Garvey ordered the Arlington Police Department to withdraw from Washington DC and cease providing support for police in the city, after violence was used against protesters during demonstrations over the murder of George Floyd.
Garvey supported the Amazon incentive agreement, which gave Amazon a large incentive package in exchange for building their new headquarters in the county. The package included a direct payout worth an estimated $23 million and benefits worth up to $458 million due to transportation, housing and infrastructure spending over a 10-15 year period. Garvey believes that the jobs and infrastructure projects created by Amazon will be worth the city’s investment and will ultimately lead to economic growth and increased development. Garvey, along with the rest of the board, encouraged Amazon to pay its workers a living wage. Additionally, the Board invested $7 million a year for ten years in building affordable housing in and around the area directly impacted by Amazon.
Libby Garvey is opposed to the Columbia Pike Streetcar plan, and she believes that city transportation funds could be better used elsewhere, due to the high projected cost of the project.
Garvey’s opponent, Audrey Clement, is pro-environment but wants to cut the budget for the affordable housing initiative and opposes moving away from single-family occupancy zoning practices. Clement appears only to be progressive on environmental issues and otherwise favors more conservative tax and housing policies.
Libby Garvey is the more progressive choice for this race.
About the Race
The election for President of the United States is on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Former Vice President and Senator from Delaware Joe Biden (D) is running against the current president, Donald J. Trump (R), a businessman and former reality television star.
About the State
Every eligible voter may cast a ballot in the presidential election. The majority of the U.S. population has voted Democratic for the last twenty-eight years, except 2004. However, the allocation of electoral college votes led to Republicans taking the White House in two of those seven elections. Turnout is typically higher during presidential election years, though 2018 saw the highest record turnout for a non-presidential election since 1914, with 50.3% of the electorate turning out to vote. Turnout for the 2016 election was at 55.7%. In 2008, when the nation elected President Barack Obama (D), turnout was 58.2% but dropped to 54.9% in 2012.