About the Race
The election for Centerville’s seat on the Virginia Beach City Council takes place on November 3, 2020, in conjunction with the US presidential election. Incumbent Sabrina Wooten, who assumed office in 2018, is running against US Navy Veteran Eric Wray. This race is nonpartisan.
About the District
The Centerville district is located in the southwest corner of the city and borders Norfolk. Virginia Beach is an independent city located in Hampton Roads on the southeastern coast of the Commonwealth. It is the most populous city in Virginia, with a population of 1.2 million. Virginia Beach is politically split and is considered a toss-up. Donald Trump won the city with 48% of the vote, to Hillary Clinton’s 44%, in 2016. However, in 2018 Democrat Elaine Luria won 51% of the vote.
Recommendation
Councilwoman Sabrina Wooten first joined the Virginia Beach City Council in 2018, when she was elected to fill the seat left vacant by Bob Dyer. She was appointed to the Board of Governors for the National Association of Nonprofit Organizations and Executives in 2018. She also served as Vice-Chair of the Minority Business Council and is a member of the National Small Business Association, the American Society for Public Administration, and the National Association of Professional Women. Wooten formerly worked as a chaplain for the Virginia Beach Police Department.
Wooten is committed to issues of racial justice. Her work as a police chaplain has given her insight into many problems within police departments. She believes serious reform is necessary to ensure all communities in Virginia Beach are safe. She supports the Virginia Beach Police Department’s implementation of the “Eight Can’t Wait” policies and will see they are followed. “Eight Can’t Wait” is eight policies designed to reduce police violence that include banning chokeholds, exhausting all alternatives before shooting, reporting all uses of force, and requiring officers to intervene when force is misused. Wooten will work to see more improvements made on police reform, including creating an empowered Citizens’ Review Board for police misconduct and banning the use of chemical weapons.
On the issue of affordable housing, Wooten believes that the city must do more to ensure that working families, senior citizens, young adults, and public servants all have access to high-quality housing that they can afford. She wants to provide developers with incentives to redevelop housing with affordability in mind.
Wooten supports increasing compensation for all Virginia Beach public school employees, particularly in the face of rising housing prices and an increased cost of living. She believes that annual increases to teacher salaries are a solution to the economic challenges and hardships faced by the city’s teachers.
Wooten has been endorsed in this race by the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee.
Wooten’s opponent, Eric Wray, is a US Navy veteran and served on the Virginia State Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers under Governor McDonnell. Wray is an ardent supporter of police and promises never to support measures that would reallocate resources from police to social services or other first responders. He will work to eliminate what he calls “unnecessary red tape” within the government and reduce taxes. Wray considers gun-ownership as a “God-given right” and vows that he will never vote to infringe on it.
Sabrina Wooten is the progressive choice for this race.
About the Race
The election for Centerville’s seat on the Virginia Beach City Council takes place on November 3, 2020, in conjunction with the US presidential election. Incumbent Sabrina Wooten, who assumed office in 2018, is running against US Navy Veteran Eric Wray. This race is nonpartisan.
About the District
The Centerville district is located in the southwest corner of the city and borders Norfolk. Virginia Beach is an independent city located in Hampton Roads on the southeastern coast of the Commonwealth. It is the most populous city in Virginia, with a population of 1.2 million. Virginia Beach is politically split and is considered a toss-up. Donald Trump won the city with 48% of the vote, to Hillary Clinton’s 44%, in 2016. However, in 2018 Democrat Elaine Luria won 51% of the vote.
Recommendation
Councilwoman Sabrina Wooten first joined the Virginia Beach City Council in 2018, when she was elected to fill the seat left vacant by Bob Dyer. She was appointed to the Board of Governors for the National Association of Nonprofit Organizations and Executives in 2018. She also served as Vice-Chair of the Minority Business Council and is a member of the National Small Business Association, the American Society for Public Administration, and the National Association of Professional Women. Wooten formerly worked as a chaplain for the Virginia Beach Police Department.
Wooten is committed to issues of racial justice. Her work as a police chaplain has given her insight into many problems within police departments. She believes serious reform is necessary to ensure all communities in Virginia Beach are safe. She supports the Virginia Beach Police Department’s implementation of the “Eight Can’t Wait” policies and will see they are followed. “Eight Can’t Wait” is eight policies designed to reduce police violence that include banning chokeholds, exhausting all alternatives before shooting, reporting all uses of force, and requiring officers to intervene when force is misused. Wooten will work to see more improvements made on police reform, including creating an empowered Citizens’ Review Board for police misconduct and banning the use of chemical weapons.
On the issue of affordable housing, Wooten believes that the city must do more to ensure that working families, senior citizens, young adults, and public servants all have access to high-quality housing that they can afford. She wants to provide developers with incentives to redevelop housing with affordability in mind.
Wooten supports increasing compensation for all Virginia Beach public school employees, particularly in the face of rising housing prices and an increased cost of living. She believes that annual increases to teacher salaries are a solution to the economic challenges and hardships faced by the city’s teachers.
Wooten has been endorsed in this race by the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee.
Wooten’s opponent, Eric Wray, is a US Navy veteran and served on the Virginia State Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers under Governor McDonnell. Wray is an ardent supporter of police and promises never to support measures that would reallocate resources from police to social services or other first responders. He will work to eliminate what he calls “unnecessary red tape” within the government and reduce taxes. Wray considers gun-ownership as a “God-given right” and vows that he will never vote to infringe on it.
Sabrina Wooten is the 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.