Other Candidates
Incumbent and former news anchor Nadine Woodward is running on a conservative platform of prioritizing her big-dollar donors, sending more police into our communities, and trying to make us fear those turning to cars and tents for shelter while she makes it impossible for many of us to afford any place to live.
Like many conservative incumbents running this year, Woodward has taken the stance that public safety has declined under her watch. In this year’s budget, police have again received the most funding, with 32 percent going to police, compared to 4 percent for libraries or just 2 percent going to housing and human services. Yet Woodward, along with Police Chief Craig Meidl, is pushing to jail even more people, all while using her office to spread falsehoods about police accountability reform. At the same time, Woodward has refused to authorize an investigation into Chief Meidl's relationship with wealthy downtown business owners with whom he shared non-public information on open cases. Meidl also used the police budget to attack his political opponents, potentially a violation of state and local law.
Army veteran and former Spokane Firefighters Union President Tim Archer is a self-described "law and order" candidate who is running on a MAGA agenda that argues that Woodward is not conservative enough.
A firefighter who lost his job in 2021 after refusing to protect his community and be vaccinated against COVID-19, Archer criticizes both low-barrier shelters and housing-first initiatives to help people off the streets and into housing, two gold-standard policies proven to stabilize people into finding jobs and security. Archer states that the Spokane mayor's office should be used to fight directly against state legislation that he doesn't agree with, promising that he will protect corrupt police officers from the state attorney general's office, which "has no business saying what’s right or wrong for our police department" despite a clear legal mandate to do so.
City employee Kelly Stevens has yet to fundraise for her campaign as of early July, respond to local newspaper requests for interviews, or launch a detailed campaign platform. Her Facebook campaign page states that she wants to focus the mayor's office on gang violence, addiction resources, and efficient management. The lack of policy detail or action suggests Stevens is not mounting an active campaign.
Patrick McKann filed within hours of the deadline to be the fifth candidate in the mayoral race. In an interview with The Spokesman, McKann's candidacy seems focused mostly on traffic calming and protecting undeveloped land. He is a member of the traffic calming sub-committee of the Lincoln Heights Neighborhood Council and wants the mayor's office to add more stop signs and crosswalks to busy streets and to build more parks. While McKann’s goal to reduce traffic violence is commendable, he has no plans or priorities for the many other challenges facing Spokane, such as housing affordability, homelessness, and public safety.
Incumbent and former news anchor Nadine Woodward is running on a conservative platform of prioritizing her big-dollar donors, sending more police into our communities, and trying to make us fear those turning to cars and tents for shelter while she makes it impossible for many of us to afford any place to live.
Like many conservative incumbents running this year, Woodward has taken the stance that public safety has declined under her watch. In this year’s budget, police have again received the most funding, with 32 percent going to police, compared to 4 percent for libraries or just 2 percent going to housing and human services. Yet Woodward, along with Police Chief Craig Meidl, is pushing to jail even more people, all while using her office to spread falsehoods about police accountability reform. At the same time, Woodward has refused to authorize an investigation into Chief Meidl's relationship with wealthy downtown business owners with whom he shared non-public information on open cases. Meidl also used the police budget to attack his political opponents, potentially a violation of state and local law.
Army veteran and former Spokane Firefighters Union President Tim Archer is a self-described "law and order" candidate who is running on a MAGA agenda that argues that Woodward is not conservative enough.
A firefighter who lost his job in 2021 after refusing to protect his community and be vaccinated against COVID-19, Archer criticizes both low-barrier shelters and housing-first initiatives to help people off the streets and into housing, two gold-standard policies proven to stabilize people into finding jobs and security. Archer states that the Spokane mayor's office should be used to fight directly against state legislation that he doesn't agree with, promising that he will protect corrupt police officers from the state attorney general's office, which "has no business saying what’s right or wrong for our police department" despite a clear legal mandate to do so.
City employee Kelly Stevens has yet to fundraise for her campaign as of early July, respond to local newspaper requests for interviews, or launch a detailed campaign platform. Her Facebook campaign page states that she wants to focus the mayor's office on gang violence, addiction resources, and efficient management. The lack of policy detail or action suggests Stevens is not mounting an active campaign.
Patrick McKann filed within hours of the deadline to be the fifth candidate in the mayoral race. In an interview with The Spokesman, McKann's candidacy seems focused mostly on traffic calming and protecting undeveloped land. He is a member of the traffic calming sub-committee of the Lincoln Heights Neighborhood Council and wants the mayor's office to add more stop signs and crosswalks to busy streets and to build more parks. While McKann’s goal to reduce traffic violence is commendable, he has no plans or priorities for the many other challenges facing Spokane, such as housing affordability, homelessness, and public safety.