The Chapel Hill News Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Register / Log In
High: 55°
Low:  32°
52 °
5-Day Forecast
Search:  Site  Archives 

Editorials Home / Opinion / Editorials  




Published: Nov 13, 2007 10:19 PM
Modified: Nov 13, 2007 10:20 PM

Elections bring some surprises
 
Story Tools
  Printer Friendly   Email to a Friend
  Enlarge Font   Decrease Font
  del.icio.us   Digg it
More Editorials
Advertisements
Nov. 6’s local elections produced their share of ho-hum results — to no one’s surprise, the incumbent mayors won easily in Carrboro and Chapel Hill, for example -- but they also turned up a few startling outcomes.

Matt Czajkowski -- it’s pronounced “Chai-cow-ski,” although we wonder whether he’d mind if we borrow a page from a certain basketball coach and just go with “Councilman C” — pulled off a dramatic upset of incumbent Cam Hill to win a seat on the Chapel Hill Town Council.

At least it looks that way; Czajkowski’s 60-vote margin appears likely to hold up, but it won’t be official until it’s official, which should happen later this week.

For poll-watchers Tuesday night, Czajkowski’s victory was the equivalent of a come-from-behind buzzer-beater. Ever since, the local politerati have been deconstructing Czajkowski’s surprise victory. How did he do it? What does it signify?

During the campaign, Hill and Czajkowski offered starkly opposing views of downtown Chapel Hill — Hill called Franklin Street “amazingly healthy,” while Czajkowski said “much of Franklin Street is simply not attractive” and called for measures to improve parking, decrease panhandling and recruit desirable retailers to fill vacant storefronts. Was that the key? And does it mean voters want to see significant changes in downtown policies?

Ballots don’t ask voters WHY they voted the way they did, of course, so all such analysis is necessarily speculative. But as impressive as Czajkowski’s win is, we’d be wary of reading a 60-vote margin, especially when the other incumbents won handily, as a clarion call for dramatic change.

Also eye-opening was Jim Ward’s vote total, the highest among any of the candidates running for Town Council. Ward raised and spent essentially no money on the campaign. Regardless of where you stand on Ward’s politics, it’s refreshing to know that around here money isn’t the measure by which candidates succeed.


If you have a comment on today's editorial, please contact Dave Hart, associate editor, at 932-8744 or dhart@nando.com.
advertisements
View All » Top Jobs
  Triangle Member Newspapers:    The News & Observer   |   The Chapel Hill News   |   The Cary News   |   The Durham News   |  Eastern Wake News   |  The Herald   |  North Raleigh News
  © Copyright 2008, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company

  Help | Contact Us | Parental Consent | Privacy | Terms of Use | N&O Store | Advertising
Hosting Partners of
newsobserver.com