After 30 years in the forecasting business (albeit in tech, not politics) I was pleased to see that my pre-election prediction was pretty much on the nose. I believed that the top 2 would be razor close and the differential for third position would be 1,000 votes. I only have a few witnesses to my call, but who cares? Here are the 9:30 pm results from this year's city council election which are virtually identical to the 8:05 pm results. I expect very little change when the last few votes are counted. UPDATE: Nov. 19 Semi-official results added below:
Election Night Nov. 19 Semi-Official
Emily Beach 3,165 38.64% 4.045 38.28%
Donna Colson 3,042 37.13% 3,830 36.24%
Mike Dunham 1,985 24.23% 2,693 25.48%
As I noted here when I endorsed Colson and Beach after interviewing all three candidates, having an election is a very important community event. Letting incumbents walk in for another term unopposed without engaging the community is not healthy. So Mike Dunham gets another tip of the hat for taking on the challenge. He did fairly well all considered; riding his team's community activism, the usual undercurrent of "throw the bums out" and a decent amount of fundraising. He raised $22K and spent $15K which begs the question of what else might have added to his total aside from walking neighborhoods and making phone calls? As of two weeks ago Colson had spent $21.7K and Beach spent $26K and there were no last minute pushes so this really (really!) was not about the money.
Texting with Mike tonight for his thoughts on the race, here is what he had to add
From a policy point of view, one thing that was very apparent talking to voters is that almost no one is happy about the new Facebook campus coming to Burlingame, and I suspect that the full consequences of the Council's dramatic upzoning of the Bayfront for purely commercial development are going to be similarly unpopular. The Burlingame Point project was able to get its approvals during the wake of a recession, but will the next several large office projects bringing thousands of jobs and zero homes to the city sail through as easily? In my mind, what happens to the Bayfront in the next 5-10 years is by far the most important set of decisions for the future of Burlingame and whether we can hold onto any of our rapidly disappearing middle class.
In the end, Beach and Colson had track records, organizations and deep community roots that are the cornerstones of successful local campaigns. Kudos to both and we will see if the challenger's sentiments weave their way into the discussions in City Hall.


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