It’s Election Time. Sort of.

We don’t vote till May. But now’s the time to get your shit together. We’re rushing headlong into the season for registering to run for public office. The deadline is Feb. 17, according to the El Paso Times:

The filing period for a place on the ballot officially opens Jan. 18 and runs to Feb. 17, but several candidates have filed appointment of campaign treasurer reports that allows them to begin fundraising.

Up for grabs in the May 6 election are the mayoral seat and four representative positions.

If you’re happy with the way local politics (and politicians) have been run in El Paso, then you don’t need to do a thing. Also, you’re on the wrong website.

But if you think that there’s room for improvement at City Hall, then now is the time to get your ducks in a row and register to run for public office.

Here’s the rundown on how the election is shaping up so far:

Among those who have filed for the mayoral seat:

Emma Acosta, East-Central city representative who was first elected to District 3 in 2008. She retired as the city’s solid waste management director in 2004.

Dee Margo, a longtime El Paso businessman who also served on the Texas House of Representatives and as president of the El Paso Independent School District Board of Managers;

David Saucedo, owner of the Saucedo Lock Co. who was appointed by Gov. Greg Abbott to the Texas State Board of Nursing and has served with the El Paso Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and the Boys and Girls Clubs of El Paso.

Also filing campaign reports for the mayoral seat are Jorge Artalejo, who has unsuccessfully run for local, state and federal offices numerous times; David Aviles-Rodriguez, a security guard and history major at the University of Texas at El Paso; Charles Stapler, a retired postal worker and historic preservation advocate; Jameel Toombs, a personal trainer; and Ana Romero Zaidle, a stay-at-home mother with a degree in psychology from Upper Iowa University.

Texas Western (now UTEP) basketball legend Willie Cager has said he plans to run for mayor, but has not filed any paperwork with the city clerk.

Under our City Manager form of government, the Mayor doesn’t really do very much except kiss the babies. He only votes to break a tie. However, the Mayor can use his office as a bully pulpit to bring attention to causes and issues that he’d like people to notice.

There are four (maybe five) City Council seats up for election in 2017.

    District 2, currently held by Representative Jim Tolbert.

    District 3, currently held by Representative Emma Acosta, who has termed out and is running for mayor.

    District 4, currently held by Representative Carl Robinson, who has termed out.

    And District 7, currently held by Representative Lily Limon.

Also, the District 8 seat will be up for grabs, if current Representative Cortney Niland either gets recalled or decides to run for mayor.

Do you live in one of those districts? Do you have two brain cells to rub together? Are you not a tool?

A City Council seat pays $29,000 a year. Plus tips. You can pay your staff a lot more, and make them take you to lunch. The mayorship pays $40k.

From where I’m sitting $29k and fawning sycophants look pretty good.

One comment

  1. This system is designed to favor special interests. I live in District one. My representative came to my house when he was running for office to ask for my vote. It was a hot summer day and he’s a dumpy kid so he was sweating like a whore in church. I admired his grit. We talked about local issues. We talked about how public office is a sacred trust and representing your district should be your main priority. We talked about fiscal responsibility and that not raising taxes in a poor community was important. We talked about historical tourism and how preserving El Paso’s legitimate culture and legacy was important. He promised to be true to his word and work for a better El Paso. I’ve never been lied to that much in my life. And I’m in the car business. I went to a district one community meeting at the beginning of his term at the Village Inn. My rep had just voted against taking a $50,000 grant from the state to do a survey of properties in the downtown area to determine if they had historic value. Bob Ayoub and some Mimco cronies were standing in the back of the room staring my rep down as he tried to justify his bone headed vote. Bob Ayoub doesn’t live in district one. Shameful. And now we have a trolley.

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