| Glass, Friedson, or Jawando? How are folx feeling? |
| Glass all the way, Friedson is bought and paid for and Jawando is an Elrich wannabe. Glass is endorsed by Sierra Club also. Also two way race between Jawando and Glass. |
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Jawando.
Glass only cares about rich people who can bike to work or eat vegan. |
Jawando doesn’t want to build houses. Also Glass made the RideOn free, so maybe he doesn’t only care about bikers, he cares about our world not overheating. |
| Can anyone tell me what Evan Glass stands for? The only things I know about him is he is gay, a Vegan, and has a dog, at least I know the other two take positions on things. |
| Jawando is behind some of the school issues and spending sprees. Hard NO. He will ruin the county. |
+1000 |
+1 |
His main issues are affordability, education, and transportation. He’s not a moderate per se but he’s willing to work with opponents. |
Jawando does want to build houses. He just votes against nonsensical subsidies for $5k apartments and zoning plans that have no infrastructure or strategic vision to back them up. It’s ridiculous to paint him as anti-housing. The YIMBYs dislike him because he’s pro-consumer. |
| Who will be the most hostile to developers? Jawando? If so, he has my vote. |
He also (like every one of them, Elrich included) does absolutely nothing to be effective in any opposition he presents, which makes his rhetoric about that rather unconvincing. It's all theater, and bad theater at that. Anything that gets heated at the hearings is about being pissed that one's presumed opponent is undercutting one's political point (jockeying for votes), not that one's presumed opponent is actually stopping something in which one actually believes. |
Not sure I quite agree with your framing of the issue here, my friend. MoCo is facing a housing affordability crisis — young people, teachers, and firefighters, among other crucial groups, are being priced out of the county — and the solution to a housing affordability crisis is to build more smart and affordable housing. That’s Econ 101, supply and demand. Now, does this mean promoting feckless, unsustainable, and unaffordable housing development every which way? Of course not. But it does mean supporting common-sense proposals like Bill 29-20 (which Jawando was one of two councilmembers to vote against) to build more affordable housing along transit corridors. I have concerns with Jawando’s track record on affordable housing. |
He will be until it benefits him more to be their friends. Jawando is about Jawando. And nothing else. |
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Are any of them interested in cutting waste and cutting taxes?
If so, that's who I would vote for. |