Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he's the best but I doubt DC is ready for a White Gay Mayor.
DC is totally ready. For most people sexual orientation is a non-issue. Prejudice is relegated to a minority of groups. Catania was gay also when he ran for Council at large. People do not really care much.
And Bowser herself is a non-traditional figure: a forty-something pretty single woman, no hubby, no kids. In this she cannot evoke the traditional family idea and values.
At least Catania has a stable partner!
Anonymous wrote:I see Bowser yard signs in my 99% white neighborhood in front of multimillion dollar houses. Maybe they are residual from the primaries. I do not know.
Trends and voting patterns go beyond our comprehension.
Let's wait for the polls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once he files, someone needs to start a "African Americans for Catania" or "Latinos for Catania" or a joint black/Latino group to drum up support among DC communities of color. That might go a long way to making it a competitive mayoral race (instead of an easy victory for Bowser).
FWIW, Catania had an African American women as his "assistant" with him last night after the meeting at Powell.
Why the quotes around "assistant"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once he files, someone needs to start a "African Americans for Catania" or "Latinos for Catania" or a joint black/Latino group to drum up support among DC communities of color. That might go a long way to making it a competitive mayoral race (instead of an easy victory for Bowser).
FWIW, Catania had an African American women as his "assistant" with him last night after the meeting at Powell.
Anonymous wrote:Once he files, someone needs to start a "African Americans for Catania" or "Latinos for Catania" or a joint black/Latino group to drum up support among DC communities of color. That might go a long way to making it a competitive mayoral race (instead of an easy victory for Bowser).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he's the best but I doubt DC is ready for a White Gay Mayor.
DC is totally ready. For most people sexual orientation is a non-issue. Prejudice is relegated to a minority of groups. Catania was gay also when he ran for Council at large. People do not really care much.
And Bowser herself is a non-traditional figure: a forty-something pretty single woman, no hubby, no kids. In this she cannot evoke the traditional family idea and values.
At least Catania has a stable partner!
Anonymous wrote:I don't see Arrington Dixon in the 1998 results:
https://www.dcboee.org/election_info/election_results/elec_1998/general_election.asp
.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is DC. The democratic primary is the only election that counts, it has been that way for the 30+ years I have lived here, and I don't see that changing. I'll vote for Catania, as Bowser has the likability of a mule, but that doesn't mean Catania has the slightest chance in hell.
You would think that it would be impossible for David Catania to get more votes than Muriel Bowser, right? Totally impossible. Not imaginable. In the April 1 primary, Bowser received 42,045 votes. In 2010 when Catania ran for re-election for his At-Large seat, he received 57,163. So, look at that, the impossible has already happened. In September of 2010, in the Democratic primary, Phil Mendelson defeated a black Democrat named Michael Brown. That's also impossible because white candidates can't beat black Democrats in Washington, DC.
In fact, the Mendelson/Brown race may be the most interesting in what it says about Catania/Bowser. DC's black voters will absolutely choose a white candidate with a respectable track record over a black candidate of questionable competence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But Bowser has that thing whereby she refers to herself in the third person going for her.
That's so she can be her own surrogate.
Anonymous wrote:I think he's the best but I doubt DC is ready for a White Gay Mayor.