Check out the statements
Tim Geddes
While I generally subscribe to the old saying “You can’t judge a
book by its cover,” sometimes the book jacket is all you have to go
by in making decisions.
This is the case with the Candidate Statement of Qualifications
filed by many of our City Council hopefuls. Often, the statements are
the only citywide contact candidates have with the voters in getting
their message out.
Incidentally, I was only able to find 12 statements on file out of
18 candidates for the City Council. That’s only two-thirds of the
field.
The statement is a 200-word summary that should succinctly state
why voters should cast their ballot for the candidate. There are four
major things I look for in asking a candidate statement to convince
me. First, does the candidate come across like a leader? In so many
words does the candidate state so? If I don’t see leader, leadership
or direct reference to the ability to lead, I get nervous. Leadership
is my top quality in selecting who I want to run our city. Only
one-third of the statements I saw made this direct reference.
Second in importance, does the statement provide contact
information (preferably a Web site) so that the voter can learn more
or follow up interest on the candidate? Less than two-thirds of the
12 statements contained this vital link.
Third, does the statement contain bona fide qualifications (who
the candidate is and what background, experience, and accomplishments
he or she has to run our city)? After all, this document is called a
Candidate Statement of Qualifications. Only half of the candidate
statements delivered on this.
Fourth, does the statement lay out purpose and priorities? Does
the candidate communicate a grasp of the issues and an understanding
of local government that would motivate the voter to support his or
her candidacy? To some extent, all of the 12 statements attempted
this, some much better than others. Did any of the 12 candidate
statements I reviewed contain all of these key ingredients? Actually,
one or two did. Voters can judge for themselves.
Additionally, I was pleased that most of the candidates refrained
from serving up political endorsements for this nonpartisan office in
their statements. Such endorsements are divisive and are no
substitute for leadership abilities in any event. The 2000 local
election was a good indicator of that truth. The candidates should be
judged on their own merits.
Voters this election owe it themselves to get all of the
information they can about the candidates for our City Council. The
Candidate Statements of Qualification are only a start.
* TIM GEDDES is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to
“Sounding Off,” fax us at (714) 965-7174 or e-mail us at
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