Site icon Xavier Newswire

Election breakdown: all 24 candidates explained

Photo Courtesy of Jennie Key | There will be elections on Nov. 7 to decide who will be filling the nine open city council seats and who will be the next mayor of Cincinnati.


On Tuesday, registered voters in Cincinnati will be deciding on the leaders of their municipal government at polling locations across the city, including one inside Gallagher Student Center’s Arrupe Overlook. But the real question is, “What’s on the ballot?”

There are four representative positions up for election: the mayor, nine seats on city council, the Judge of Hamilton County Municipal District 2 and four spots on the Board of Education for Cincinnati Public Schools. There are also four tax levies, a proposed law and a constitutional amendment for you, the voters, to decide on. Due to the number of people running for city council, this is a (brief) Xavier student’s voting guide to the Cincinnati city council elections of 2017.

A sample ballot can be found, along with a voter’s polling location, on the Hamilton County Board of Elections website, boe.hamilton-co.org


Mayor

There are only two candidates vying for the mayoral position in Cincinnati: Yvette Simpson, a current city council person, and John Cranley, the incumbent mayor. You can read more about them on the Newswire website here.


City Council

Despite there being only nine spots on city council, 24 people are vying for these positions. City council members are tasked with representing the city’s interests. Due to the large number of candidates, the following constitutes a list of the candidates and minor notes on any significant history that they might have.


By: Kevin Thomas ~Campus News Editor~ 

Exit mobile version