Gus Haynes
Active Member
One thing I am certain of: Tim Cartmell is Danielle Smith's preferred choice.
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I suspect Cartmell is really hoping Sohi will run and not another potentially stronger progressive candidate. Regardless of the number of candidates, I feel a lot of the right of centre vote will coalesce with Cartmell particularly if Sohi runs, unless they do not see Cartmell as likely to win.If the progressive vote coalesces into one candidate (probably Sohi if he runs again) and there's 3-4 right of centre candidates, then I don't see as much of a path to the mayor's office for Cartmell tbh. Caterina (and Sandhu along with what other candidates pop up) running is the biggest issue for Cartmell's chances rather than the strength of Sohi or a different progressive candidate.
There's not really a stronger candidate right now who might make the run tbh (for me at least). Unless someone like Notley or a former/current NDP MLA puts their name on the running.I suspect Cartmell is really hoping Sohi will run and not another potentially stronger progressive candidate. Regardless of the number of candidates, I feel a lot of the right of centre vote will coalesce with Cartmell particularly if Sohi runs, unless they do not see Cartmell as likely to win.
Oh you can bet Cartmell is going to run against the current council and unless there is another strong candidate on the left, centre or right it will probably work. Sohi will not be a strong candidate.There's not really a stronger candidate right now who might make the run tbh (for me at least). Unless someone like Notley or a former/current NDP MLA puts their name on the running.
It's the spoiler effect for the other right of centre candidates, especially if it becomes a close election. You can't really aim for an anti-incumbency vote as a current councillor anyway.
I don't think Sohi has impressed many on the left, right or centre. Cartmell selling himself as Mr. Fiscally-Responsible-Engineer-Small-Business-Owner will probably resonate with a lot of folks who are sick of the continual property tax increases and seemingly endless construction, which will likely include a healthy chunk of the progressive vote. Caterina landed 5th(!!!) in the last municipal election despite being basically the partial incumbent. I don't think he or Sandhu are really serious threats to split the vote in any meaningful way.If the progressive vote coalesces into one candidate (probably Sohi if he runs again) and there's 3-4 right of centre candidates, then I don't see as much of a path to the mayor's office for Cartmell tbh. Caterina (and Sandhu along with what other candidates pop up) running is the biggest issue for Cartmell's chances rather than the strength of Sohi or a different progressive candidate.
Cartmell will claim he wants to cut property taxes but has voted to increase taxes every single year. Don't ever forget that.
I’ll cast my bet now: Cartmell wins.
I don’t think sohi beats him, and I don’t think a new option can beat the name recognition Cartmell has already.
But the council is more than the mayor. They’re just 1 vote. So I’m more interested in what sort of “team” he’s trying to build and if any of them will be successful.
I hope to see more business savy leaders get in. I hope we have downtown boosters. I hope we keep some strong progressive voices and those who can keep our work on transit/biking/infill going. I hope we have more vision (even though it’ll be some slim budgets this decade). And I hope we improve our finances.
That so-called merged municipal party, which we all know is just for the UCP to spy on Edmonton's inner workings are so power hungry they will submit their own candidate and split the right wing vote, allowing Sohi to be reelected. Trust me, South Asians will show up to support Sohi.