The new Salisbury 'Dream Team' - Day and Ireton
It probably wasn't a big surprise based on the primary results and the perception that this election was a tag team match between Jake Day and Jim Ireton vs. Debbie Campbell and Joe Albero. But the preliminary results are in, and it's all but official that the Day/Ireton side won handily: Day picked up just under 72% of the vote in routing two-term incumbent Debbie Campbell while Jim Ireton managed just 68% of the vote in defeating Joe Albero and winning a second term.
Campbell was the only one of the three incumbents to lose, as District 1 Council member Shanie Shields won a third term with just 48% of the vote - a quirk in the City Charter allowed both challengers to advance through the primary. Cynthia Polk received 3 more votes than April Jackson did this time.
So where will Salisbury go now? Later this month it appears we will find that the 3-2 majorities which always seemed to stymie Ireton's key initiatives will now become 3-2 votes in favor, with Day joining incumbents Shields and Laura Mitchell to provide a pro-Ireton majority. And I'd love to get a hold of Debbie Campbell's green-highlighted copy of the Day plan just to see how many of these items indeed cost city taxpayers.
But another question may be the fate of River's Edge, which was touted by Campbell as one of her achievements. While the money from the state is probably still going to be there, will the plans have to change to accommodate the retail aspect Day wants to bring to the city? (It's still pretty sad that taxpayers all around the state are going to be paying a subsidy for a artisan community, but that's a subject for another time.)
Still, given the primary results none of these results were completely unexpected. Both Day and Shields actually improved their percentages from the primary - which was not surprising to me because people like to back a winner. Day gained 723 votes from the primary while Campbell picked up only 292. Over 71 percent of the new votes went to Day, reflective of the final margin and perhaps a result of the (somewhat undeserved) negative reputation Campbell acquired over the years.
Of course, it's too early to tell what the future will hold for the losers. While April Jackson was a first-time candidate in District 1, Cynthia Polk has now lost twice. And while Debbie Campbell can look back at eight years where she went from the reformer darling against the "Dream Team" in 2005 to being portrayed as the Wicked Witch of the West on one local blog, Joe Albero literally relocated himself to an apartment inside one of the properties he owns a year ago to establish city residency after living outside Delmar, Delaware for several years. Is he through with Salisbury?
For all the talk about attracting businesses in this campaign, it should be noted that Jim Ireton is a financial supporter of the man who has all but single-handedly turned Maryland into one of the most hostile states toward business in the country, Martin O'Malley. His redistributionist policy is one of the greatest handicaps to making Salisbury into a jewel, and we can't do anything to change that until next year.
And so another election season comes to an end in Salisbury, but the work for those of us who believe in liberty begins now. It's time to find a conservative slate of candidates willing to stop the subsidies, cut the red tape, and truly place the "open for business" sign in Salisbury - hopefully working in conjunction with a like-minded state government in Annapolis ready and willing to roll back the excesses of the O'Malley era. This city can thrive, but it needs the right people in charge to do it.