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Jacksonville by Neighborhood => The Burbs => St. Johns County => Topic started by: marcuscnelson on August 20, 2020, 04:21:57 PM

Title: St. Johns County Commissioner Race
Post by: marcuscnelson on August 20, 2020, 04:21:57 PM
This year is looking to be pretty interesting for politics in St. Johns County. For the first time in a long time a County Commission seat is up for grabs between a Democrat and a Republican, both newcomers.

Joe McAnarney (D):
http://electjoemack.com
https://www.facebook.com/JoeMcAnarney

Christian Whitehurst (R):
https://electwhitehurst.com
https://www.facebook.com/WhitehurstForStJohns
Title: Re: St. Johns County Commissioner Race
Post by: jaxlongtimer on August 20, 2020, 05:44:00 PM
Was surprised Jimmy Johns, the incumbent, lost the race and badly.  That is, until I looked at the financial reports for the candidates and saw that Whitehurst raised almost all his money (more than any other candidate) from developers, left and right, including Nocatee (multiple companies giving the maximum) and Sleiman, among the many, and numerous PAC's with the same out-of-town address.

If Whitehurst wins, which is likely given the (R) by his name, I would expect he will be beholden to the development community, big time.  Just like Curry is in Jax.  St. Johns citizens asleep at the wheel, just like in Duval, unfortunately.
Title: Re: St. Johns County Commissioner Race
Post by: marcuscnelson on August 20, 2020, 10:16:01 PM
Quote from: jaxlongtimer on August 20, 2020, 05:44:00 PM
Was surprised Jimmy Johns, the incumbent, lost the race and badly.  That is, until I looked at the financial reports for the candidates and saw that Whitehurst raised almost all his money (more than any other candidate) from developers, left and right, including Nocatee (multiple companies giving the maximum) and Sleiman, among the many, and numerous PAC's with the same out-of-town address.

Let me give you a brief rundown on recent politics in St. Johns County. Jimmy Johns lost for two reasons:
Quote
If Whitehurst wins, which is likely given the (R) by his name, I would expect he will be beholden to the development community, big time.  Just like Curry is in Jax.  St. Johns citizens asleep at the wheel, just like in Duval, unfortunately.

The biggest problem for Whitehurst right now is that the Democrat's campaign is stronger than expected, mostly due to a relevant platform and some decent grassroots work. McAnarney has good messaging and can genuinely make a case against developers. His biggest problems are also two-fold:
QuoteI mean that this is a republican county. That is the reason why it is such a nice place to live. Democrats ruin everything they touch. Just look around the country if you need proof. I fled NJ years ago to escape liberal tax tyranny.
QuoteMaybe he's a nice guy but the democrat philosophy is flawed. It is now the party of riots, looting, and outright communism. They care more about illegal aliens then American citizens and freedom can't afford more democrats in power.
QuoteSorry, Joe might be a nice guy but I will never vote blue. Just look at the city of St Augustine. That's A good example of liberal carnage on a local level. Removing history and muzzling their constituents. Wasting money on social justice, while their city floods. If the whole county turns blue, It's lost and I'm gone.

The question for McAnarney is whether he can find enough people who don't cover their ears and start screaming to look at his platform and ponder Whitehurst's developer backing.
Title: Re: St. Johns County Commissioner Race
Post by: marcuscnelson on November 07, 2020, 02:48:58 PM
Quote from: marcuscnelson on August 20, 2020, 10:16:01 PM
The question for McAnarney is whether he can find enough people who don't cover their ears and start screaming to look at his platform and ponder Whitehurst's developer backing.

The answer is not right now. It was a very good campaign, but especially in the shadow of the national race, he didn't do well. A lot of people simply stuck to party line and moved along. But, there are probably some lessons in there that local Dems can learn from, this being the first partisan countywide campaign in over a decade.