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District of Columbia State Board of Education election, 2018

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2020

District of Columbia
Board of Education

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Election details
Filing deadline: August 8, 2018
General: November 6, 2018

Pre-election incumbent(s):
Regular election
Laura Wilson Phelan (Ward 1)
Ruth Wattenberg (Ward 3)
Mark Jones (Ward 5)
Joe Weedon (Ward 6)

Special election
Vacant (Ward 4)

How to vote
Poll times: 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Voting in District of Columbia
Ballotpedia analysis
Federal and state primary competitiveness
State executive elections in 2018
Impact of term limits in 2018
State government trifectas
State government triplexes
Ballotpedia's Election Analysis Hub, 2018
District of Columbia
executive elections
District board of education

Washington, D.C. held an election for four of the nine seats on the state board of education on November 6, 2018.

Emily Gasoi won the open Ward 1 seat, incumbent Ruth Wattenberg won re-election to Ward 3, Zachary Parker won the open Ward 5 seat, and Jessica Sutter defeated incumbent Joe Weedon in Ward 6.

A special election was called for December 4, 2018, to replace Lannette Woodruff after she resigned from the Ward 4 seat.[1]

The races, which were called "symbolic battlegrounds over the future of public education" by the Washington Post, saw over $150,000 poured into them. By August, the candidates had received more in contributions than candidates received in the full election cycle in the previous school board election.

Former D.C. Mayor Adrian M. Fenty took away most of the board's power in 2007 and placed the appointment of most education positions in the hands of the mayor. But in 2018 the board election was held in the midst of the council considering two bills that would have removed some of that authority from the mayor's office.

One would have established the Office of State Superintendent for Education as an independent agency, extending the superintendent's term from four to six years. It would have taken away the mayor's ability to remove the superintendent and give the superintendent authority to hire his or her own personnel. Another proposal would have transferred control of the agency from mayor to the State Board of Education.[2][3] Neither moved beyond a public hearing in December 2018.[4][5]

Washington, D.C., also held elections for mayor, city council, attorney general, and shadow U.S. senator and representative. Click here for more information about those races. Click here for more information about the Washington, D.C., United States House of Representatives election.

Candidates and election results

Regular election

Ward 1

General election

Ward 3

General election

Ward 5

General election

Ward 6

General election

Special election

Ward 4

A special election for the Ward 4 seat was called for December 4, 2018, after Lannette Woodruff resigned her position.[1]

General election

Additional elections on the ballot

See also: District of Columbia elections, 2018

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 District of Columbia Board of Elections, "DCBOE Certified Ward 4 Seat Vacancy on State Board of Education," accessed August 27, 2018
  2. The Washington Post, "Why is so much money flowing into D.C.’s school board races?," October 6, 2018
  3. The Washington Post, "The D.C. school system has made enormous progress. These bills would set it back.," September 30, 2018
  4. [http://lims.dccouncil.us/Legislation/B22-0947?FromSearchResults=true Council of the District of Columbia, "B22-0947 - Office of the State Superintendent of Education Amendment Act of 2018," accessed April 11, 2019
  5. [http://lims.dccouncil.us/Legislation/B22-0952?FromSearchResults=true Council of the District of Columbia, "B22-0952 - State Education Agency Independence Amendment Act of 2018," accessed April 11, 2019

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