Jimmy Flannigan Goes Down In Flames

A tiny glimmer of hope in Austin’s winter of discontent: Liberal city councilman Jimmy Flannigan was defeated by Mackenzie Kelly:

Conservative challenger Mackenzie Kelly beat incumbent Jimmy Flannigan in the Austin City Council runoff election Tuesday, earning 677 more votes in District 6. Meanwhile, voters re-elected incumbent Alison Alter in District 10. She beat challenger Jennifer Virden by 587 votes.

Kelly’s election will change the solidly progressive makeup the council has had the past two years. The positions she campaigned on are significantly more conservative than those of her fellow council members and she is the only council member to have an endorsement from the Travis County Republican Party.

Snip.

For the past two years, all eleven members of the Austin City Council — while they may have differed intensely on certain policy issues — have been generally progressive and unified in their ideals.

This council approved a repeal of Austin’s ban on public camping in 2019 in an effort to decriminalize homelessness, an action that spurred heated debate in the community over how best to address homelessness. It has drawn statewide attention and criticism from the state’s Republican leaders, including Gov. Greg Abbott.

This council also unanimously approved the city’s budget for the 2020-2021 fiscal year, which will ultimately move around $150 million dollars from the Austin Police Department.

Snip.

elly, who will be a newcomer to the council, ran on her experience as a volunteer firefighter and president of Take Back Austin, which is pushing to reinstate the ban on public camping in Austin.

“From standing courageously behind our law enforcement community to demanding safer conditions for our homeless population to fighting for transparency at City Hall, the voice of Northwest Austin is has been heard,” Kelly’s campaign said in a statement. “Considering the stark differences between my campaign’s priorities and the platform of the incumbent, their united voice is resoundingly clear this evening!”

Maybe with one sane voice on the Austin City Council, we can at least break up the groupthink. It’s a start.

(Hat tip: Dwight.)

Speaking of Austin’s homeless problem, Texas Scorecard made me aware of the SeeClickFix to report things like trash on property, graffiti, etc. Maybe we should start taking pictures of every trashed transient camp and report it on that tool, every day, until action is taken.

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4 Responses to “Jimmy Flannigan Goes Down In Flames”

  1. Howard says:

    I see there’s a recall petition at StopAdler.com … think it’ll get traction?

  2. Lawrence Person says:

    Maybe, but it’s hard to see the same electorate that voted in Jose Garza actually recalling Adler.

    I fear things may have to get a lot worse before Austin voters have been smacked by enough clue-by-fours to change their ways.

  3. Bella says:

    I wish we could recall Adler but there is very, very little chance of that happening. Austin, especially Central Austin, is insanely liberal. I mean how could sane people approve a multi billion dollar public transit bond in the middle of an event that’s changing how and where we work from???

  4. jabrwok says:

    Self-righteousness is a hell of a drug, and Leftists are nothing if not self-righteous. I don’t expect Austinites to wake up until Austin looks like Detroit. Glad I got out 13 years ago and have rarely been back. At this point I wouldn’t be surprised if I never go back.

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