Local, not US, issues at play in Tuesday voting

Category: News

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By THOMAS BEAUMONT
Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe, right, turns toward his son Peter after completing his vote on election day in McLean, Va. on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Ken Cuccinelli, Ron Paul

Republican gubernatorial candidate, Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, left, greets former U.S. Rep. Ron Paul during a rally in Richmond, Va., Monday, Nov. 4, 2013. Cuccinelli faces Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Tuesday’s election. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
Chris Christie

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie waves to workers at Oasis Pastry Shop during a campaign stop in Hillside, N.J., Monday, Nov. 4, 2013. Christie will face Democratic candidate, Barbara Buono in an election Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
Barbara Buono

Democratic candidate for New Jersey governor, Barbara Buono, answers a question as she visits campaign workers and supporters in New Brunswick, N.J. Monday, Nov. 4, 2013. Buono will face New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie in an election Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
Bill de Blasio

Democratic New York City mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio greets commuters at a subway stop in New York, Monday, Nov. 4, 2013. The mayoral election will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
Joe Lhota

New York City mayoral candidate Joe Lhota greets pedestrians in New York, Monday, Nov. 4, 2013. The mayoral election will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Big judgments about the direction of the country will have to wait on this Election Day as voters around the country express opinions on a couple of governors’ races, several mayoral races and a host of local issues.

Among the contests around the country Tuesday are governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey, and such questions as how best to turn the page in San Diego’s scandal-ridden mayor’s office and whether to spend more than $217 million to revive Houston’s shuttered Astrodome.

From ballot initiatives to mayor’s races, these off-year elections will shed virtually no light on how the American public feels about today’s two biggest national debates — spending and health care. Those will have to be addressed in next fall’s midterm elections.

Here’s a look at some of the more interesting matters on which voters will render judgment:

—San Diego: Voters in the nation’s 8th-largest city are trying to recover from ethics problems in the mayor’s office — again.

Republicans have quickly rallied around a popular councilman, who is promising a return of honor to the office after Mayor Bob Filner resigned in August eight months into his term for sexual harassment allegations that resulted in guilty pleas to related charges.

Filner was the first Democrat to become San Diego mayor in 20 years, but the third to resign in the past 30. The three Democrats — a tech exec, city councilman and former city attorney — are not mentioning the former congressman’s misdeeds, but asking voters to keep the party in power.

—Big city mayoral races also will be decided in Atlanta, Boston, Detroit, Minneapolis and Seattle. Then there’s New York, where Michael Bloomberg has served for 12 years and where former New York Rep. Anthony Weiner’s hope for political redemption became an asterisk to the two candidates, Bill de Blasio and Joe Lhota.

—Washington state: In a ballot issue that has become a fight between transparency and the world’s largest food companies, voters will decide whether food producers will label genetically modified foods.

The campaign, like one narrowly defeated last year in California, has drawn hefty financial contributions in opposition from the likes of PepsiCo., Monsanto and General Mills. Last year, such interests combined to spend $46 million to defeat the question.

Supporters say consumers have a right to know whether foods they buy contain genetically engineered ingredients and contend that the genetically engineered label is no different from other food labels. Foes say it would cost farmers and food processors, and that the label would imply the food is less safe.

—Colorado: Colorado voters will decide whether to tax marijuana at 25 percent and apply the proceeds to regulating the newly legalized drug and building schools.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, voters in rural 11 counties — unhappy with legal pot and same-sex unions enacted by majority Democrats — are asking voters to approve secession from the state. One wants to join Wyoming. It’s a longshot proposal but an indication of the sharp divide between conservative northern and eastern Colorado, the Denver area’s swing-voting suburbs and the liberal city of Denver and resort towns.

Voters in one such mountain getaway, Telluride, will decide whether to tax bottled sugary drinks, including soda, one cent per ounce. The tax, expected to raise roughly $400,000 annually beginning next year, would be spent on children’s health and physical activity programs.

“It’s been pretty divided,” said Zach Sands, a bartender at a Telluride brew pub. “Personally, I’m for it. It’s going to help a lot of local athletic programs.”

In Washington, D.C., the 16-day partial federal government shutdown and troubled rollout of the federal health care law has focused attention on Washington dysfunction, and Americans’ contempt for it.

But there is no one clear question on the thousands of ballots around the country that will gauge Americans’ mood.

Still, some political strategists might look to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s margin of victory should he win his New Jersey re-election race — where polls show he has widespread support — as a measure of this potential presidential candidate’s strength on the national stage.

And in Virginia, Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe could win his first elective office in a decades-long political career after linking his GOP rival to House Republicans whose demands helped trigger the shutdown. Polls show McAuliffe with an edge over state Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, a conservative with tea party support.

In tiny Coralville, Iowa, a big national outside group is exerting its influence. The conservative group Americans for Prosperity that played a role in last year’s national elections has blanketed the eastern Iowa town of 19,000 with mail, radio, Twitter and Facebook ads promoting conservative council candidates to tackle a $280-million debt.

The input is hardly unwelcome, said Republican county co-chairman David Yansky.

“They have great ideas,” Yansky said. “They want to be involved where government has overreached. That’s part of their mission.”

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