Government and politics of Seattle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seattle is a charter city in the U.S. state of Washington with a mayor–council form of government. The Mayor of Seattle is head of the executive branch of city government, and the Seattle City Council, led by a Council President, is the legislative branch.

Seattle City Hall

The mayor of Seattle and two of the nine members of the Seattle City Council are elected at large, rather than by geographic subdivisions. The remaining seven council positions are elected based on the city's seven council districts. The only other elected offices are the city attorney and Municipal Court judges. All offices are non-partisan. Seattle is a predominantly liberal city and tends to elect left-leaning politicians to office. Katie Wilson was elected as Mayor of Seattle in a municipal election in November 2025.[1]

Government

The city government provides more utilities than many cities; either running the whole operation, such as the water and electricity services, or handling the billing and administration, but contracting out the rest of the operations, like trash and recycling collections.

Organization

The government of the city of Seattle includes the following officers:

Politics

More information Year, Republican ...
Presidential Elections Results[2]
Year Republican Democratic Third Parties
2024 8.95% 37,281 87.00% 362,545 4.05% 16,881
2020 9.11% 39,834 88.45% 386,570 2.43% 10,625
2016 8.44% 32,362 84.22% 323,126 7.34% 28,162
2012 13.74% 48,164 83.01% 290,963 3.25% 11,385
2008 13.81% 45,761 84.32% 279,441 1.87% 6,207
2004 17.87% 57,034 80.50% 256,974 1.63% 5,195
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Seattle's politics lean famously to the left compared to the U.S. as a whole. In this regard, it sits with a small set of similar U.S. cities (such as Madison, Wisconsin, Berkeley, California, and Cambridge and Boston in Massachusetts) where the dominant politics tend to range from center-left to social democratic. Seattle politics are generally dominated by the liberal wing (in the U.S. sense of the word "liberal") of the Democratic Party; in some local elections, Greens (and even, on at least one occasion, a member of the Freedom Socialist Party) have fared better than Republicans. There exists pockets of conservatism, especially in the north and in affluent neighborhoods such as Broadmoor, as well as scattered libertarians, but for the most part Seattle is primarily a Democratic city on all political levels. The city has not voted for a Republican presidential nominee since Ronald Reagan in 1984. While local elections are officially nonpartisan, most of the city's elected officials are known to be Democrats.

In 2015, Seattle voters approved the nation's first Democracy Vouchers Program,[3] in which every city resident receives 4 $25 vouchers to donate to local candidates. The program has diversified the donor pool, allowed more candidates to run for office, and boosted political engagement among voucher users.[4]

Democratic dominance is no less pronounced at the state and federal level. The Democrats hold majorities in both houses of the Washington State Legislature covering a significant portion of the city. At the federal level, for years Seattle was entirely within Washington's 7th congressional district, the most Democratic white-majority district in the nation. Jim McDermott, who held the district from 1989 to 2017, consistently won reelection with margins of well over 70 percent of the vote. He was succeeded by another progressive Democrat, Pramila Jayapal. After the 2010 census, part of southeast Seattle was drawn into the 9th District, represented by Democrat Adam Smith.

Crime and criminal justice

Line graph of reported crime in Seattle from 1985 through 2016. Population shown in green, total reported crimes in blue, and rate of reported crimes per 1,000 people in orange.[5][6]

As with most U.S. cities, the county judicial system handles felony crimes — the Seattle Municipal Court deals with parking tickets, traffic infractions, and misdemeanors. Seattle does not have its own jail, contracting out inmates it convicts to either the King County Jail (which is located downtown), the Yakima County Jail, or (for short-term holdings) the Renton City Jail.[7] After reaching its highest murder rate in 1994 with 69 homicides, Seattle's murder rate declined to a 40-year low with 24 homicides in 2004.[8] By 2006, Seattle's murder rate had increased, with thirty murders that year.[9] Auto theft is another matter: Seattle has until recently ranked in the top ten "hot spots" for auto theft; the Seattle Police Department has responded by nearly doubling the number of auto theft detail detectives, and started a "bait car" program in 2004.[10]

Seattle has suffered two mass-murders in recent history: the 1983 Wah Mee massacre (13 people killed in the Wah Mee gambling club)[11] and the March 25, 2006 Capitol Hill massacre when 28-year-old Kyle Aaron Huff killed six at a rave afterparty.[12] Later in 2006, an attempted spree killing by Naveed Afzal Haq left one dead at the Jewish Federation building.[13]

Official nickname, flower, slogan, and song

In 1981, Seattle held a contest to come up with a new official nickname to replace "the Queen City." "Queen City" had been devised by real estate promoters and used since 1869,[14] but was also the nickname of: Cincinnati;[15] Denver;[16] Regina, Saskatchewan;[17] Buffalo;[18] Bangor, Maine;[19] Helena, Montana;[20] Burlington, Vermont,[21] Charlotte,[22] and several other cities. The winner of this contest, selected in 1982, was "the Emerald City". Submitted by Californian Sarah Sterling-Franklin, it referred to the lush, thickly forested surroundings of Seattle that were the result of frequent rain.[23] Seattle has also been known in the past as "the Jet City"—though this nickname, related to Boeing, was entirely unofficial.[23] It has also been known as the "Portal to the Pacific", a phrase inscribed on the arches of the tunnel leading westward into the city from the Interstate 90 floating bridge over Lake Washington.

Seattle's official flower has been the dahlia since 1913. Its official song has been "Seattle the Peerless City" since 1909. In 1942, its official slogan was "The City of Flowers"; 48 years later, in 1990, it was "The City of Goodwill", for the Goodwill Games held that year in Seattle.[24] On October 20, 2006, the Space Needle was adorned with the new slogan "Metronatural." The slogan is a result of a 16-month, $200,000 effort by the Seattle Convention and Visitor's Bureau.[25] The official bird of Seattle is the great blue heron, named by the City Council in 2003.[26]

Seattle mayors of note

Sister cities

Seattle, Washington, has 21 sister cities through Sister Cities International.[31]

More information City, Region ...
City Region Country Year
Kobe Hyōgo Prefecture  Japan 1957[32]
Bergen Vestland  Norway 1967[33]
Tashkent Tashkent Region  Uzbekistan 1973[34][35]
Beersheba Southern District  Israel 1977[36]
Mazatlán Sinaloa  Mexico 1979[37]
Nantes Pays de la Loire  France 1980[38]
Christchurch Canterbury  New Zealand 1981[39]
Mombasa Coast Province  Kenya 1981[40]
Chongqing none; directly administered  People's Republic of China 1983[41]
Limbe Southwest Region  Cameroon 1984[42]
Galway County Galway  Ireland 1986[43]
Reykjavík N/A[44]  Iceland 1986[45]
Daejeon none; directly administered  South Korea 1989[46]
Cebu City Cebu  Philippines 1991[47]
Kaohsiung none; directly administered Taiwan 1991[48]
Pécs Baranya  Hungary 1991[49]
Perugia Umbria  Italy 1991[50]
Surabaya East Java  Indonesia 1992[51]
Gdynia Pomeranian Voivodeship  Poland 1993[52]
Sihanoukville Sihanoukville Province  Cambodia 1993[53]
Haiphong none; directly administered  Vietnam 1996[54]
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Sister ports

More information Port, Region ...
Port Region Country Year
Port of Kobe Hyōgo Prefecture  Japan 1957
Port of Kesennuma Miyagi Prefecture  Japan 1990
Port of Rotterdam South Holland  Netherlands 1959
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See also

Notes

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