Everything you need to know about ranked-choice voting in one spot. Click to learn more!

Rob MacDermid

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Local Politics Image.jpg

Ballotpedia provides comprehensive election coverage of the 100 largest cities in America by population as well as mayoral, city council, and district attorney election coverage in state capitals outside of the 100 largest cities. This board member is outside of that coverage scope and does not receive scheduled updates.


BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
Ballotpedia does not currently cover this office or maintain this page. Please contact us with any updates.
Rob MacDermid

Silhouette Placeholder Image.png


Prior offices
Central Kitsap School District school board District 2

Rob MacDermid was a member of the Central Kitsap Board of Directors in Washington, representing Area 2. MacDermid assumed office in 2015. MacDermid left office in 2023.

This office is outside of Ballotpedia's coverage scope and does not receive scheduled updates. Our scope includes all elected federal and state officeholders as well as comprehensive coverage of the 100 largest cities in America by population.

Elections

2015

See also: Central Kitsap School District elections (2015)

Opposition

The seats of Area 2 incumbent Mark Gaines, Area 3 incumbent Scott Woehrman and Area 4 incumbent Jeanie Schulze were up for election. Gaines did not file to seek re-election Rob MacDermid was the sole candidate to file to replace him. The other two incumbents and MacDermid won their elections unopposed.[1]

Results

Central Kitsap School District Board of Directors, Area 2 General Election, 4-year term, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Rob MacDermid 97.8% 9,125
Write-in votes 2.21% 206
Total Votes 9,331
Source: Kitsap County, Washington, "General Election: November 3, 2015," November 24, 2015


Funding

MacDermid reported no contributions or expenditures to the Washington Public Disclosure Commission as of October 30, 2015.[2]

2012

MacDermid was defeated in the primary election on August 7, receiving 17.16% of the vote.[3][4]

See also: Washington judicial elections, 2012

See also

External links

Footnotes