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

Seward Stevens

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.
Seward Stevens

Silhouette Placeholder Image.png


Prior offices
South Kitsap School District school board District 1

Seward Stevens is the District 1 representative on the South Kitsap School District school board in Washington. Stevens was initially appointed to the position in 2016. Stevens won a new term in the by-district general election on November 7, 2017.

Elections

2017

See also: South Kitsap School District elections (2017)

Three of the five seats on the South Kitsap School District school board in Washington were up for by-district general election on November 7, 2017. In District 3, incumbent Christopher Lemke was defeated by challenger Elizabeth Sebren. District 4 incumbent Rebecca Diehl filed for re-election and ran unopposed, winning a new term.

A special election was also scheduled for November 7, 2017, following the District 1 representative's resignation in September 2016.[1] Seward Stevens, the representative appointed to the position until November, filed for election and ran unopposed, winning his first full term.[2]

Results

South Kitsap School District,
District 1 Special Election, 2-year term, 2017
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Seward Stevens Incumbent (unopposed) 97.50% 10,239
Write-in votes 2.5% 262
Total Votes 10,501
Source: Kitsap County, Washington, "General Election: November 7, 2017," accessed December 1, 2017

Funding

Stevens opted for mini reporting in this election, according to the Washington Public Disclosure Commission.[3] Candidates who opted for this had to keep a record of their contributors and expenditures, but were not required to report them. If they raised and spent more than $5,000 in aggregate or received more than $500 from any one contributor, including themselves, they would have had to switch their filing status from mini to full reporting.[4]

See also

External links

Footnotes