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Ed Clark recall, Prairie City, Oregon (2025)

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Ed Clark recall
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Officeholders
Ed Clark
Recall status
Scheduled
Recall election date
October 7, 2025
Signature requirement
73 signatures
See also
Recall overview
Political recall efforts, 2025
Recalls in Oregon
Oregon recall laws
Mayoral recalls
Recall reports

An election to recall Mayor Ed Clark took place on October 7, 2025, in Prairie City, Oregon.

Clark was elected as mayor of Prairie City in November 2024.[1]

Recall vote

Ed Clark recall, 2025

Ed Clark is facing a recall election in the Mayor of Prairie City recall on October 7, 2025.

Recall
 Vote
%
Votes
Yes
No
Total Votes


Recall supporters

The recall effort was organized by Prairie City resident Colin Kolb.[2] Petitions listed the following as grounds for recalling Clark.[3]

  1. The mayor has shown dishonesty and lack of transparency and not acting in the best interest of Prairie City or staff or residents of Prairie City.
  2. There is a lot of favoritism with certain city staff, and the mayor has had these complaints regarding the staff being brought to his attention and has failed to act regarding these complaints.
  3. The city has failed to adhere to the hours of operation that are clearly posted on the City Hall door.
  4. The mayor is not following public meeting laws. The mayor has cancelled city meetings due to the city recorder not being present and they have failed to reschedule said meetings.
  5. There is no accountability with the mayor.
  6. And the Mayor has failed to follow the city charter.[4]

Recall opponents

Clark submitted the following in response to the recall.

As your mayor, I respect the citizens’ rights to a recall petition. However, the claims listed are misleading, nbased on opinion—not fact, and do not accurately reflect my service to Prairie City. I want to address each point briefly.

  • Transparency – City actions are conducted in public meetings with records available to every resident. No evidence of dishonesty exists.
  • Staff “favoritism” – The mayor does not disclose staff discipline or personnel matters. All concerns are handled through the proper council and administrative process.
  • City hall hours – Office hours are currently being met as long as staff are available. Temporary changes are posted publicly, and services remain available.
  • Public meetings – Meetings follow Oregon law. In rare cases, a meeting must be cancelled if required staff are absent. Meetings are rescheduled as needed.
  • Accountability – Records budgets, and meetings demonstrate continued accountability to both citizens and council.
  • City Charter – No specific charter violations have been identified. I have acted, with legal counsel, within the charter.

This recall is not supported by facts. I remain committed to managing the city and its employees to be fiscally responsible with taxpayer monies, and to lead Prairie City with integrity, transparency.[4]

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing recall in Oregon

No specific grounds are required for recall in Oregon. To get the recall on the ballot, supporters must collect signatures equal to 15% of the votes cast in the last regular gubernatorial election in the relevant jurisdiction. Signatures must be collected within 90 days.[5]

Recall organizers were required to submit at least 73 valid signatures to put the recall against Clark on the ballot.[2]

Recall context

See also: Ballotpedia's Recall Report

Ballotpedia covers recall efforts across the country for all state and local elected offices. A recall effort is considered official if the petitioning party has filed an official form, such as a notice of intent to recall, with the relevant election agency.

The chart below shows how many officials were included in recall efforts from 2012 to 2024 as well as how many of them defeated recall elections to stay in office and how many were removed from office in recall elections.


See also

External links

Footnotes