Ron Davis (Washington)
Ron Davis (also known as Ronnie) ran for election to the Seattle City Council to represent District 4 in Washington. He lost in the general election on November 7, 2023.
Davis completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. Click here to read the survey answers.
Biography
Ron Davis earned a bachelor's degree from George Fox University in 2002, a graduate degree from the University of Oregon in 2004, and a law degree from Harvard Law in 2012. His career experience includes working as a consultant.[1][2]
Elections
2023
See also: City elections in Seattle, Washington (2023)
General election
General election for Seattle City Council District 4
Maritza Rivera defeated Ron Davis in the general election for Seattle City Council District 4 on November 7, 2023.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Maritza Rivera (Nonpartisan) | 50.3 | 14,221 | |
![]() | Ron Davis (Nonpartisan) ![]() | 49.4 | 13,986 | |
Other/Write-in votes | 0.3 | 92 |
Total votes: 28,299 | ||||
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Nonpartisan primary election
Nonpartisan primary for Seattle City Council District 4
Ron Davis and Maritza Rivera defeated Kenneth Wilson and George Artem in the primary for Seattle City Council District 4 on August 1, 2023.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | ![]() | Ron Davis (Nonpartisan) ![]() | 44.8 | 10,105 |
✔ | Maritza Rivera (Nonpartisan) | 31.8 | 7,174 | |
![]() | Kenneth Wilson (Nonpartisan) | 21.2 | 4,772 | |
George Artem (Nonpartisan) | 2.0 | 460 | ||
Other/Write-in votes | 0.2 | 38 |
Total votes: 22,549 | ||||
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Endorsements
Ballotpedia did not identify endorsements for Davis in this election.
Campaign themes
2023
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Ron Davis completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Davis' responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
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|- Seattle should be a place where everyone from every background can launch a career, raise a family, and age comfortably in their homes–without breaking the bank. But special interests have hijacked our city and made it unaffordable for young workers, parents, and seniors on fixed incomes. It used to be that normal people could make it in this city. Sure, they might have to work extra hard to get ahead. But now, many work hard just to survive, and seniors on fixed incomes face property tax bills that exceed their old mortgage payments! We have to stop catering to interest groups that drive up housing costs or that demand we don’t raise basic progressive revenue and instead rely exclusively on property and sales taxes.
- No matter what we look like or where we come from, we all want to provide for our families and know that hardship – like losing a job, divorce, addiction, or getting sick – won’t mean homelessness. But today, the activists who created our crisis are at it again. They are fighting to keep taxes for the very richest low—which is why our mental health system has failed. They are also fighting to choke off housing growth. But the leading experts in the world have been very clear – this created our homelessness crisis. To fix this, we have to build housing for the middle class, aggressively fund housing vouchers, tiny homes, affordable and social housing, prevent homelessness for renters on the edge, and rebuild our behavioral health system.
- Our city isn’t safe enough. As a dad and husband, I won’t stop until we fix it. We have to prevent crime–fully funding human services and behavioral health, ignoring the special interests that fight taxing the richest to pick up the tab. We need the right crisis response. Behavioral health workers for mental health and drug crises, traffic cameras for driving infractions, and police for more serious threats. All responders should receive de-escalation training. Let’s restore trust through accountable policing. Good governance requires independent oversight, transparency, and accountability. Finally, we need to rehabilitate people whenever possible, preventing future crimes.
The path to safety for all, including respect for the civil rights of every citizen, has four parts.
We have to prevent crime:
We have to intervene for those most at risk for committing offenses through community violence intervention programming that provides access to jobs and mentors, engagement with mentors, reduces gun violence, and keeps young people busy with positive pursuits.
We have to send the right crisis responder and use the right tool for the job:
We need to send social workers to most behavioral health calls. They have more expertise and are less likely to violate people’s civil rights. Taking this load off can free up tons of police time to respond more quickly, intervene in violent situations, and investigate sex crimes. SPD says 12% of its calls don’t require an officer. An outside audit said it was closer to half. Either way–it’s a lot. We should do as Albuquerque, Denver, and Eugene have done and scale up this alternate response.
Most traffic violations should be automatic and camera-enforced. Traffic stops are where a great deal of racial bias has shown up in policing, and this can be automated to help an overstretched workforce. We just need to ensure we do not over-enforce in already marginalized neighborhoods.
All first responders should be free to use Narcan–we don’t need to waste valuable police time on this either. We also don’t need police to direct traffic at events.
Police will then be able to respond to the more acute situations - impending violence, violence in progress, investigating sex crimes, and the destruction of storefronts.
It should be noted we cannot build a plan around hiring magical numbers of police. SPD expects that with bonuses marketing and politicians’ magic, we’ll still only be able to grow the department this year. This is due to a dire regional, state, and national hiring shortage. 85% of departments in WA are below hiring targets. Some metros–including red ones have as acute of shortages as Seattle. No serious person will build a public safety plan around hiring an impossible number of cops–just like no serious person will plan to make a development pan out by saying they will change interest rates. I’m sure you know that in the private sector, that kind of incompetence gets a person fired. (In politics, it ends up being a slogan!).
We need to restore confidence between the community and SPD through accountable policing:
Any attorney will tell you governance requires oversight - any CEO must submit to a board, and our entire government structure at the federal, state, and local levels is built around mutual oversight. King County Sheriff's Department and Seattle’s Senior officers have real civilian oversight, but Seattle’s front line does not. If our police are not accountable, they will continue to behave in ways that alienate the community, violate civil rights, and keep our city under the watchful eye of the Justice Department, which had to intervene because of our racially biased policing practices. Getting this right will protect our citizens and will begin to heal the relationship between the community and its enforcers.
We need to rehabilitate people whenever possible:
We have decades of evidence that focused, evidence-based practice can significantly reduce reoffending rates and that just straight-up jailing someone may actually increase reoffending rates. We need to prioritize actual safety and use 21st-century, science-based practices, not use the justice system as a way to briefly vet our anger at defendants and create lifelong repeat offenders.
I’d add that the lack of mental health treatment has put too much stress on all parts of the housing chain, and the lack of permanent supportive housing means many affordable housing developers have to manage a fair amount of psychiatric distress in their buildings, and this is backing up even into some regular market rate housing too. Unless we unplug this and get real treatment capacity and more permanent supportive housing, almost everyone will continue to suffer.
That means legalizing retail without parking in every neighborhood. It means frequent, grade-separated transit that connects all major nodes and many medium nodes. That means building out ST3 in ways that connect to actual places people live, designing and building ST4, and designing and launching a likely ST5. That also means target headways of 3-5 minutes for the busiest lines at peak hours.
Politically, I admire Sen Elizabeth Warren for her wonkishness and clarity and Sen Mark Hatfield (retired now)--despite being Republican–for standing up to his party regarding the Vietnam War. Locally, I admire Claudia Balducci for her brilliance, leadership, and skill, Girmay Zahilay for the way he brings the community into the process (and his brilliance and big heart), and Teresa Mosqueda for her ability to keep a strong progressive true north and negotiate complex deals with opponents (and her brilliance!).
After Virtue, Alisdair McIntyre (moral moral)
The Tyranny of Merit, Michael Sandel (moral context)
Justice (moral philosophy)
Success and Luck, Robert Frank (economic and moral context)
Getting to Yes, Roger Fisher (tactical)
The Color of Law, Richard Rothstein (racial and moral context)
Just Mercy, Bryan Stevenson (racial and moral context)
Our Declaration, Danielle Allen - Philosophy of Liberty and Equity
The Affordable City, Shane Phillips (policy)
Homelessness is a Housing problem, Gregg Colburn (policy)
In the Midst of Plenty, Jill Khadduri and Marybeth Shinn (policy)
Willingness to make tradeoffs to accomplish it
Honesty
I much more clearly remember the Berlin Wall coming down when I was nine.
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587, UAW 4121, 46th District Democrats, 43rd District Democrats, UFCW 3000, KC Young Dems, UW KC Young Dems, Sailors’ Union of the Pacific, Transit Riders Union, MLK Labor Union, SEIU 925, Joint Council of Teamsters 28. Seattle Student Union, King County Dems, The Stranger, The Urbanist, Publicola.
Girmay Zahilay, King County Council
Darya Farivar, State Representative
Teresa Mosqueda, Seattle City Council Member
Larry Gossett
Retired 6-term King County Councilmember, Executive Director of the Central Area Motivation Program, UW Office of Minority Affairs, Founder UW Black Student Union, Member Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
Joe Nguyen
State Senator, Chair of Environment, Energy and Technology Committee, Member, Democratic Assistant Floor Leader, Committee Member, Ways and Means, Human Services.
Nicole Macri
State Representative
Abel Pacheco
Former Seattle City Council District 4 Councilmember, Director, Government and Community Relations, Sound Transit
Dr. Nancy Connolly
Former Seattle 46th District Candidate, Physician, Homelessness Health Advocate
Brady Walkinshaw
Former State Representative for the 43rd, CEO of Grist, Current CEO of Earth Alliance
Vivian Song Maritz
Seattle Public School Board Director, District 4
Lisa Rivera Smith
Seattle Public Schools Board Director
Chandra Hampson
Board Member, Seattle Public Schools, Tribal Management Consultant, Board Member, First Nations Development Institute
Sam Cho
President, Port of Seattle Commission, Board Korean-American Coalition of Washington, Council on Foreign Relations
Toshiko Hasegawa
Seattle Port Commissioner; Executive Director of Washington State Commission on Asian Pacific Affairs
Ryan Calkins
Seattle Port Commissioner
David Hackney
Washington State House of Representatives
De'Sean Quinn
Councilmember, Tukwila City Council; Assistant General Manager, King County Metro
Carmen Rivera
Renton City Council Member
Cary Moon
Former General Election Candidate for Seattle Mayor, Founder of People's Waterfront Coalition
Jeremy Barksdale
Bellevue City Council, MPA, PhD
Jim Street
Former Seattle City Council Member and Superior Court Judge, current climate advocate
Community Leaders
EJ Juarez
Former Director, Progressive Majority, Director of Environmental Justice & Equity, Washington State
Lhorna Murray
President, Strong Together Community Committee, Vice President, Magnuson Park Advisory Council
Sean Haney
President, UW Greek Pride
Jay Lazerwitz
Roosevelt Neighborhood Association President, ArtSpace CoFounder, Seattle Arts Commissioner, Affordable Housing Advocate
Jesse Piedfort
Sierra Club - National Deputy Director, Clean Transportation for All, Former Director, Washington State Chapter; former Chair, 46th District Democrats
Jaime Mayerfeld
Political Science Professor, focused on Human Rights and Ethics, University of Washington
Katie Stultz
Sr. Program Manager, WA Community Alliance, (Former) Sr Political Manager Win/Win Network, Program Director Institute for Democratic Future, Program Director Washington Bus
Angela Compton
Community Organizer w/lived experience of homelessness as a service provider for the unhoused (Compass), King County Policy & Planning Manager for Equitable & Affordable Housing, Board Member, Futurewise
Scott Alspach
Board Member, 46th District Democrats, former Chair, 43rd District Democrats
Robert Cruickshank
Board Member Sierra Club, Washington State Chapter
Evan Briggs
Member, Northeast Seattle Equity and Social Justice Council, Magnuson Park Advisory Council, Documentary Filmmaker.
Mike Eliason
Founder, Larch Lab, Sustainable & Livable Urban Housing Expert
Chris DeVore
Founder and Managing Director, Founders Co-op, one of Seattle's leading Venture Capital Firms
Alan Durning
Executive Director, Sightline Institute (Think Tank), Author/Coauthor of 10 books, Keynote speaker and lecturer at major universities, numerous conferences, and the White House
Paul Chapman
Chair, 43rd District Democrats, Principal Release Manager, Microsoft
Ben Maritz
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See also
2023 Elections
External links
Candidate Seattle City Council District 4 |
Personal |
Footnotes
- ↑ Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on August 25, 2023
- ↑ LinkedIn, "Ron Davis: Education," accessed August 28, 2023
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