Perhaps the most surprising returns of the night came from the District 150 School Board election (winners in bold):
Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Linda Butler | 1,439 | 24.87% |
2 | Rachael Parker | 1,277 | 22.07% |
3 | Bill O’Brien | 1,243 | 21.49% |
4 | Alicia Butler | 962 | 16.63% |
5 | Beth Akeson | 864 | 14.94% |
I was not surprised that Alicia Butler didn’t win. On her campaign postcard, the very first bullet point reads, “Open, honest communication with the community.” Kind of ironic, isn’t it? Since the charges were levied that she did not have the degrees she claimed to have, she’s not had open communication with anyone (we’re still waiting for a comment from her lawyer), and obviously her honesty is the very thing at issue.
I was surprised that she didn’t come in last. Beth Akeson tied for first place in my precinct, but in district 2 at large she came in dead last, even behind Alicia Butler. I’m not sure I understand why. I guess her message just didn’t resonate with the voters. Maybe this is for the best — now she can continue to focus on the Heart of Peoria Commission instead of having her interests divided.
Bill O’Brien was interviewed on WCBU after the final numbers came in. Even though he only lost by approximately 30 votes, he was willing to graciously concede rather than pursue a recount. We all thought that was very gentlemanly of him.
Rachael Parker was one of my endorsements, so it’s good to see her win, of course.
The biggest surprise to me was that Linda Butler came in first. I’m clearly out of touch with other voters in the second district because I didn’t see that coming at all. I felt Linda Butler was the status-quo candidate; she’s the only candidate that didn’t take a hard stance against the school in the park idea. I never would have expected her to come in first.
I’m going to predict that this will not represent much of a shift for the school board.