Kerri: Seeking Office Is ‘Personal’
“Don’t take it personal.” I recall more than one well-meaning person saying those words to me
in 2001 after I was roundly trounced in my bid to become mayor of Post Falls. I had to laugh. Nothing is more personal than putting your name on a ballot, walking through the neighborhoods knocking on doors and asking complete strangers to vote for you. The candidate forums bring on nerves and insecurities that haven’t surfaced since junior high school. And then there’s asking friends and supporters to write a check to finance the campaign. Running for elected office on the local level is not for the faint of heart. Six years later I had dusted myself off and ran successfully for an open city council seat. Now ending my second year of a four-year term, I’m older, wiser and far more empathetic to those who toss their hat and their heart in the public ring/
KerriT
, More Main Street.
More here
.
Question: Have you ever run for a local office? Do you agree with Kerri’s description of what it’s like?
* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Huckleberries Online." Read all stories from this blog