Independent Voter
Voters in the City of Ferguson, Missouri turned out in record numbers
for city council elections Tuesday night. Nearly 30 percent of
registered voters went to the polls, almost doubling the turnout of the
last city election. The increase in turnout resulted in historic changes
in the composition of the city council.
Before the elections, Ferguson, which is over two-thirds
African-American, had only one black representative on the 6-person city
council. After the ballots were counted Tuesday, two black candidates,
Ella Jones and Wesley Bell, were elected to two seats formerly held by
white members, marking the first time in Ferguson’s history that black
members represent half of the city council.
The election comes one month after the Justice Department released a report
detailing a broad pattern of racist police activity in the city’s
police department, a claim many Ferguson citizens made in the wake of
last year’s police shooting of Michael Brown.
To many in the city and in the national media, the Ferguson city
elections represented a test as to whether the traumatic events of 2014
could turn voter apathy and drive citizens to the polls. The results of
Tuesday’s election answered that test with a resounding call for change
in the way the city leadership was comprised.
The new council will now have to navigate how to address the issues raised in the Justice Department’s report — a report that prompted the resignation
of the police chief, the city manager, and a municipal judge whose
fines on predominantly poor citizens acted as a source of revenue for
the city.
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