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Some high-profile names in the news took one on the electoral chin on Tuesday. |
| By Doug Hissom Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Doug Hissom |
| Published April 4, 2008 at 5:25 a.m. |
|
Some high-profile names in the news took one on the electoral chin on Tuesday. Business gurus and perennial candidates dotted the ballots, but most of them didn't get very far.
• It didn't go unnoticed among politicos that the absentee ballots cast in the City of Milwaukee were taken to a secretive locale under tight security to be counted. It's a move that differed highly from the past practice of just counting then at City Hall in the Election Commission offices. Word on the street is that one of the reasons for the switch was due to a tete-a-tete between backers of Michael McGee and Milele Coggs at the Election Commission offices on the night of the February primary, where Coggs made an amazing electoral recovery after the absentee ballots were counted. District Attorney John Chisholm is investigating the voter fraud allegations as of this writing.
• One of the bigger upsets of Tuesday's ballot bout was Greendale Municipal Court Judge Anthony Machi's re-election defeat. Machi, known for his steady temperament and more so his affinity for auto racing, went down in defeat to Mark Kapocius, who's been out of law school all but a year. He does, however, wear his ideology on the sleeve a tad, being a member of the right-wing Federalist Society of legal thinkers. The Kapocius name, however, has been a mainstay in the tony Greendale community for many a decade.
• Dan Devine, who shares a name with a former Green Bay Packers coach, won an easy victory in the West Allis mayoral race. The former County Board member, while touting progressive leanings during his County campaign, was known more for adequately representing the views of his conservative-leaning constituency. We doubt, though, that Devine put a picture of himself with Gerry Adams, president of Sinn Fein, the political arm of the Irish Republican Army, in his campaign literature. The picture was a prominent part of the back bar at the former Nash's Irish Castle, where Devine once worked as a bartender.
• Paul Lincoln Schueble, once known as New Berlin's Jerry Garcia, lost not only his bid to become a New Berlin alderman again, but his campaign for County board and his run for New Berlin School Board. It's the first known election trifecta defeat in modern history.
Schueble, who lives in a house once owned by former Wisconsin Gov. Julius Heil, was one of the first New Berlin officials to bring to the fore the serious issue of the lack of good water in western New Berlin. That part of the city relies on well water, while the eastern part of the 'burb gets to slake itself with Lake Michigan water. But Schueble's outspokenness -- and his affinity for being part of the Rainbow Gathering hippy festival -- left voters a tad uneasy and he was a one-and-out alderman in the mid-1990s. His ability to take on the status quo of the power elite was a joy to watch.
• In Whitefish Bay, prominent developer Doug Weas didn't get far in his bid to become village president. Weas lost big to incumbent Kathleen Pritchard. There aren't too many issues than rankle the electorate in WFB these days except what to do with the armory, and Pritchard won her first election over controversy on what to do with the that building and the Jewish Community Center. Weas' projects include the UW-Milwaukee's Kenilworth Building, whose bidding process created a brief, but contentious lawsuit. He also has the option to build a high-rise boutique hotel in the Third Ward, which has yet to break ground.
• In Menomonee Falls, Jefferson Davis tried to resurrect the ashes of his political career, but failed. Davis was elected village president in one of those emotional taxpayer revolt movements, but was later forced out due to campaign finance issues, saving his butt from felonies by agreeing to quit. He has since tried to be president again but Davis couldn't rise again to even make it to status of village trustee this time.
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