Robert Kettle Explained

Robert Kettle
Office:Member of the Seattle City Council
from District 7
Term Start:January 1, 2024
Predecessor:Andrew J. Lewis
Birth Place:New York
Party:Democratic
Spouse:Sarah Dunne
Residence:Seattle, Washington
Alma Mater:

Robert Kettle is an American veteran and politician elected to represent District 7 of the Seattle City Council.

Early life

Kettle was born in New York to a working class family.[1] After graduating college, he joined the United States Navy, becoming a Naval Intelligence Officer and rising to the rank of Commander.[1] After retiring from the Navy, Kettle and his family moved to the Queen Anne neighborhood in Seattle, where he became a stay-at-home dad to support his wife's work as a civil rights attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington.[2] [3]

Prior to running for Seattle City Council, Kettle was active in the Queen Anne community as a member of the Queen Anne Community Council board, and chair of its public safety board, as well as a member of the West Precinct Advisory Council, the Queen Anne Block Watch Network, and the World Affairs Council Seattle.[2] [3] [4]

Career

Seattle city council

2023 election

Kettle ran for city council in 2023 against incumbent Andrew J. Lewis.[3] There were four other challengers in the race, which included Piroshky Piroshky owner Olga Sagan.[5] In the August primary, Lewis and Kettle advanced to the general election, with 43% and 31% of the vote respectively. [6]

Kettle was labeled a "centrist" and a "moderate" with the focus of his campaign being public safety and addressing rising crime in the city.[7] [8] He blamed Lewis and the council for the "permissive environment" that had been created through their policies, including support for a 50% cut to the Seattle Police Department.[9] [10] Kettle supported hiring more police officers, cracking down on public drug use, and alternative responses to police.[4] [7] Lewis would state that his support for defunding the police was "a mistake" and that he backed Mayor Bruce Harrell plan to recruit more officers.[4] [10]

Kettle received backing from business and real estate lobbyists, including the National Association of Realtors, as well as some Republicans, like city attorney Ann Davison and former Sacramento Kings basketball player Spencer Hawes.[11] [12]

In the general election, Kettle won with 50.78% to Lewis' 48.91%.[13]

Tenure

Kettle was first elected to a council with a majority of moderates, a switch to the previous progressive city council.[14] [15] He was appointed chair of the public safety committee, and released his "6 pillars" to address public safety in the city which included, hiring more police, additional legal tools, and collaboration between different government entities.[16] [17] Kettle supported various bills to increase police officer hiring, including changing the police test to have a larger candidate pool.[18]

In conjunction with councilmember Cathy Moore Stay out of Areas of Prostitution (SOAP) legislation, Kettle sponsored a bill to create Stay out of Drug Areas (SODA) zones. The bill originally created two areas, one in Downtown Seattle and the other in Little Saigon, that would exclude people with previous drug related charges from those areas with enhanced trespassing orders.[19] In committee meetings, citizens were vocally opposed to the legislation, and people were removed from the meeting after causing a disturbance after the public comment period abruptly ended. [20] [21] Both the SODA and SOAP bills passed out of committee, with amendments adding additional SODA zones.[20] [21] At the full council, the public comment was extended to accommodate the more than 100 people who signed up to give testimony and the bills were both passed on a 8-1 vote.[22]

Personal life

Kettle lives in the Queen Anne neighborhood with his wife and children.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Radomsky . Rosalie R. . Sarah Dunne and Robert Kettle . 21 September 2024 . New York Times . July 7, 2012.
  2. Web site: Candidates Primary 2023 . King County Elections . 21 September 2024.
  3. Web site: Keller . Jessica . QA's Bob Kettle looks to add progressive decision-making to City Council . Queen Anne & Magnolia News . 21 September 2024.
  4. News: Cohen . Josh . Seattle City Council District 7: Andrew Lewis vs. Bob Kettle . 21 September 2024 . Cascade PBS . October 19, 2023.
  5. News: Coughlin-Bogue . Tobias . Archibald . Ashley . The fight for 14: Who will emerge from the jungle? . 21 September 2024 . Real Change . June 7, 2023.
  6. Web site: Election Results . King County Elections . 21 September 2024.
  7. News: Barnett . Erica C. . PubliCola Questions: City Council Candidate Bob Kettle, District 7 . 21 September 2024 . Publicola . October 24, 2023.
  8. News: Hyde . David . Will Seattle become a law-and-order town after this election? . 21 September 2024 . KUOW . November 7, 2023.
  9. News: Staff . KUOW's District Dash: A Seattle City Council deep dive for busy people . 21 September 2024 . KUOW . October 18, 2023.
  10. News: Santos . Melissa . Seattle District 7 council candidates spar over public safety . 21 September 2024 . Axios . October 19, 2023.
  11. News: Cohen . Josh . Outside interests spend more than $1M on Seattle City Council races . 21 September 2024 . Cascade PBS . October 30, 2023.
  12. News: City Council Candidate Bob Kettle Promoted Right-Wing Endorsements . 21 September 2024 . The Stranger . October 31, 2023.
  13. Web site: Election Results . King County Elections . 21 September 2024.
  14. News: Taylor . Sarah Grace . Without Sawant and Herbold, who will lead Seattle’s left? . 22 September 2024 . Seattle Times . December 18, 2023.
  15. News: Board . Conner . New Seattle City Council taking shape as races are called . 22 September 2024 . King5 . November 15, 2023.
  16. News: Daniels . Chris . 'We need an all-hands-on-deck effort': Seattle Public Safety chair to lead 1st meeting . 22 September 2024 . KOMO . February 12, 2024.
  17. News: Staff . Seattle City Council’s new public safety chair unveils vision and ‘6 Pillars addressing the Permissive Environment’ . 22 September 2024 . Capital Hill Seattle Blog . February 13, 2024.
  18. News: Barnett . Erica C. . Council’s Public Safety Chair: “We Don’t Have the Luxury” of Being Picky About Police Test Scores . 22 September 2024 . Publicola . June 26, 2024.
  19. News: Moreno . Joe . Seattle City Council to debate new drug-free zones in crime-stricken areas of city . 22 September 2024 . KOMO . August 1, 2024.
  20. News: Smith . Helen . Controversial proposals to ban those with drug, prostitution arrests from certain areas of Seattle passes out of committee after tense meeting . 22 September 2024 . King5 . September 11, 2024.
  21. News: Beekman . Daniel . Seattle City Council considers 7 ‘stay out’ drug or prostitution zones . 22 September 2024 . Seattle Times . September 11, 2024.
  22. News: Cohen . Josh . Seattle enacts controversial drug, prostitution ‘stay out’ zones . 22 September 2024 . Crosscut . PBS . September 17, 2024.