Ben Stuckart
A candidate for Council President, City of Spokane in the 2015 Nov. 3 Washington General Election
Party: Democratic
Age: 52
City: Spokane, Washington
Political experience: Served two terms as City Council president. Lost race for Spokane mayor in 2019.
Work experience: Former executive director of Communities in Schools of Spokane County. Former regional manager at TicketsWest, 2001 to 2007. Spokesman for the 2010 campaign in support of the Children’s Investment Fund initiative, which voters rejected.
Education: Graduated from Lewis and Clark High School in 1990. Earned bachelor’s degree in political science from Gonzaga University in 2000 and master’s degree in organizational leadership from Gonzaga University in 2006.
Family: Married. Has no children.
Contact information
More about Ben Stuckart
Race Results
Candidate | Votes | Pct |
---|---|---|
Ben Stuckart (D) | 19,643 | 63.63% |
John Ahern | 11,227 | 36.37% |
Related Coverage
Spokane lawmaker’s bill wouldn’t let cities enact sick leave or wage laws
Proposal wouldn’t let cities enact new sick leave or minimum wage laws
Shawn Vestal: Stupidity on Facebook shouldn’t disqualify Condon ally
In a quick, quiet vote last night, four members of the City Council voted to punish a political opponent for daring to criticize them. Or – if you take a more charitable view – the council voted to uphold standards of basic civility.
Baumgartner, Stuckart spar over plan to limit city workplace laws
OLYMPIA – A Spokane senator wants to keep other cities from mandating paid sick leave as the Spokane City Council has, or from raising the minimum wage higher than state law requires. The Spokane Council president said the proposal doesn’t respect the will of local voters.
Sick and safe leave right for Spokane
Mayor should not veto an ordinance that will be good for employees and employers.
Spokane City Council votes to require employers to provide sick leave
Most workers in Spokane will get three or five paid sick days under legislation approved by the Spokane City Council Monday night. “It is an accepted value,” said Spokane Council President Ben Stuckart. “We just need to codify it.”
Council members seek proof that downtown police precinct move will save money
Spokane City Council members are calling for city and police leaders to show how two-week old move of the downtown police precinct will save the city money.
Infighting jeopardizes Spokane immigration ballot initiative
Petitioners hoping to reverse Spokane policy prohibiting police from questioning if someone is in the country illegally have collected enough signatures to put the issue before voters. But voters may not get a chance to consider the issue.
Spokane City Council limits participation in weekly public forums
On Monday Spokane City Council voted 5-2 to limit open forum speakers to once a month.
Spokane City Council may limit open forum speakers to once a month
The Spokane City Council considers limiting people to speak at public forum to just once a month
Guards in Spokane schools won’t be armed
A proposal to arm Spokane Public Schools resource officers has been scrapped.