
(Image: Wilson for Seattle)
Who didn’t vote for Katie Wilson on Capitol Hill? — CHS was only partly joking when we looked at the maps of support for the mayoral candidates in August’s primary election. Candidate Katie Wilson, the progressive organizer and leader at the Transit Riders Union who has helped lead minimum wage and renter rights campaigns around the region, did well here in a tough summer vote for the city’s centrist incumbents. As we head toward the General Election on November 4th, Mayor Bruce Harrell has been on the offensive, claiming his opponent was a leader in the defund the police movement and accusing Wilson campaign supporters of racism. Wilson has mostly deflected the political potshots to remain focused on her messages around affordability and underserved communities including leading the city with plans to create $1 billion in union-built affordable housing, build 4,000 units of shelter, and expand police alternatives like the Community Assisted Response & Engagement Department’s crisis responders while also fielding smaller initiatives like championing creation of more public restrooms in the city. You can read more of her plans and platform at her campaign website: wilsonforseattle.com.
* We’ll have more with Harrell soon about his issues with Wilson and what he hopes to shape in a second term leading the city.
Below, CHS talks with Wilson about her campaign, her plans for the city, hot button issues like the Broadway Crisis Care Center, the Capitol Hill Superblock, and a key element that surprisingly hasn’t come up much on the campaign trail — Katie Wilson would truly be a Capitol Hill mayor.
CHS: A lot has been said about you being Seattle’s first renter mayor. That would be cool, but there’s more to it. You’d be Seattle’s first Capitol Hill renter mayor. How did you end up here in the neighborhood?
Wilson: Do we know for sure that I’d be the first renter? How did I end up on Capitol Hill? I’ve been gradually getting closer to Capitol Hill the whole time I’ve lived in Seattle. I first landed in Greenwood back in 2004 when my husband Scott and I moved here. We found a lady on Craigslist who would rent us a room in her basement for $400 a month, and that just happened to be in Greenwood. We didn’t know anything about the neighborhoods of Seattle. After that, we lived on Phinney Ridge for a long time, so we were in North Seattle, and then we moved into a house with some other people in the Central District, kind of in the 24th and Pine neighborhood. Then we lived in a house with other people up in Squire Park, which is almost Capitol Hill. Finally, we moved in 2018 into our current apartment, which is right up at the top of Capitol Hill. It’s just been gradually honing in the whole time that we’ve lived here, and it’s a great neighborhood to live in if you don’t own a car, for example. Lots of grocery stores are within walking distance, lots of transit right out the door, and the light rail station is just a short walk away. So it’s a great neighborhood for that kind of urban lifestyle. Obviously, now I have a daughter, so raising a daughter in an apartment building, it’s really important to us to have parks nearby. We spend a lot of time at Miller and Volunteer Park and some of the others. So, it’s a great neighborhood.
CHS: Something we don’t hear about are your roots. Mayors tend to have a root story for their city, and I haven’t heard that as much with you. Your opponent talks about the Central District and “good old days” almost in every speech, and I don’t hear that kind of nostalgia from you.
Wilson: Yeah. Well, I moved here in 2004, so I’ve lived here for over 20 years. Seattle is a real mix of people who have lived here for generations, people who grew up here, and people who have arrived from all over the country and all over the world. We have many immigrant communities, folks coming here from all over the world. I feel like that’s part of our city’s identity and culture: being a welcoming place that people move to for all kinds of reasons. People move here to work in the tech industry, LGBTQ+ folks move here because they’re not feeling welcome or safe in the community they grew up in. So, we’re a very diverse city, and many people here have stories that didn’t start in Seattle, and that doesn’t make us any less Seattleite, I think. Continue reading →