SEATTLE (AP) - Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan has asked a King County judge to reconsider her ruling to allow a recall petition to proceed against the mayor.
Durkan argues the use of tear gas to disperse protesters was a decision made by police Chief Carmen Best, not her, and that it was reasonable, The Seattle Times reported.
King County Superior Court Judge Mary E. Roberts last week dismissed six claims against Durkan as insufficient for a recall, but allowed a seventh to move forward. That claim alleged Durkan failed to implement new policing policies after tear gas and other chemical agents were used on protesters.
The ruling was an initial victory for Durkan’s opponents in what would be a long process to recall the mayor. Roberts’ role is to assume the charges, as filed against Durkan, are true, and to determine whether they’re both specific and serious enough to allow the petition to proceed. Opponents would have to collect more than 50,000 signatures from Seattle voters - one-quarter of the votes filed in the last mayoral election - before a special recall election could be held.
A recall election would be a simple up or down vote on Durkan. If the recall succeeded, the city council president, currently M. Lorena González, would become mayor.
In a motion filed this week, Durkan said it’s not her duty to dictate Seattle police policies and, even if it was, changing police policies without court approval would violate the city’s longstanding consent decree.
“The Mayor believes the remaining claim will be dismissed,” Stephanie Formas, Durkan’s chief of staff, said. She said Durkan would pursue “appropriate next steps,” potentially an appeal, if it is not.
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