Baker & Reiter tie for Sioux Falls School Board

It’s Nan Baker & Carly Reiter tied for the first place win in tonight’s Sioux Falls School Board race, shutting out Constitution Party member Lora Hubbel hard by over 1800 votes for a distant third place.

The only way this election could’ve gone better, would have been if Hubble had come in last.

But I think she gets the hint.

24 thoughts on “Baker & Reiter tie for Sioux Falls School Board”

  1. Maybe Lora can run for Dog Catcher to see what her chances are of ever winning an election.

  2. How could this young Ms. Anderson have scored less than Ms. Hubbel? That, you Sioux Falls voters, is just insaner than all get out.

    1. Anderson was even nuttier, if you can imagine such a thing. She had some idea that the school board was in charge of bullying, not budgets.

      1. Because in SD we’re proud of our crazy people. We don’t hide them up in the attic, we bring them right down to the living room to show them off.

  3. Is this supposed to be representative of Pat’s command over the election process ?

  4. Parents and public health professionals had a sigh of relief Lora anti-vax Hubbel did not get elected again.

      1. The Libertarian Party of South Dakota has a rich history of being hijacked by colorful people like Chad Haber, Lee Pornahan, last cycle and Lora would fit right in perfectly.

      2. I hope so, then Lora can again generate a story about the Libertarian Party; which they will not deserve. However, since the CPSD central committee has banned and sanctioned Lora and crew from ever running under the Constitution Party of South Dakota or voting when it comes to being a nominated candidate or committee person. I give them no authority to use the CPSD party name nor the position to use it for any political gain.

  5. The real bad news about the school board election is the poor turnout – 3.86 percent, or 4,247 out of 110,040.

    With turnout that low, school district employees and their families could constitute the majority of those who voted. (As Jack Keegan demonstrated several years ago, it’s possible to determine this based on public records.)

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