In a sign of either hope or desperation, Rose City voters decided to throw out their entire government structure and replace it with a weaker mayor, expanded City Council and ranked choice voting.
A major driving factor was the passage of “Measure 110” decriminalizing all drugs in 2020, which was backed by 74 percent of Multnomah County’s residents. Voters couldn’t — or at least didn’t — anticipate how this policy change would reshape a city already strapped for money, dealing with a public health crisis and confronting rising rates of homelessness and fentanyl abuse.
Drug use shot up, homelessness worsened and taxpayers fled.
Seemingly everyone wants to be part of fixing the city’s woes. There are 19 people running for mayor and 98 people seeking seats on the City Council. They’re nearly all campaigning on left-of-center platforms — this is Portland, after all. But progressives often put blame for the policy failures on unexpected circumstances like the fentanyl crisis and on problems with implementation, while moderate candidates are bemoaning the city’s far-left shift and pushing for bigger policy corrections.
The ramifications are measurable: Nearly 12,000 people moved out of Multnomah County between 2020 and 2023, per data from Portland State University. The exodus between 2020 and 2021 alone took nearly $1.1 billion in taxable income out of the city, according to data analyzed by the Economic Innovation Group. Portland’s once bustling downtown is nearly empty, and a negative national reputation clouds its economic future.
Rep. Earl Blumenauer, a retiring Democrat congressman who has represented parts of Portland since 1996 and before that served on both the Multnomah County Commission and the City Council, said parts of downtown look “like Dresden in World War II.”
“I’ve spent 54 years trying to make Portland the most livable city in the country or in the world,” said Blumenauer, his voice cracking, in a mid-September interview as he prepared to pack up his Capitol Hill office. “No one’s going to describe it like that now.”
The rest is about their “summer of love”. These retards are so broken they can’t do anything but continue to double down and implode.
I'm on board with building a wall around it so the dems don't infect other cities with their disasterous and failed ideas. I imagine the ones on the inside will be glad too -- "We don't need your help anyhow! We can just fix this by going farther to the left!"
The rest is about their “summer of love”. These retards are so broken they can’t do anything but continue to double down and implode.
Wait till they recommend building dams and keeping all that water and electricity up there, only to have Canada do the same at the border.
I say let them rip themselves apart. Drug tests for anyone wanting to leave. "Escape for Portland" should be John Carpenter's next flick.
I'm on board with building a wall around it so the dems don't infect other cities with their disasterous and failed ideas. I imagine the ones on the inside will be glad too -- "We don't need your help anyhow! We can just fix this by going farther to the left!"
Sell it as an "anti-fascist wall" to protect Portland from those sister-fucking rightoids in East Oregon.
May need another one for Bend...