Skip to Main Navigation

The Buffalo News

Web Search
by YAHOO! SEARCH

Bruce Andriatch: ‘Unopposed’ is easy, but it isn’t the best

Published:October 27, 2009, 7:43 AM

Font Size:
  • E-mail
  • Share
  • Print

Recent Bruce Andriatch Columns

Updated: August 21, 2010, 2:43 AM

Hamburg Highway Superintendent Thomas Best has a name that other politicians can only dream about. The slogan possibilities are endless.

Best for Hamburg. You’ve seen the rest, now vote for Best. Simply the Best.

And yet these gems must remain packed away for another day. Best has no reason to wheel them out because no one wanted to run against him this year.

The unchallenged Best.

He will have plenty of company. Next Tuesday’s ballot will be full of races in which there really is no race. Of the more than 150 state, county and local positions that Erie County voters will consider next week, more than a third feature only one candidate.

The mayor of Buffalo is unopposed, as are five of the 15 county legislators. So are most of the town clerks in addition to several tax receivers, town board members and—like Best—highway superintendents.

Are uncontested races good for democracy? No. Every elected official should have to defend his or her record before the voters and be able to answer criticism from a political adversary. But running for office is expensive, and beating incumbents is rare. As a result, uncontested races are inevitable.

Not surprisingly, it’s tough to find any of the these ensured winners complaining.

Best, a former Hamburg police captain, is running for highway superintendent for the first time. He was appointed to the job earlier this year after James Connolly resigned. At the time, he was in the middle of his first term on the Town Board, a position he won in 2007 with nearly 10,000 votes.

But he would gladly trade the joy of that very public validation for what he has this year: a chance to run without worry.

“I don’t envy any of the [opposed] candidates,” he said. “Things get exaggerated. Things get twisted. And sometimes it’s embarrassing for the families of politicians.”

Michael Nolan is completing his third two-year term as Elma town supervisor. He has won the job every which way— unopposed, opposed, after a primary. He’ll take unopposed any day.

“It’s much easier to do your job as normal,” he said of running unopposed. “You’re not . . . making a wrong decision around election time because of the election. That type of pressure is not there.”

Which is not to say there is no pressure. Aurora Town Clerk Martha Librock, who is alone on the ballot for the third time in her four campaigns, said that there is always the worry about a candidate waging a write-in campaign.

“Ask any town clerk who runs unopposed,” she said. “It’s still in the back of your mind—that ‘what if?’ ”

Running unopposed also is a money-saver for candidates, who don’t have to build up a campaign war chest to buy advertising. Some buy signs anyway, as a reminder to voters that their names will appear on the ballot. Best said he didn’t even have to do that; he had about 15 signs left over from his Town Board run that he is reusing this year.

The only problem is that he is running for a different position this year, but Best figured a way around that one, too. “Instead of having to buy all new signs, I bought the word ‘highway’ and glued it over the word ‘councilman,’ ” he said. “ ‘Elect Tom Best councilman’ was the sign. This year it says ‘Elect Tom Best highway.’ ”

Now like dozens of his fellow unopposed candidates, Best can sit back and relax all the way through Election Day.

After that, he can start worrying about whether he will have to run against someone in 2013.

His bigger worry is that his opponent’s name will be Better.

Comments

There are no comments on this story.

The Feed / What’s Happening Now

Latest Updates
Most Commented
Most Viewed
Sabres & NHL

Sabres show some gumption in beating Bruins

Niagara Falls

Body of missing woman found in fields in LaSalle neighborhood

City of Buffalo

White firefighters are awarded $2.7 million in bias case

Courts

21-year prison sentence set in fatal shooting

Sabres & NHL

Sabres' Regier remains upbeat despite latest injury

Bills & NFL

Bills hire a quarterback mechanic in Lee

State Wire

Driver killed as collision shuts Thruway lanes

Jerry Sullivan

Fitz won't blame injury for poor play

Police Blotter

Knife in carry-on leads to arrest at airport

South Buffalo

Kearns wants action on vacant South Buffalo home

Newsroom Tips

Have a news tip you think The Buffalo News should investigate?

Call The News tip line at 849-4475 or email us at investigations@buffnews.com.

All calls and emails will be kept confidential.

Buffalo Marketplace

Marketplace videos

Watch the latest offers, products and services from our advertisers.

Browse our print ads

It's the ultimate advantage for Buffalo consumers. Never miss another ad again!

Buffalo Savers: coupons

Buffalo coupons at your fingertips.
Just click and print. It's Easy!

close

Browse our print adsclose

Special Sections

Buffalo Saversclose

Local coupons

Featured coupon

Latest Blogs

School Zone

What will the next round of school turnarounds look like in Buffalo?

Politics Now

Erie County Hall Politics Now chat with Denise Jewell Gee at 1 p.m.

Sabres Edge

Inside the NHL chat with Bucky Gleason at 10 a.m.

BillBoard

Harrison calls out Gronkowski

Sports, Ink

This Day in Buffalo Sports History: Had 'em all the way