ONTD Political

Teenager Wins Iowa Mayoral Race

4:19 pm - 11/12/2011





AREDALE, Iowa — Eighteen-year-old Jeremy Minnier (muh-NEAR’) is in the high school band. He writes for the school newspaper. And he’s mayor-elect of his Iowa hometown.

Unofficial results from the Butler County elections office show the senior at Hampton Dumont High School was elected mayor of Aredale (AHR’-dayl) on Tuesday with 24 write-in votes. Incumbent Mayor Virgil Homer received eight votes.


Minnier told television station KIMT that he ran his write-in campaign because he thought the opinions of Aredale’s 73 residents were going unnoticed.

He says he’s planning to attend community college close to home next year so he can continue his mayoral duties throughout his four-year term. Minnier tells KWWL-TV (http://bit.ly/t98fPp ) he’s thinking about rural water and septic issues, and ways to improve the appearance of the town.


So Minnier was surprised not just to win, but also that he got three times the votes of the sitting mayor. And he hopes the community will continue to stand behind him, showing that even at 18, you can be a leader.

"A lot of people think 18 year olds are too young, you can't handle it. You're not interested in that stuff. Well, that's false. There's a lot of kids, young adults that are interested in this stuff. And we're the future," said Minnier.

In the small community of Aredale, there's not much to boast about. There's a post office, a couple of bars, and a bank. It's a place where you can literally walk down the middle of Main Street in the middle of the day. But mayor-elect Minnier still thinks he can accomplish big things here.

"We have some things with the DNR and their septic problems with everybody needing leech fields or needing pods put in their property for their septic. Another thing is rural water because we all have our own wells in Aredale. And there's also things we can just improve the overall appearance of the city and make it a place people like to come to," Minnier said.

Then maybe the mayor-to-be can encourage other young people to consider staying in their home communities to keep small Iowa towns like Aredale alive.

Minnier will officially begin his four-year mayoral term after being sworn in this January.

By the way, Minnier's dad is a former Aredale mayor and city councilman. The teen plans to continue living at home with his parents next year and commuting to college so he can take on the city's top job.


Source
shirogirl 12th-Nov-2011 10:22 pm (UTC)
Is anyone else just picturing Ben from Parks and Rec?
senkig 12th-Nov-2011 10:27 pm (UTC)
mmhmm.
fickery 12th-Nov-2011 10:23 pm (UTC)
Ice Town!
senkig 12th-Nov-2011 10:27 pm (UTC)
first thing I thought of
sephystabbity 12th-Nov-2011 10:29 pm (UTC)
Yeah, I really hope he's up to it, and not just toying with the idea of running a town because it sounds fun or whatnot.
yeats 12th-Nov-2011 10:25 pm (UTC)
i love how the first two comments capture my thoughts about this (namely, BB BEN!) exactly.
hazel_belle 12th-Nov-2011 10:32 pm (UTC)
four for you kid.
anolinde 12th-Nov-2011 10:51 pm (UTC)
Unofficial results from the Butler County elections office show the senior at Hampton Dumont High School was elected mayor of Aredale (AHR’-dayl) on Tuesday with 24 write-in votes. Incumbent Mayor Virgil Homer received eight votes.

mastadge 12th-Nov-2011 11:03 pm (UTC)
I do wonder if that's a vote of no confidence in the incumbent, or whether this was a sneak campaign.

ie, did the mayor and the other two-thirds of the town have any reason to believe there was competition?
roseofjuly 12th-Nov-2011 11:06 pm (UTC)
"A lot of people think 18 year olds are too young, you can't handle it. You're not interested in that stuff. Well, that's false. There's a lot of kids, young adults that are interested in this stuff. And we're the future," said Minnier.

I like that he said this. Lots of people write young adults off as if they don't matter, or they stereotype them as not caring. And this guy sounds like he knows what the fuck he's talking about with the water and shit.
chernobylred 13th-Nov-2011 02:35 pm (UTC)
I liked it, too. Go, Jeremy!
omgangiepants 12th-Nov-2011 11:17 pm (UTC)
Damn, 73 people. And I thought my metropolitan hometown of 800 people was small. Good luck, kid! Hopefully the town doesn't lose its post office and dissolve into nothing.
peace_piper 13th-Nov-2011 07:13 am (UTC)
lol, and I though my town of 1000 was small too. We've still only got a post office, a gas sation, a grocery store and a logging museum.
redstar826 12th-Nov-2011 11:42 pm (UTC)
well, a lot of politicians already act like high schoolers...
wicked_g 12th-Nov-2011 11:52 pm (UTC)
omgangiepants 13th-Nov-2011 12:30 am (UTC)
This kid was born in the same year that this song came out. Whoa.
yeats 12th-Nov-2011 11:53 pm (UTC)
on a less silly note: i really wish that people took the idea of extending suffrage to 16 year-olds more seriously. i've heard it argued before, and i went from being a total naysayer to being really intrigued at the idea.
the_gabih 13th-Nov-2011 11:35 am (UTC)
This. I mean, I'm constantly being told that 16 to 18-year-olds aren't aware enough to make informed decisions, but frankly, given we never ask how knowledgeable adults are when it comes to politics before we let them vote, it seems like a pretty stupid argument.
fickery 13th-Nov-2011 04:29 am (UTC)
LMAO
mollywobbles867 13th-Nov-2011 02:19 am (UTC)
73 people? I can't imagine living in a town that small. I've had college classes that had more people. I just can't wrap my head around it.
echoandsway 13th-Nov-2011 02:53 am (UTC)
That's stunningly rural. I lived in a place with a population of 105 when I was young; there was really nothing there (it was unincorporated, but so was every other town in that county. Dunno if that is still so...wait, yes it is. The county still has no incorporated towns, according to Wiki). I can't imagine a town 25% smaller than that.
cparamo 13th-Nov-2011 04:43 am (UTC)
Honestly, I'm astounded that a town that small has a mayor and council. I like the town meeting system that a lot of small towns in New England have, which is essentially direct democracy.
intotheaether 13th-Nov-2011 06:38 am (UTC)
I was just coming here to say this; I'm shocked that they have a mayor! I grew up in one of those small NE towns with town meetings, but this town's population makes ours (1500) look like NYC.
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