10/11/2021
The next-to-last question in my review of last year's LWV question updates:
2020 LWV Question: Our political discourse in Hudson has been extremely divisive in recent months due, in large part, to social media. How will you cooperate and collaborate with other council members?
What I said in 2020: I am, by nature, a problem solver and I can ask meaningful questions or propose thoughtful alternatives that lead towards a better consensus. Some people mistake questioning as a sign of “divisiveness,” when questions are actually the only way to discern truth. The political discourse in Hudson isn’t divisive because of social media. The discourse is divisive because city administrators and certain elected officials won’t listen to listen to residents. Voters want their streets fixed, not money wasted on a flailing broadband network. They want a recreation center, not an over-budget new city hall. They want Hudson’s historic charm to be preserved, instead of having some hyper-dense new development crammed into an inconvenient pocket of town. The responses on social media are a symptom, not a cause of the divisiveness. Our best solution is to elect competent, independent, transparent, and thoughtful leaders for Hudson. I have worked with the Wards 2, 3, and 4 council members as well as the Mayor over the course of years on various projects and my track record as a reliable, engaged citizen is unquestionably solid.
In the last year: the candidate who prevailed in 2020 for the at-large seat demonstrated a severe lack of maturity and judgment by weaponizing comments on social media against those with whom she disagreed. She also used social media platforms to intimidate a citizen who had made lawful public records request and then shared that information with others. In the middle of that, unnecessary social media drama was paraded in Council chambers in an effort to attack a seated council member. Hudson deserves better than this! Cyber-bullying should not be a means of adult discourse!
Representing the people requires authentic, mature people skills: listening, inquiry, analysis, dialogue, and responsiveness. It is one thing to disagree with another person’s opinion. How an elected representative or candidate handles that disagreement is a mark of their character. The discord and divisiveness in our town will persist, and ultimately prevail, if Hudson does not elect diplomatic, polite, mature, and level-headed leaders like me. I learned mediating skills early in my professional career and I know how to listen to opposing perspectives, find middle ground, and build a framework for solutions from that point.
Vote for Sarah G. Norman to oppose cyber-bullying and divisiveness in Hudson’s political environment!