Donât tell the residents of Copenhagen that voting doesnât make a difference.
High voter turnout in the March 16 village election resulted in a new mayor and new trustee. A total of 191 residents came out to case ballots. Thatâs more than 47% of the 401 registered voters in Copenhagen.
A heated run-off culminated in a coalition government with winners from both of the micro-parties and a new vision at the top. Mayoral challenger Mark Souva, who ran on the Team with New Vision, garnered 128 votes, winning decidedly over incumbent Mayor Kenneth Clarke with 87 votes,â according to a story published March 16 by the Watertown Daily Times. âIn the race for the two trustee positions up for grabs, newcomer Shareef Stokely, also of Team Vision, topped the pack with 116 votes to join the board. And incumbent Gerald Snyder, who ran as part of the Home Team with fellow sitting officers, will keep his seat with his 107 votes. Ronald Vogt came up seven votes short for a
Village elections: Copenhagen, Richville & Theresa Some north country residents went to the polls Tuesday to vote in village elections. (Source: WWNY) By 7 News Staff | March 17, 2021 at 6:00 AM EDT - Updated March 17 at 7:52 AM
COPENHAGEN, N.Y. (WWNY) - Voting is complete for three village elections.
Of interest are a coalition of challengers in Copenhagen and vacant trustee seats that will likely be filled by write-in candidates in Richville and Theresa.
In Copenhagen’s mayoral race, the challenger, Mark Souva defeated incumbent Kenneth Clarke 128 to 87.
For the two open trustee seats, Shareef Stokley received the most votes with 116. Incumbent Gerald Snyder fills the other open seat, receiving 107 votes.
COPENHAGEN â A heated run-off culminated in a coalition government with winners from both of the âmicro-partiesâ and a ânew visionâ at the top.
Mayoral challenger Mark Souva, who ran on the âTeam with New Vision,â garnered 128 votes, winning decidedly over incumbent Mayor Kenneth Clarke with 87 votes.
âI figured it would be close,â Mr. Souva said. âI was quite surprised by the gap.â
In the race for the two trustee positions up for grabs, newcomer Shareef Stokely, also of Team Vision, topped the pack with 116 votes to join the board, and incumbent Gerald Snyder, who ran as part of the âHome Teamâ with fellow sitting officers, will keep his seat with his 107 votes.