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Christian Bradley Hubbs
Hubbs in August 2018.
Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke
Assumed office
31 January 2019
Serving with 6 others[a]
Preceded byErnest Broadwater
Delegate to the Vermont Progressive State Committee from Caledonia County
Assumed office
Acting: 16 November 2018 – 19 October 2019
19 October 2019
Serving with 6 others[b]
Preceded byNone (delegation added)
Deputy Secretary-Treasurer of the Caledonia County Progressive Committee
Assumed office
19 October 2019
Preceded byVacant
Delegate to the Caledonia County Progressive Committee from the town of St. Johnsbury
Assumed office
28 September 2021
Serving with Daniel Miller
Preceded byNathan Brimmer
2nd Vice Chair of the St. Johnsbury Progressive Town Committee
Assumed office
28 September 2021
Preceded byNathan Brimmer
Delegate to the Caledonia County Progressive Committee from the town of Burke
In office
30 September 2017 – 28 September 2021
Serving with
Patricia A. Colon, John Lotti, Linda J. Lotti, Patricia A. Ward
Preceded byNone (inaugural officeholder)
Succeeded byPatricia A. Colon
1st Chair of the Burke Progressive Town Committee
In office
17 September 2019 – 28 September 2021
Preceded byNone (inaugural officeholder)
Succeeded byPatricia A. Colon
1st Vice Chair of the Burke Progressive Town Committee
In office
Acting: 30 September 2017 – 8 August 2018
8 August 2018 – 17 September 2019
Preceded byNone (inaugural officeholder)
Succeeded byJohn Lotti
Personal details
Born
Christian Bradley Cowdrey-Lafleur McKee-Hubbs

(1998-10-08) October 8, 1998 (age 25)
Spring Hill, Florida, U.S.
CitizenshipVermont, United States of America
Political partyProgressive (2016-present)
Independent (until 2016)
Other political
affiliations
Liberty Union/Socialist (2015-2016)
Neoreformist (2016)
Residence(s)West Burke, Vermont (until 2020)
St. Johnsbury, Vermont (2021-present)
EducationCommunity College of Vermont
Progressive candidate for
2022 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace election in St. Johnsbury
Election date
8 November 2022

Christian Bradley Hubbs (born October 8, 1998) is a Progressive political activist, electoral reform advocate, and political scientist from Vermont. He is also a local political officeholder, currently serving at the county level in the Northeast Kingdom, is a member of the Progressive State Committee, and was the first Progressive elected official in Caledonia County.

Political activity[edit]

Background[edit]

Hubbs was born October 8, 1998 in Florida and moved to Vermont, where most of his family resided, in April 2001. Via his mother, he is related to the Harrison family of Virginia; a direct descendant of Mary Harrison McKee, and U.S. Presidents Benjamin Harrison and William Henry Harrison.

He had a tenuous interest in politics from an early age; after witnessing the political fallout of the presidential election recount and results in Florida in 2000, he had further experiences with elections from 2002 to 2012 via family members being active in state and local elections in Vermont during his childhood, a time in which he describes the rural area where he lived as being very conservative, and also witnessed the economic and political effects of the Great Recession from 2008 to 2012 on both his local community and the country. He traveled to Washington, D.C and visited the U.S. Capitol and other historical and political sites of the East Coast in May 2012. He became active in local politics and in various national issues following the 2014 elections and attributes his early political interests to media resources such as C-Span and Gabe Fleisher’s Wake Up To Politics as well as political talk shows such as The David Pakman Show, The Thom Hartmann Program, and Secular Talk.

Positions[edit]

He has advocated for limiting the borders of state legislature districts to counties and towns within counties, as some districts such as Essex-Orleans-Caledonia can include towns from separate counties, or the senate district Orleans-Essex encompassing multiple counties. He is in favor of 4-term consecutive term limits for executive offices in the U.S. including the presidency and governorships (8-term in the case of Vermont and New Hampshire Governors which have 2-year terms), and for state senators to have 4-year alternating terms.

He supports lowering the voting age to 15, but possibly requiring registrants aged 15-19 to take a “basic political competency test” to be eligible to vote. He believes that many political issues at the national, state, and local levels affect young people, many of whom have enough experience to make informed decisions when voting in elections, and that boosting youth political engagement will make the country more adaptable and quick to address new problems that arise.

He has supported and been involved in various legislative campaigns in the Northeast Kingdom for the Vermont House of Representatives, to spread the Progressive movement outside of just Washington and Chittenden counties where the party has been the most popular, noting that the northeast region of the state is the most rural and conservative.

He supported U.S. Senator from Vermont Bernie Sanders in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, and supported Bill Lee and Brenda Siegel in the 2016 and 2018 Vermont gubernatorial elections, respectively.

Political Parties[edit]

As a member of the Vermont Progressive Party, he has supported measures such as ranked-choice voting in order to make third parties more viable in elections, although advocates specifically for an exponential system of multi-point voting as opposed to the linear systems of single-transferable voting or instant-runoff voting.

He has expressed his displeasure with the Democratic Party and that he would like to see the progressive movement "make a clear, bold, breakaway from the Democratic Party and their un-progressive policies", and that he would like to see a Progressive Party at the national level as was the case at various times in the past.

In reference to a modern Progressive Party, he has stated:

"If you take the members of the Progressive Caucus, assuming they're all truly progressive, various existing parties such as the Green Party, Justice Party, Reform Party, the Socialist Party if they're so inclined, and state-level Progressive parties, and organizations such as DSA, Our Revolution, Justice Democrats, and you put them all together, you would have all the organizational structure that you'd need. But then, if you awaken the Democratic base of voters, who mostly are ideologically Progressive even if they don't know it, and get them to break away, then you'd have a full party and political force that would be able to win elections all down the ballot and all across the country. It would be larger and more successful today than the parties of James Weaver, Teddy Roosevelt, Robert La Follette, and Henry Wallace ever were."

Aerospace Policy[edit]

Hubbs has been a firm, vocal advocate for space sciences, for policies that support spaceflight, exploration, and travel, the increase in budget for NASA as “an immeasurably important investment for the nation, the planet, the future, and for humans as a species”, and has called for “a return of the federal agency leading a bold space program that pushes the frontier and supports public and private space travel infrastructure in the near-Earth and cis-Lunar space regions. Essentially Apollo program level undertakings, without the Cold War motivational downsides.” He has been a critic of the management of the federal space program under the Clinton, Bush, Obama, and Trump administrations, and has said that "…[T]he militarization of outer space by the United States, or any country, would be "the single greatest mistake of any government since the Iraq War, and most outrageous misuse of taxpayer money and national resources". He also believes, on the matter of the creation of the United States Space Force, that a military branch in space is unnecessary, and instead an agency analogous to the Federal Aviation Administration is needed, for regulation of space transportation, satellite management, and space communications as pertaining to interests of the U.S. and U.S. companies in space, similarly to the relationship between NOAA and NASA in terms of science, research, and development in the oceans and atmosphere, compared to high atmosphere and space, respectively. Hubbs is, however, a strong supporter of the Commercial Resupply Services Program, Commercial Crew Program, LOP-Gateway station, Orion Program, Artemis Program, and Space Launch System developed under said administrations and continued under the direction of NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine.

He supports a proposal to create a civilian spaceport and launch facility along the coast of Maine or Massachusetts, capable of supporting sounding, sub-orbital, small-lift, and potentially medium-lift and stratolaunch vehicles, to be a public utility and economic asset for New England, and an infrastructural resource for the U.S. spaceflight industry, citing the creation of a spaceport at a similar latitude in nearby Nova Scotia.

Hubbs has worked on public engagement and as a curator and speaker for topics on astronomy, rocket science, aerospace engineering, planetary science, astrodynamics, and space exploration at the Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium in St. Johnsbury, Vermont since 2015.[1]

Electoral history[edit]

Portrait of Hubbs as County Justice of the Peace in May 2019.

Hubbs first appeared in elections at the municipal-level, before he was even old enough to vote, when in March 2015 at age 16 he received 2 write-in votes for Town Auditor of his hometown Burke, Vermont.

At the 2017 County Committee meeting in St. Johnsbury he was appointed to be the lone delegate from Burke to the Caledonia County Progressive Committee by the County Chair and State Committee Secretary, John Christopher Brimmer. One year later he was one of the founding members of the Progressive Town Committee of Burke at a caucus on August 8, 2018 and became its first Vice Chair in a special election. Also at the caucus he was nominated[2] and went on to successfully run for Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke, ranking third in the results with 14% of the vote, after he was recruited and encouraged by town officials to fill one of two vacancies out of the seven Justice seats allotted for the town. He succeeded retiring Justice Ernest Broadwater (D) when his two-year term began on January 31, 2019. In November 2018 he was appointed as the second State Committee Delegate from Caledonia County and was formally elected to the Committee as a voting member in 2019.

Past election results[edit]

2015-present

2015

2015 Burke Town Auditor election
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Gail Weed 214 94.69
Write-in Debra Hale 10 4.425
Write-in Christian B. Hubbs 2 0.885
Total votes 226 100.0
Independent hold
2016
2016 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace election in Burke
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Susan Carr (incumbent) 413 17.20 -0.09
Republican Jean Davis (incumbent) 411 17.11 -0.11
Independent Cathleen Feeley (incumbent) 402 16.74 +1.88
Republican Louisa Sanderson (incumbent) 366 15.24 -0.26
Democratic Joel Gilbert (incumbent) 328 13.65 +0.07
Democratic Joan Harlowe (incumbent) 320 13.32 -0.46
Democratic Ernest Broadwater (incumbent) 157 6.53 -1.02
Write-in Christian B. Hubbs 1 0.04 +
Write-in Write-ins (other) 4 0.16
Total votes 2,402 100.0
N/A Blank votes 3,415
Republican hold Swing 49.55 -0.46
Democratic hold Swing 33.50 -1.41
Independent hold Swing 16.74 +1.88
2016 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-4 election[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Martha Feltus (incumbent) 1,893 35.76 -13.08
Republican Richard Lawrence (incumbent) 1,886 35.63 -14.48
Democratic Patrick Seymour 1,490 28.15 +28.15
Write-in Ian Balcolm 2 0.03 +0.03
Write-in Ed Fregosi 2 0.03 +0.03
Write-in Christian B. Hubbs 1 0.02 +0.02
Write-in Alvin Shulman 1 0.02 +0.02
Write-in Write-ins (other) 17 0.32 -0.71
Total votes 5,293 100.0
N/A Blank votes 1,473
Republican hold Swing 71.39 -27.56

2017

2017 Burke Progressive Town Committee County Delegate election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 5 100.0
Total votes 5 100.0
2018
2018 Endorsements
State politicians
  • Martha Abbott, Treasurer of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2013–present), 2nd and 5th Chair of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2001–2005, 2009–2013), Progressive candidate for Governor of Vermont in 2012, 2010, and 2004, Progressive nominee for Vermont Auditor in 2008 and 2006, Burlington City Councilor (1994–1998), Liberty Union nominee for Vermont Governor in 1974, Campaign coordinator and organizer for Bernie Sanders (1972–2004) and Dave Zuckerman (2006–present)
  • Bill Coleman, Chair of the Newark Progressive Town Committee (2015–present), Delegate to the Caledonia County Progressive Committee from Newark (2015–present), Delegate to the Vermont Progressive State Committee from Caledonia County (2013–present), former Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke (1987–1999), Democratic nominee for State Representative in 1990 and for State Senator in 1992, Grassroots nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Vermont in 1996 and 1998, cannabis legalization and renewable energy activist
  • Susan Hatch Davis, State Representative from district Orange-1 (2007–2017), Chair of the Orange County Progressive Committee (2005–present)
  • Patrick Seymour, Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Sutton (2017–present), Sutton Schoolboard member (2015–present), dairy farmer, member of the Sutton Volunteer Fire Department, candidate for Vermont House of Representatives from district Caledonia-4 in 2016 and 2018
  • Joshua Wronski, Executive Director of the Vermont Progressive Party (2015–present), Progressive nominee for Chittenden County Justice of the Peace from the city of Burlington in 2016 and 2018, labor organizer and activist
County politicians
  • John Christopher Brimmer, Secretary of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2009–present), Chair of the Caledonia County Progressive Committee (2011–present), Secretary-Treasurer of the Ryegate Progressive Town Committee (2011-present), Zoning Administrator and Administrative Officer of the town of Waterford, Zoning and Planning Administrator of the town of Fairlee, and former Zoning Administrator of the town of Derby, Municipal Consultant, U.S. Coast Guard veteran, farmer
  • Cathleen Feeley, Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke (2005–present), Burke Town Agent (2015–present), and Assistant Treasurer (2001–present)
  • Carter Neubeiser, Progressive nominee for Burlington City Council in 2016 and for Chittenden County Justice of the Peace from the city of Burlington in 2016 and 2018, Founder and Chair of the Vermont Progressive Party Youth Caucus
Local politicians
  • Darryel Corrow, Burke Selectboard member, rural economic developer and member of the Burke Area Chamber of Commerce
  • Linda Hackett-Corey, Burke Assistant Town Clerk (2007–present)
  • Jeanne Miles, Burke Town Auditor (2013–present) and Grand Juror (2003–2011, 2015–present)
  • Dylan Stetson, Candidate for Waterford Progressive Town Committee Chair in 2019
2018 Burke Progressive Town Committee Vice Chair special election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 3 100.0
Total votes 3 100.0
2018 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace Progressive caucus in Burke
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 7 100.0
Total votes 7 100.0
2018 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-4 Progressive primary election[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Dennis R. Labounty (write-in) 4 30.77
Progressive Martha Feltus (incumbent) (write-in) 3 23.08
Progressive Patrick Seymour (write-in) 2 15.38
Progressive Christian B. Hubbs (write-in) 2 15.38
Progressive Fred Gorham (write-in) 1 7.7
Progressive Patrick Ham (write-in) 1 7.7
Write-in Write-ins (other) 0 0.0
Total votes 13 100.0
N/A Blank votes 13
{{Election box gain with party link and percentage}}{{Election box gain with party link and percentage}}
2018 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace election in Burke
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Cathleen Feeley (incumbent) 658 17.5 +0.76
Republican Susan Carr (incumbent) 644 17.13 -0.07
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 527 14.02 +13.98
Republican John Kascenska 524 13.94 +13.94
Democratic Joel Gilbert (incumbent) 508 13.51 -0.14
Independent William David Hammond 481 12.79 +12.79
Democratic Joan Harlowe (incumbent) 396 10.53 -2.79
Write-in Janet Wheeler 8 0.21 +0.21
Write-in Jean Davis (incumbent) 4 0.11 -17.0
Write-in Louisa Sanderson (incumbent) 3 0.08 -15.16
Write-in Write-ins (other) 7 0.19
Total votes 3,760 100.0
N/A Blank votes 1,192
Republican hold Swing 31.07 -18.48
Democratic hold Swing 24.04 -9.46
2018 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-4 election[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Martha Feltus (incumbent) 1,633 38.06 +2.29
Republican Patrick Seymour 1,375 32.04 +3.89
Democratic Dennis R. Labounty 1,266 29.49 +29.49
Write-in Christian B. Hubbs 2 0.05 +0.03
Write-in Benjamin Robbins 2 0.05 +0.05
Write-in Write-ins (other) 13 0.40
Total votes 4,291 100.0
N/A Blank votes 1,248
Republican hold Swing 70.09 -1.3
2019
2019 Burke Town Auditor election
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Susan Carr 228 93.06
Write-in Debra Hale (incumbent) 14 5.71
Write-in Christian B. Hubbs 3 1.22
Total votes 245 100.0
Independent hold
2019 Burke Progressive Town Committee County Delegate election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Patricia A. Colon 8 22.22
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs (incumbent)[c] 8 22.22
Progressive Linda J. Lotti 7 19.44
Progressive John Lotti 6 16.67
Progressive Patricia A. Ward 5 13.89
Progressive Carmenza Montague 2 5.56
Total votes 36 100.0
2019 Burke Progressive Town Committee Vice Chair election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive John Lotti 6 75.0
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs (incumbent) 2 25.0
Total votes 8 100.0
2019 Burke Progressive Town Committee Chair election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 7 87.5
Progressive John Lotti 1 12.5
Total votes 8 100.0
2019 Caledonia County Progressive Committee State Delegate election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Susan Brimmer (incumbent) 16 20.51
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs (incumbent) 12 15.38
Progressive Jodi Campbell (incumbent) 11 14.10
Progressive Bill Coleman (incumbent) 11 14.10
Progressive Olivia Brimmer 10 12.82
Progressive Dylan Stetson 10 12.82
Progressive Paul Fixx (incumbent) 8 10.26
Total votes 78 100.0
2019 Caledonia County Progressive Committee Secretary-Treasurer and Deputy Secretary-Treasurer election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Dylan Stetson 11 47.83
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 8 34.78
Progressive Bill Coleman 3 13.04
Progressive Jodi Campbell 1 4.35
Total votes 23 100.0
2020
2020 Endorsements
State politicians
  • Martha Abbott, Assistant Treasurer of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2019–present), Treasurer of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2013–2019), 2nd and 5th Chair of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2001–2005, 2009–2013), Progressive candidate for Governor of Vermont in 2012, 2010, and 2004, Progressive nominee for Vermont Auditor in 2008 and 2006, Burlington City Councilor (1994–1998), Liberty Union nominee for Governor of Vermont in 1974, Campaign coordinator and organizer for Bernie Sanders (1972–2004) and Dave Zuckerman (2006–present)
  • Scott Campbell, State Representative from district Caledonia-3 (2019–present), candidate for Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of St. Johnsbury in 2014
  • Bill Coleman, Chair of the Newark Progressive Town Committee (2015–present), Delegate to the Caledonia County Progressive Committee from Newark (2015–present), Delegate to the Vermont Progressive State Committee from Caledonia County (2013–present), candidate for Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Newark in 2020, former Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke (1987–1999), Democratic nominee for State Representative in 1990 and for State Senator in 1992, Grassroots nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Vermont in 1996 and 1998, organic farmer, cannabis legalization and renewable energy activist
  • Susan Hatch Davis, former State Representative from district Orange-1 (2007–2017), Chair of the Orange County Progressive Committee (2005–present)
  • Patrick Seymour, State Representative from district Caledonia-4 (2019–present), candidate for Vermont House of Representatives from district Caledonia-4 in 2016, Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Sutton (2017–present), Sutton Schoolboard member (2015–present), dairy farmer, member of the Sutton Volunteer Fire Department
  • Joshua Wronski, Executive Director of the Vermont Progressive Party (2015–present), Progressive nominee for Chittenden County Justice of the Peace from the city of Burlington in 2016 and 2018, labor organizer and activist
County politicians
  • John Christopher Brimmer, Secretary of the Vermont Progressive State Committee (2009–present), Chair of the Caledonia County Progressive Committee (2011–present), Secretary-Treasurer of the Ryegate Progressive Town Committee (2011–present), Zoning Administrator and Administrative Officer of the town of Waterford, Zoning and Planning Administrator of the town of Fairlee, and former Zoning Administrator of the town of Derby, U.S. Coast Guard veteran, farmer
  • Cathleen Feeley, Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke (2005–present), Burke Town Agent (2015–present), Burke Treasurer (2019–present), Burke Assistant Treasurer (2001–2019)
  • William David Hammond, Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Burke (2019–present), candidate for State Representative from Caledonia-4 in 2020
  • Carter Neubeiser, Progressive nominee for Burlington City Council in 2016, and for Chittenden County Justice of the Peace from the city of Burlington in 2016 and 2018, Founder and Chair of the Vermont Progressive Party Youth Caucus
  • Dylan Stetson, Chair of the Waterford Progressive Town Committee (2019–present), Progressive nominee for Caledonia County Justice of the Peace from the town of Waterford and State Representative from Caledonia-1 in 2020, dietitian, activist
Local politicians
  • Darryel Corrow, former Burke Selectboard member (2010–2019), rural economic developer and member of the Burke Area Chamber of Commerce
  • Bobby Farlice-Rubio, Barnet Village Trustee (2012–present), former Barnet Schoolboard member (2007–2019), member of the Vermont Astronomical Society, science educator and astronomer at the Fairbanks Museum & Lyman Spitzer Jr. Planetarium (2003–present), musician
  • Linda Hackett-Corey, Burke Town Clerk (2019–present), Burke Assistant Town Clerk (2007–2019)
  • Jack Hanson, Burlington City Councilor (2019–present), Delegate to the Chittenden County Progressive Committee from the city of Burlington (2015–present), activist
  • Ford Hubbard, Burke Selectboard member (2019–present), candidate for Burke Selectboard in 1977, 1980, 1983, and 1992, candidate for Burke Constable in 1984, farmer
  • John Lotti, Vice Chair of the Burke Progressive Town Committee (2019–present), candidate for Burke Selectboard in 2020, member of the Burke Area Chamber of Commerce, businessman
  • Jeanne Miles, Burke Town Auditor (2013–present) and Grand Juror (2003–2011, 2015–present)
2020 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace Progressive caucus in Burke
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs (incumbent) 8 72.72
Progressive Carmenza Montague 2 18.18
Progressive Vivien Kremer 1 9.09
Total votes 11 100.0
2020 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-4 Progressive primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 10 58.82
Progressive Patrick Seymour (incumbent) (write-in) 5 29.41
Write-in Write-ins (other) 2 11.76
Total votes 17 100.0
N/A Blank votes 6
{{Election box gain with party link and percentage}}
2020 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace election in Burke
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Cathleen Feeley (incumbent) 785 15.37 -2.13
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs (incumbent) 772 15.12 +1.1
Democratic Joel Gilbert (incumbent) 767 15.02 +1.51
Democratic William David Hammond (incumbent) 701 13.73 +0.94
Republican Susan Carr (incumbent) 696 13.63 -3.5
Democratic Joan Harlowe (incumbent) 683 13.37 +2.84
Republican John Kascenska (incumbent) 675 13.22 -0.72
Write-in Write-ins 28 0.55 N/A
Total votes 5,107 100.0
N/A Blank votes 1,404 N/A
Republican hold Swing 26.85 -4.22
Independent hold Swing 15.37 -14.92
Progressive hold Swing 15.12 +1.1
2020 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-4 election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Martha Feltus (incumbent) 2,198 33.15 -4.91
Independent Patrick Seymour (incumbent) 1,857 28.0 -4.04
Democratic Dennis R. Labounty 1,596 24.07 -5.42
Democratic William David Hammond 972 14.66 +14.66
Write-in Christian B. Hubbs 3 0.05 +0.00
Write-in Benjamin A. Robbins 1 0.02 -0.03
Write-in Write-ins (other) 4 0.06
Total votes 6,631 100.0
N/A Blank votes 1,250 N/A
Republican hold Swing 61.15 -8.94
2021
2021 St. Johnsbury Progressive Town Committee Vice Chair election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs 4 100.0
Progressive Other 0 0.0
Total votes 4 100.0

Upcoming elections[edit]

Future
2022
2022 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace Progressive caucus in St. Johnsbury
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs (incumbent)
Total votes 100.0
2022 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-1 Progressive primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs
Write-in Write-ins (other)
Total votes <25 100.0
2022 Caledonia County Justice of the Peace election in St. Johnsbury
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs
Write-in Write-ins
Total votes 100.0
2022 Vermont House of Representatives district Caledonia-1 election
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Christian Bradley Hubbs
Write-in Write-ins (other)
Total votes 100.0

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Susan Carr (R), Cathleen Feeley (I), Joel Gilbert (D), William David Hammond (I), Joan Harlowe (D), and John Kascenska (R)
  2. ^ Olivia Brimmer, Susan Brimmer, Jodi Campbell, Bill Coleman, Paul Fixx, Dylan Stetson
  3. ^ The Chair of a town committee, as which Hubbs was also elected, is automatically a member of the county committee.

References[edit]

External links[edit]