Burlington City Hall Credit: matthew roy ©️ Seven Days
Burlington Progressives on Sunday evening nominated party chair Charles Winkleman to run for the East District city council seat. Nearly 40 people turned out to the caucus at Burlington Cohousing East Village, where Winkleman narrowly defeated Samantha Tilton by four votes.

The victory earns Winkleman the Prog slot on the ballot and the chance to face Democratic and Republican contenders on Town Meeting Day in March.

Winkleman seeks the seat to be vacated by fellow Progressive Selene Colburn, who has served three years as a councilor. Colburn decided recently to step down from the council after she was elected to the state legislature in November.

At Sunday’s gathering, Winkleman vowed to “hold the mayor’s feet to the fire” on delivering early childhood education initiatives,* which “struck a chord” with the audience, Colburn told Seven Days after the caucus.

The 27-year-old Winkleman said his work as a preschool teacher at the Burlington Children’s Space alerted him to the economic issues facing the city. “The main things I’ve seen is that these families are struggling and it doesn’t seem to be getting much better,” he told Seven Days in an interview Friday. Winkleman also serves on the Fletcher Free Library board of commissioners.

The Progressive caucus for the Central and South districts was held in December, though Colburn at that time had not decided if she would vacate her council seat. In the end, she urged Tilton, who works at the University of Vermont Transportation Research Center, to make a bid for the seat.

Colburn’s candidate fell short, but the high turnout showed that there is a “real interest in running as a Progressive,” she said.

*Clarification, January 9, 2017: More detail was added to this paraphrased quote.

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Katie Jickling is a Seven Days staff writer.

One reply on “Burlington Progressive Party Chair to Seek East District Council Seat”

  1. I want to clarify my quote, above. I said that Charles is a pre-school teacher who said he would hold the mayor’s feet to the fire on delivering on promised early education initiatives, and that this along with other parts of his platform clearly struck a chord.

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