LATEST

ROTHENBURGER – It’s an election year; silly season is coming

(Image: Mel Rothenburger)

WELCOME to Silly Season — it’s an election year.

The term  “silly season” was coined to describe the uneventful media days of late summer when the kids were out of school, everybody was at the beach, and politicians were in recess along with everyone else.

Reporters were reduced to covering the weather, someone’s 29 hand in cribbage, potatoes that look like Elvis and other such tidings that now became the stuff of front-page headlines.

“There’s no such thing as a slow news day,” we’d tell our news staff. “Only slow reporters.”

Over time, though, “silly season” became identified with the months leading up to civic elections, when incumbents and newbies begin promising us the moon, the stars and responsible spending.

It usually began in the fall of election year as the dog days waned and community life re-started. But it kicks in earlier and earlier as the years pass. In November 2025, Coun. Dale Bass proclaimed that silly season was already underway, almost a year before the 2026 civic election.

That was premature but the real silly season will arrive any day now. Council members will be pressing the flesh at every ribbon cutting, charity event and community gathering they can find.

They will promise to trim the fat from the City’s budget, to be transparent and responsive, to bring new development to town, to solve all the things they’ve been unable to solve in the first three years of their term. They’ll sound more caring, more considerate of taxpayer concerns.

Every word they utter will be in the context of whether it will help or hurt their chances for another term. In the background, they’ll be busy preparing their campaigns and pondering whether it’s better to announce their candidacies sooner, or maybe later.

Wannabes have big targets to shoot at. They will focus on the dysfunction at City Hall, on the failure to resolve homelessness and crime, on the incumbent council’s penchant for shutting down public input, on the ballooning cost of capital projects, on the use of the unpopular Alternative Approval Process to ram those projects through.

They will promise “positive change,” a return to civility at City Hall, “bold leadership.” And there will be an increase in notices of motion from incumbents trying to convince the hoi polloi they have the answers to everything if people would just listen.

What will this pre-election environment do to the hostility we’ve seen around the horseshoe these past three years? Will council members suddenly start getting along in order to put their best foot forward for voters? Will the sniping between the mayor and eight councillors be toned down?

I fear not. I worry it will get even worse, especially if this week’s council meeting is any indication..

“Us vs. them” populism will grow in intensity as spring approaches in River City. It’s a blessing, perhaps, that, like leap year, silly season only comes around every four years. With as many as a half dozen candidates for mayor and three dozen for councillor, this could be the silliest ever.

Mel Rothenburger is a former regular contributor to CFJC-TV and CBC radio, publishes the ArmchairMayor.ca opinion website, and is a recipient of the Jack Webster Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award, and a Webster Foundation Commentator of the Year finalist. He has served as mayor of Kamloops, school board chair and TNRD director, and is a retired daily newspaper editor.  He can be reached at mrothenburger@armchairmayor.ca. This column is also published in the January edition of the Kamloops Chronicle.

Mel Rothenburger's avatar
About Mel Rothenburger (11682 Articles)
ArmchairMayor.ca is a forum about Kamloops and the world. It has more than one million views. Mel Rothenburger is the former Editor of The Daily News in Kamloops, B.C. (retiring in 2012), and past mayor of Kamloops (1999-2005). At ArmchairMayor.ca he is the publisher, editor, news editor, city editor, reporter, webmaster, and just about anything else you can think of. He is grateful for the contributions of several local columnists. This blog doesn't require a subscription but gratefully accepts donations to help defray costs.

3 Comments on ROTHENBURGER – It’s an election year; silly season is coming

  1. Again, thanks for your editorial, Mel.  

    “Silly season” is perhaps a time to compare candidate profiles for past elections to how things actually played out when the elected candidate was a part of the living, breathing Horse Shoe clan.  

    If anyone dares to look, I have provided a link to the candidate profile for Dale Bass.  Was she even the same person before and after the election?  Why are there discrepancies between her election platform and the person she became after having won a seat on City Council?

    Did she mention that in a tirade of frustration, she would inform a member of the public that she was rolling on the floor laughing her ass off?

    Before she announces her candidacy for the next civic election, I hope she can come clean where she finally found her backside and if she enlisted any helpers for the task.  Or, does that revelation stay part of a “closed” meeting?

    It is silly season indeed, Armchair Mayor.

    https://cfjctoday.com/2022/09/20/candidate-profile-dale-bass/

    Like

  2. Unknown's avatar Walter Trkla // January 14, 2026 at 7:31 AM // Reply

    Over the years, I’ve realized there’s a foolproof way to end the absurd “silly seasons” plaguing municipal, provincial, and national governance: force the media to unearth truths instead of fanning the flames of nonsense. In Kamloops, folks despise this chaotic farce at every level, yet we stumble into elections blindfolded, not by choice but by design, trapped in an echo chamber where evidence bows to clickbait.

    Our deadliest foe? Rampant ignorance and a deliberate fog around real issues, with media snipers zeroing in on messengers while dodging the messages themselves. We must expose the ignorance peddlers, cowering behind privacy shields, and the spin doctors twisting facts into fiction, and let’s call out the culprit including a decaying education and media that’s devolved from watchdog to wrecking ball.

    Society demands better than this fragmented farce; without it, voters enter the booth clueless about how cities, provinces, and nations truly operate, dooming us to perpetual silly seasons.

    Like

    • Unknown's avatar Pierre Filisetti // January 14, 2026 at 8:29 AM // Reply

      Society actually does not “demand better”. The general public is afraid to expose their ignorance hence goes along to get along. Furthermore we can’t “force” anything. But yes what do we pay for a local CBC bureau when the best they can do is a pointless weather report and I write-up about a phantasmal beetle infestation?

      Like

Leave a reply to John Noakes Cancel reply