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A three-time former Dallas City Council candidate is circulating a petition to oust Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson in response to his switch to the Republican Party last year.
Davante Peters, a local activist and owner of a Dallas health store, said Tuesday that he has obtained about 1,100 signatures in support of recalling Johnson. Peters told The Texas Tribune that Johnsonâs political party affiliation switch and absence at several City Council meetings last year made him doubt the mayorâs commitment to his position.
Dallas City Secretary Bilierae Johnson confirmed to The Dallas Morning News that Peters filed his petition Friday. Peters said he must obtain over 103,000 signatures from registered voters by March 5 in order for the petition to reach Dallasâ City Council, who can decide whether to hold a mayoral recall election.
âIf we regular people didnât go to work, we wouldnât have a job,â Peters said. âI feel like our leadership should be held to that same standard.â
According to Dallasâ city charter, the petition must be signed by 15% of registered voters eligible to vote in the cityâs most recent general election within 60 days in order to move forward. If Peters hits that threshold and the cityâs secretary finds that all signatures are valid, the City Council can choose to bring the recall to a vote.
In Dallas, the mayoral office and all City Council positions are nonpartisan â voters do not see candidatesâ party affiliation when they cast ballots. But Johnsonâs announcement in September that he was switching to the Republican Party prompted backlash from some voters. The mayorâs move turned Dallas, solidly Democratic, into the countryâs largest city with a GOP mayor.
Kardal Coleman, chair of the Dallas County Democratic Party, started an online petition last year calling for the two-term mayor â a former long-time Democrat â to resign. As of Tuesday, it has over 2,300 signatures.
Peters said he felt that the online petition was a âsymbolic effort.â His recall petition is the first filed with the cityâs secretary against a Dallas City Council member since a failed effort to unseat a council member in 2017.
Johnsonâs office did not respond on Tuesday to requests for comment on the petition.
In September, a KERA News analysis of city records revealed that Johnson has missed over 130 unexcused hours of council meetings, including 13 total meetings â more than any other current Dallas City Council member.
âWe have big issues here, and Dallas is rapidly changing,â Peters said. âWe need someone who is going to be cognizant and present.â
Peters said he hopes the petition will gain support from Coleman, other Dallas Democrats and community activists.