Difference between revisions of "2020 Westercon Site Selection"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Bot: Automated import of articles) |
|||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
Elayne Pelz's backyard ||1 | Elayne Pelz's backyard ||1 | ||
McCloud, CA ||1 | McCloud, CA ||1 | ||
− | [[Minneapolis in 73]] ||1 | + | [[Minneapolis in '73]] ||1 |
Tonopah, NV ||1 | Tonopah, NV ||1 | ||
No Preference ||5 | No Preference ||5 | ||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
{{bidding | series=Westercon | year=2020 | before=2019 Westercon Site Selection | after=2021 Westercon Site Selection}} | {{bidding | series=Westercon | year=2020 | before=2019 Westercon Site Selection | after=2021 Westercon Site Selection}} | ||
− | |||
[[Category:westercon]] | [[Category:westercon]] |
Revision as of 11:30, 1 April 2020
The site for Westercon 2020, Westercon 73, was selected in 2018 at Westercon 71 in Denver, CO. The only bidder was Seattle in 2020 which won with 55 of the 64 ballots cast.
Bidder | Votes |
---|---|
Seattle in 2020 | 55 |
Elayne Pelz's backyard | 1 |
McCloud, CA | 1 |
Minneapolis in '73 | 1 |
Tonopah, NV | 1 |
No Preference | 5 |
TOTAL | 64 |
With 59 votes cast with a preference, 30 votes were needed to win; Seattle in 2020 won on the first ballot and will host Westercon 73 in Seattle, WA.
2019 Westercon Site Selection | Westercon Site Selection | 2021 Westercon Site Selection | 2020 |
This is page about convention bidding, the competition and its outcome. Please extend it by adding information about who was bidding, and how the race went. |