Inslee leading in governor's race
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OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - Democrats dominated much of Washington's election on Tuesday night, triumphing in several key races and claiming an early lead in the state's costly campaign for governor.
Jay Inslee, a former Democratic congressman, held 52 percent of the vote in the gubernatorial race as Republican Rob McKenna struggled in the population-rich King County. McKenna, seeking to become the first Republican to win the seat in more than three decades, asked his supporters to wait a few more days as mail ballots continued to arrive at county offices.
"This year, it will be worth the wait," McKenna said.
Although some races remain undecided, Democrats in Washington won big in key federal contests and were in position to potentially claim every statewide executive office - something they haven't done since the 1960s. Republicans held a very slight lead in only one statewide race - secretary of state - and that's an office they've held continuously since 1965. Democrat Bob Ferguson led Republican Reagan Dunn in the hard fought attorney general's race.
Democrats also found success in some of the top ballot measures. They had endorsed a proposal to legalize marijuana, which passed, and aided a measure to approve same-sex marriage, which held a lead.
Dwight Pelz, chairman of the Washington State Democrats, said he was very excited by the results. He doubted that McKenna could flip the numbers in the govenror's race, given the size of Inslee's lead and how poorly the Republican was performing in King County.
"It's a good day for Democrats across the country," Pelz said "And if we can win the governor's' seat, it would be a pretty good sweep for us here."
Perhaps the best consolation to conservatives was the passage of an initiative that requires lawmakers to have a two-thirds majority in order to raise taxes. That rule provides the GOP with the power to block tax-raising budgets in Olympia, although the state Supreme Court is currently considering whether it is constitutional. Another measure to develop charter schools in the state was in a toss-up Tuesday night.
McKenna was supposed to be the biggest Republican triumph, as he had been steadily building his political reputation for years and developing a deep grasp of the issues facing state government. The race was viewed as one of the most competitive gubernatorial contests in the country, with the campaigns and outside political groups raising and spending some $40 million in the race.
As of Tuesday night, hundreds of thousands of ballots remained uncounted while others had yet to arrive at election offices around the state.
Republicans last won a governor's race in the state in 1980, when John Spellman was elected. Voters ousted Spellman at the end of his first term, around the time McKenna was student body president at the University of Washington.
The GOP has come close in some elections, most notably the 2004 race in which Dino Rossi lost to current Gov. Christine Gregoire by 133 votes.
Republicans had been cultivating McKenna as a potential gubernatorial candidate, as he worked his way from the King County Council to attorney general. In that seat, he won 59 percent of the vote in 2008.
Inslee, meanwhile, took his first run at the governor's seat in 1996 but lost in a primary to eventual Gov. Gary Locke. He also bounced back from a 1994 defeat when he was serving as a congressman on the eastern side of the state and eventually won a new seat in Congress after his family moved west to Bainbridge Island.
Inslee held that congressional seat for a decade, becoming a leader in clean energy issues.
Clean energy also became a focus of Inslee's campaign for governor this year. He vowed to focus investments on that industry and others - such as life sciences and agriculture - to stimulate job growth.
To deal with Washington's unbalanced budget, Inslee said the state would bring in extra money from economic growth. He also vowed to seek savings in the health care industry and make government more efficient by following "lean management" practices.
McKenna, meanwhile, repeatedly noted that Olympia had been guided by Democrats for years and that the percentage of money going to education has shrunk under their watch. He vowed to cap non-education spending growth at 6 percent per biennium while also seeking improvements in health care costs and government efficiency.
Gregoire has been skeptical about whether McKenna and Inslee's budget ideas are viable, and she believes new tax revenue is necessary.
Jay Inslee, a former Democratic congressman, held 52 percent of the vote in the gubernatorial race as Republican Rob McKenna struggled in the population-rich King County. McKenna, seeking to become the first Republican to win the seat in more than three decades, asked his supporters to wait a few more days as mail ballots continued to arrive at county offices.
"This year, it will be worth the wait," McKenna said.
Although some races remain undecided, Democrats in Washington won big in key federal contests and were in position to potentially claim every statewide executive office - something they haven't done since the 1960s. Republicans held a very slight lead in only one statewide race - secretary of state - and that's an office they've held continuously since 1965. Democrat Bob Ferguson led Republican Reagan Dunn in the hard fought attorney general's race.
Democrats also found success in some of the top ballot measures. They had endorsed a proposal to legalize marijuana, which passed, and aided a measure to approve same-sex marriage, which held a lead.
Dwight Pelz, chairman of the Washington State Democrats, said he was very excited by the results. He doubted that McKenna could flip the numbers in the govenror's race, given the size of Inslee's lead and how poorly the Republican was performing in King County.
"It's a good day for Democrats across the country," Pelz said "And if we can win the governor's' seat, it would be a pretty good sweep for us here."
Perhaps the best consolation to conservatives was the passage of an initiative that requires lawmakers to have a two-thirds majority in order to raise taxes. That rule provides the GOP with the power to block tax-raising budgets in Olympia, although the state Supreme Court is currently considering whether it is constitutional. Another measure to develop charter schools in the state was in a toss-up Tuesday night.
McKenna was supposed to be the biggest Republican triumph, as he had been steadily building his political reputation for years and developing a deep grasp of the issues facing state government. The race was viewed as one of the most competitive gubernatorial contests in the country, with the campaigns and outside political groups raising and spending some $40 million in the race.
As of Tuesday night, hundreds of thousands of ballots remained uncounted while others had yet to arrive at election offices around the state.
Republicans last won a governor's race in the state in 1980, when John Spellman was elected. Voters ousted Spellman at the end of his first term, around the time McKenna was student body president at the University of Washington.
The GOP has come close in some elections, most notably the 2004 race in which Dino Rossi lost to current Gov. Christine Gregoire by 133 votes.
Republicans had been cultivating McKenna as a potential gubernatorial candidate, as he worked his way from the King County Council to attorney general. In that seat, he won 59 percent of the vote in 2008.
Inslee, meanwhile, took his first run at the governor's seat in 1996 but lost in a primary to eventual Gov. Gary Locke. He also bounced back from a 1994 defeat when he was serving as a congressman on the eastern side of the state and eventually won a new seat in Congress after his family moved west to Bainbridge Island.
Inslee held that congressional seat for a decade, becoming a leader in clean energy issues.
Clean energy also became a focus of Inslee's campaign for governor this year. He vowed to focus investments on that industry and others - such as life sciences and agriculture - to stimulate job growth.
To deal with Washington's unbalanced budget, Inslee said the state would bring in extra money from economic growth. He also vowed to seek savings in the health care industry and make government more efficient by following "lean management" practices.
McKenna, meanwhile, repeatedly noted that Olympia had been guided by Democrats for years and that the percentage of money going to education has shrunk under their watch. He vowed to cap non-education spending growth at 6 percent per biennium while also seeking improvements in health care costs and government efficiency.
Gregoire has been skeptical about whether McKenna and Inslee's budget ideas are viable, and she believes new tax revenue is necessary.
Billy Boner (see below), trust me, everyone here is glad you moved too, except you still seem to have your heart here, don't ya? You're such a moron, you don't even realize how stupid you are.
I am sooo glad I moved to Arizona.
I'm pretty sure there's some very important things on Jays agenda, like what to ban this week
I almost can't believe the outright stupidity of the left coast. I'm sure given you're way, we'd have Nancy Pelosi and Roseanne Barr running the country...
You all areacting like childish folks. There is only one thing to say about last night...the definition of insanity...to do the same thing over and over again expecting a different result...that's exactly what happened...same prez, same house, and same senate...gridlock all over again. And, for those of you who like your freebies...Thomas Jefferson said it best "A Government Big Enough to Give You Everything You NEED, is a Government Big Enough to Take Everything you HAVE"
We're skrood!
One thing that's seriously wrong with the people of this state is that people are ever so willing to call the majority 'stupid', 'sheeple'Â and 'fools' and other even more hateful and angry things.
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Just because you didn't get your candidate elected doesn't mean the majority is any less than you are. You're not automatically smarter because you voted for a particular candidate/political party.
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If you don't like who gets elected, work harder to elect the type of person you want next time.  Don't sit there whining because you lost.
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Today it's too easy to sit and whine, complain, make baseless claims of all kinds as excuses as to why your guy/party/initiative/etc lost. It's harder to step up and do something about it, and that's probably why so many just sit there whining.
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I didn't want to see Tim Eyeman's 2/3's initiative pass because it's an unconstitutional restriction on the legislature (regardless of whether the dems continue to control it or someday when the repubs take control of it). It creates a tyranny of the minority rather than controls spending.Â
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I didn't want to see the pot initiative pass - heck, I have no problem with weed being legal, but the misrepresentation of 'drug crime will go away' when this is passed put me off. Pot crime WILL continue. The gangs and the local guy selling it will merely undercut the state taxed prices and they will continue to sell. We will end up spending just as much money (if not more) chasing and prosecuting these continuing illegal sales as we have been today. Nothing really changes in the $$ for government because of that. That's why I didn't want to see it pass.
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Various candidates I wanted to see elected don't appear to be winning.
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Am I throwing hissy fits and making all kinds of angry statements? No. Let's move forward and go out and fix the problems in this country instead of being dirtbags to each other.
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@FormerMarineSgt
Thank you, Sarge. Great post and you conveyed precisely what I have been thinking: The culture of hatred during this election has been unconscionable.Â
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It made me think about how the South viewed the North with disdain and denigration before the Civil War began. People forgot that they were all citizens of this country. The rich plantation owners did not care that they enjoyed lives of luxury on the backs of humans that they enslaved. That same mentality of entitlement has been evident in the behavior of GOP extremists and people who embrace rhetoric of bully and and rage. Just bizarre.
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If Inslee loses, I won't be going batsh!t nuts, attacking anyone who supported McKenna.Â
Whatever the outcome, I'm glad that people got and voted - we are all a part of this state and we, the people can work together to make things better.
There is a growing tendency in America to demonize opposing views rather than discuss them, learn from them, or try to work with them. Hyperbole on the results o the decision made by voters who are obviously morons because they didn't vote like I did. We need to grow up and get past that. We need to solve our problems together. DIdn't get who you wanted? It happens. This election didn't go "my way"...or at least, doesn't it appear it went that way. That's our process. Now let's move forward with who we have rather than declare the end of civilization as we know it.
@NBA_Is_Useless Right on. Great post! I dig it.
You are dead on correct. I would also add the following to those who appear to be getting their way in this election: stop acting like the school yard bully.  Sitting back and saying "nanny nanny poo poo, my guy won and your guy lost" isn't going to solve anything. Speaking stictly about the governor's race, in the end I believe that Inslee will probably squeak this one out and win. However, the vote is still too close to call at this point. That tells me that the people of this state are split right down the middle in their opinions on how to solve our problems. Instead of bullying each other, lets move on and try to find some common ground.  In my opinion, that's the only way our problems are really going to get solved.
@ScienceGirl - if you want folks to move forward and stop the asinine hyperbole and work together instead of predicting 'the end of civilization as we know it because my guy didn't win', then we need to stop the BS from BOTH sides, not just from 'the other side'.
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Nationally, what the Republicans and the right wing need to understand is that there nearly NEVER just one way to fix a problem.  There are nearly always multiple paths to a solution. The Republicans have fixated hard core on an ideal that thier way is THE ONE AND ONLY LEGITIMATE PATH to fix America's problems.  This is a fools path. There are definitely far more than just one way to fix the problems facing America. The current path that Obama is on is working - albiet slowly and with risks (although I don't honestly think the risks are any worse than those in the republican or tea party plans - they are just different risks).Â
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The Dems have some of the same problem with a fixation on 'only one way' as the Repubs, but it's not so brazenly displayed, not so firmly entrenched and so widespread as it is with the tea party and other hard core right wingers. (although I'm sure many from these groups would disagree - and that's fine).
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Let's stop the 'party above nation' and the politics of 'destroy the evil opposition at any cost'. Let's get back to where we were able to have real cooperation and real comprimise (no, comprimise IS NOT 'we get what we want and the other guys can go to hell').Â
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THAT is how we will fix America's problems - not by our current politics of destruction and lies.
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gloating, not goating. Sorry, typing too fast!
I actually agree with you, but in your first paragraph you sound like you may not have understood what I was trying to say. I may not have been as clear as I could have. I was trying to keep my comments brief. My bad. I was agreeing with NBA when he/she said "Didn't get what you wanted? It happens." I was just adding that people from the side who did get what they wanted need to stop goating as well. Whining and gloating will serve no one, from either side. Let's move on and try to find some common ground.
 @ScienceGirl I see more sour grapes than gloating.
@thebigteacher I see both, and neither will serve a purpose in the end. To those who didn't get their way, I'm sorry, but that's the way the ball bounces. To those who did, I'm happy for you, but do you really have to rub it in? I guess that's the point I was trying to make. Instead of the gloating AND the sour grapes, we should accept the decisions that were made and move on. I think the majority of people would agree that we have some serious problems in this state (and in this country) and the only way those are going to get solved is to work together.
This really BLOWS
Hmm. Surprised by this outcome. McKenna was the first good/reasonable gubernatorial candidate in Washington in at least 16 years and I thought people would clutch onto that rather than the (R) by his name.
30 years of Democrats running the state and then we pick Inslee? Four years from now our state budget will be even worse.  I believe he has brain damage from playing football without a helmet.
 @opout ROFLMAO!  Sore loser like every other tpublicon.
 @comdown  @opout No, you ALL lose with this one. You're just too freak'n stupid to see past the "tpublicon" and you'll pay for it with this one.
 @comdown  @opout If you are a Republican in this state you aren't a sore loser.  It's just that you have grown up seeing idiots elected year after year just because they have a D next to their name.  One stupid county in the entire state gets to make all of the decisions for the rest of us, and before you make the comment of "move out of the state then."  Wake up and realize that it isn't as easy as moving away from everyone in your life because of politics.
 @scrumpage  @comdown  @opout You wake up. One person, one vote. County lines are arbitrary when it comes to state majority voting races.
 @thebigteacher My apologies for saying stupid it wasn't meant to come out that way.  It is just frustrating for the rest of the state because we don't really have any say in what goes on around us.  It is the wealthiest because it taxes like crazy.  I don't know that I call allowing yourself to be taxed to death is smart.Â
 @scrumpage Yep, the wealthiest and most educated county in the state.
Yay for that population too. Â
 @scrumpage  @comdown  @opout "One stupid county in the entire state", it's about population genius.
And if it is a really close race, they will keep on recounting until they win..
 @Devils_Advocate you mean like bush did in 2000...
 @David Sherburne Or Gregoire last election....
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I'd think you republicans would be good losers by now. Lord knows you've had plenty of practice. If you don't like living in a blue state I imagine there's plenty of room for you in West Virginia. That's the level of this discussion I'm sure you'd be right at home. McKenna is a right wing zealot who opposed the presidents historic healthcare law against the will of the electorate. People heald that against him; at least I did.
What a flamming liberal you are, I'll give to democrats 1 thing, your very good at brain washing people.
 @cheney119 Idiot.  Pretty much sums of everything about you.
 @cheney119 Ahh yes, the historic healthcare law that taxes you if you don't have health insurance....and only truly benefits the insurance industry...yeah you libtards forget people still have to pay the healthcare bills they incur even with insurance... so how is it benefiting anyone?
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You must not have grown into your big boy pants and learned to live on your own. Enjoy having the government hold your hand and tell you how you should be living?
 @SilverGryphon  @cheney119 "Enjoy having the government hold your hand and tell you how you should be living?"
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I guess abortion rights and gay rights are somehow separate to this conservative argument?Â
 @cheney119 And I will take my company and it's jobs with me
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 @barkleydog  @cheney119 Go, it is not like The Wall Street Journal and Forbes rate Washington as one of the best places to do business or anything. Wait, they actually do.
 @barkleydog  @thebigteacher  @cheney119 Your case was rather weak, so I'm not sure what you are resting. Just because someone is a teacher doesn't mean they are government sucking liberal idiots. Maybe try arguing the point?
 @barkleydog  @cheney119 You knew that Washington was a great state to do business in? Or that I went to college for 7 years (while working for private industry) and took a pay-cut to become a teacher?
 @thebigteacher  @cheney119 I knew it  I rest my case
 @yeahguy  @barkleydog  @cheney119 Washington state improved its standing in a national assessment of how friendly state tax systems are to businesses, moving from No. 8 last year to No. 7 this year, according to a report released Wednesday by the nonpartisan Tax Foundation.
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1. Washington. The Evergreen State tops the list by coming in second on the New State Economy Index and fifth on the Small Business Survival Index. Washington is first among the states in steps toward energy efficiency and using more alternative-energy sources. It also has a highly productive manufacturing sector, signaling high wages and a tech-intensive economy. Washington leads the nation in value added per production hour as a percentage of the national averageâthe difference in value between inputs in the production process and the value of the units as finally sold. But in addition to these nonpolitical factors, Washington also has very low taxes, making the costs of growing a business quite low. It does not have its own income or capital-gains taxes, either personal or corporate.
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There is more, a lot more.
 @barkleydog  @cheney119 It is always great to talk to the omniscient. I've been successful at every job I've ever had (construction, commercial fisherman, finish carpenter, retailer and yes for the last 18 years, teacher) . As I've said before I'm a teacher and a successful small business owner (many teachers are). Washington is a great state to do business in.
 @thebigteacher  @barkleydog  @cheney119 hahah oh really? Washington is ranked 37th. Back to school to learn numbers for you
 @thebigteacher  @cheney119 Let me guess,thebigteacher? You must have a job that gets paid by MY TAXES? Government employee? School employee? Unemployed? Cheney119 People like you have no idea what it takes to run a successful business.Â
 @thebigteacher  @cheney119 It's easy to say until YOUR job is eliminated.Â
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 @barkleydog  @cheney119 Please do.
If you vote the way you've always voted, just because of your party, believe me, you're going to get more of what you've always gotten, and most likely worse, with Inslee. You people of King County amaze me. Didn't you even investigate his voting record in congress? There is not tax increase he doesn't like. You thought Gregroire was bad, Geesh, if he wins, you will see a further decline of Washington.
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And just think.......do you want another sales tax increase? He does. Do you want one fee after another tagged on to everything we use? And, do you really believe his rhetoric about creating jobs? He a lawyer and politician, for crying out loud.
 @Yadayada "He a lawyer and politician, for crying out loud." Isn't McKenna a lawyer and a politician?
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I actually voted for McKenna, but let's keep things in perspective here.
 @Yadayada More taxes are good, I want more firemen and teachers better transportation options. But then again, I appreciate what my government for me while knowing what they do to me as well.
 @dupku So you support not holding the State to a budget, and forcing them to budget for the necessities first then all the extra horse crap with whats left over?
@Yadayada They are all thieves and Lawyers. Sometimes you have to chose the thief you want in your pocket.
Wall Street Wins! Wall Street Wins!
A clean top-two sweep by Obama (the darling of Wall Street) and Inslee, the lapdog of the rich and powerful of Washington State!
Too bad no one in the press noticed that little bit over the last four years. The middle class is screwed.
 @nkroadcaptain How do you form the opinion that Republicans help the middle class? How?
Actually no, Wall St. was supporting Romney