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Washington State Republican Party

Washington State affiliate of the Republican Party

Washington State Republican Party

Summary

Washington State affiliate of the Republican Party

FieldValue
nameWashington State Republican Party
logo[[File:Washington State Republican Party logo.jpg]]
headquartersBellevue, Washington
chairpersonJim Walsh
leader1_titleVice Chair
leader1_nameMichelle Belkot
leader2_titleSenate Leader
leader2_nameJohn Braun
leader3_titleHouse Leader
leader3_nameDrew Stokesbary
colorcode
seats1_titleU.S. Senate delegation
seats1
seats2_titleU.S. House delegation
seats2
seats3_titleStatewide offices
seats3
seats4_titleWashington Senate
seats4
seats5_titleWashington House
seats5
foundation1890
nationalRepublican Party
websitewww.wagop.org
stateWashington
country_dab1Politics of Washington (state)
country2the United States
symbol[[File:Republican Party Disc (alternate).svg100px]]

The Washington State Republican Party (WSRP) is the state affiliate of the national United States Republican Party, headquartered in Bellevue.

Washington is considered a blue state, with the WSRP holding no statewide offices, 2 out of the state's 10 U.S. house seats, and minorities of both houses of the state legislature as of 2024. No state has gone longer without a Republican governor than Washington. Democrats have controlled the governorship for years; the last Republican governor was John Spellman, who left office in 1985. Washington has not voted for a Republican senator, governor, or presidential candidate since 1994, tying with Delaware for the longest streak in the country.

Since 2016, the WRSP and its voter base have undergone a hard right-wing shift in their political and social views. This has led to a further loss of electoral power for the party.

History

Campaigns and elections

Horace Cayton founded and published ''The Seattle Republican'', an early party mouthpiece.

Washington voters tend to support Democratic Party candidates, with The New York Times referring to the state as "Democratopolis." The last Republican governor in Washington was John Spellman, who held office from 1981 to 1985. Republicans came closest to recapturing the state's chief executive office in 2004 when Democrat Christine Gregoire secured election by just 133 votes out of 2.8 million cast. The last time Washington gave its electoral votes to a Republican candidate for U.S. president was in 1984, when a majority in the state voted for Ronald Reagan.

Early years

The early history of the state saw firm electoral dominance by the Republican Party. In 1889, Republicans prevailed in the first election for governor and scored majorities in both chambers of the inaugural state legislature. William Owen Bush, Washington's first African-American legislator, is credited with introducing the legislation that led to the establishment of Washington State University. Elected as a Republican from Thurston County, Bush was known as a tireless promoter of Washington agriculture. Republican policies in the early period of statehood were advanced by the party-connected Seattle Post-Intelligencer and, later, by The Seattle Republican. Founded by ex-slave Horace Cayton, The Seattle Republican would grow to become the second-largest newspaper in Seattle before it folded in 1917. "The success of the Republican Party is one of its highest ambitions," Cayton said of his publication.

In 1922 Republican Reba Hurn of Spokane became the first woman elected to the Washington State Senate, serving from 1923 to 1930. Hurn advocated for conservative fiscal policies and was a supporter of prohibition, but otherwise espoused a generally liberal social agenda, helping to pass the state's first child labor laws. Charles M. Stokes became the first African-American elected to the state legislature from King County in 1950. He led the Republican Party delegation to the 1952 Republican National Convention where he spoke in support of Dwight Eisenhower's presidential nomination and later introduced the legislation that created Washington's Lottery.

Resurgence

After a period of declining fortunes, in 1964 Republican Dan Evans was elected governor at the age of 39, becoming the youngest person to hold the state's chief executive office. The architect of Evans' victory, C. Montgomery Johnson., became the party's first full-time chairman. Johnson, a former forest ranger, publicist for Weyerhauser, early pro-choice advocate and champion of limited government, led a purge of John Birch Society members from the Washington Republican party, declaring afterward that "we had to make the term 'conservative' respectable again. The only way to do it was to get the far right off the backs of conservatives. The Republican Party is not the far-right."

In 1971 Johnson quit the party chairmanship to form a political consulting firm. With the warning that future tolerance of the John Birch Society would be "the instrument of Republican defeat - statewide, regionally, and locally," party leaders elected Johnson's political ally, Earl Davenport, to replace him as party head. The election, the same year, of Republican Michael Ross from Seattle's 37th legislative district foreshadowed eventual changes in Washington state law. The former treasurer of the Seattle chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality, Ross grabbed headlines when he introduced a bill to legalize marijuana. (While the measure failed, Washington would eventually become the first state to legalize the manufacture and sale of marijuana in 2012.) During a period of racial tensions at Rainier Beach High School, Ross commandeered a state vehicle and drove a contingent of armed Black Panthers to the school to protect African-American students. In 1973 Ross attempted an unsuccessful bid for Seattle City Council. One of his campaign volunteers in that contest was the Republican party's 2004 and 2008 gubernatorial nominee Dino Rossi.

Republican state legislator Michael Ross meets with Washington's then governor Dan Evans, another Republican, in 1971.

Modern era

The Republican Revolution of 1994 helped party candidates score an unprecedented seven of the state's nine seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. In Washington's 5th congressional district Republican George Nethercutt unseated Tom Foley, the incumbent Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. Foley's defeat marked the first time a sitting Speaker had been defeated in a reelection in 132 years. Another Republican elevated to national office as a result of the 1994 elections was Jack Metcalf. Described by The Seattle Times as "the vestige of a certain place the Northwest used to be," Metcalf typified the unconventional characteristics for which Washington Republicans had previously been known. One of the few Republicans in the late 1990s endorsed by organized labor, Metcalf blended fiscal conservatism with environmental advocacy, working with the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd Conservation Society and sponsoring an abortive effort to require labeling of genetically modified foods.

The Washington state Republican party has, in recent years, struggled with internal divisions between its historic core of social liberals and a strengthening contingent of religious conservatives. The party's 1996 gubernatorial candidate, paleoconservative Ellen Craswell, won the Republican nomination by only a slim margin before being soundly defeated in the general election by Democrat Gary Locke. Craswell would ultimately quit the party to help form the American Heritage Party. Concerns about increasing social conservatism in the party led state legislators Fred Jarrett and Rodney Tom to drop their Republican affiliation in the late 2000s and join the Democratic Party. [[File:Rossi Sign.jpg|thumb|right|A campaign sign for Republican Dino Rossi's unsuccessful 2010 race for U.S. Senate.]] Eastern Washington is considered a stronghold of the party. Republican candidates have also performed well in the eastern half of King County and in Seattle's affluent Madison Park neighborhood in the past. Among the largest recent financial backers of the party's activities are the National Electrical Contractors Association, Kemper Holdings, Microsoft, real estate developer Clyde Holland, and investor Richard Alvord (Alvord's parents, meanwhile, are Democratic Party benefactors).

2010s to present

Since 2016, the state GOP and its voter base have undergone a hard rightward shift in their political views and positions along with the embrace of Trumpism. This includes the party being completely taken over by social conservatives including gun rights and anti-abortion activists. This has led to many people on the Eastside and elsewhere in the state abandoning the party. After the 2020 Washington gubernatorial election, despite Jay Inslee's large margin of victory, Republican candidate Loren Culp refused to concede his loss and gave no concession speech, while making unsubstantiated claims of voting fraud.

After Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, state Republicans were divided over Trump's false claims of election fraud, with some rejecting or embracing the claims. In the aftermath, some Republicans and county chapters have spread misinformation and conspiracy theories over the 2020 election. There has been efforts by a few Republican legislators to abolish the mail by voting system that's been used in the state for years, often claiming there was widespread election fraud. It was also reported that a Republican lawmaker proclaimed on social media to "prepare for war" and advocated for others to join following the 2020 election. In 2023, the state GOP selected Jim Walsh as their new chairman, signaling a hardline conservative shift for the party. In April 2024, the state GOP passed a resolution that claimed that America is not a democracy but a republic, stating "every time the word ‘democracy’ is used favorably it serves to promote the principles of the Democratic Party." Other resolutions called for terminating mail-in voting and repealing the 17th amendment, which enabled the direct election of U.S. Senators.

Factions and affiliated groups

The Washington chapter of the National Federation of Republican Women was established in 1945 and currently consists of more than 30 local Republican women's clubs. The Washington College Republican Federation has College Republicans chapters at 10 of the state's colleges and universities. Past members of the University of Washington chapter of the group have included former gubernatorial candidate John Carlson, and former state party chairmen Kirby Wilbur and Luke Esser.

An independent pressure group founded in 1990, Mainstream Republicans of Washington, advances efforts to moderate Republican policies and recruit centrist candidates. The group's members include former state legislators Gary Alexander, Steve Litzow, and Hans Zeiger. In 2005 an organization of Republican attorneys and former elected officials, the Constitutional Law PAC, was formed to advocate in state judicial elections. The current head of that organization is former U.S. Senator Slade Gorton. A Washington chapter of the Republican Liberty Caucus was organized in 2012 to push a libertarian agenda. Former state legislators Matt Shea and Jason Overstreet have been involved with the group.

Though officially non-partisan, the Olympia-based think tank Evergreen Freedom Foundation has been connected with Republican candidates and causes. When former state Auditor Brian Sonntag, a Democrat, joined the foundation as an adviser in 2013, Washington State Democratic Party chair Dwight Pelz declared Sonntag was no longer a Democrat and called on him to "pay your dues to the Republican party." Washington state has a chapter of the Log Cabin Republicans and the former executive-director of the national group, Patrick Sammon, is a native of Seattle.

Party chairmen

NameYear
Arnold S. Wang1958–1960
William C. Goodloe1960–1962
C. Montgomery Johnson1964–1971
Earl Davenport1971–1973
Ross Davis1973–1977
Ken Eikenberry1977–1981
Jennifer Dunn1981–1992
Ben Bettridge1992–1993
Ken Eikenberry1993–1996
Dale Foreman1996–2000
Don Benton2000–2001
Chris Vance2001–2006
Diane Tebelius2006–2007
Luke Esser2007–2011
Kirby Wilbur2011–2013
Luanne Van Werven2013
Susan Hutchison2013–2018
Caleb Heimlich2018–2023
Jim Walsh2023–present

Current elected officials

The Washington State Republican Party controls none of the nine constitutional offices and holds a minority two of the state's 10 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. Republicans are the minority in the Washington Senate and Washington House of Representatives.

Member of Congress

U.S. Senate

  • None

[[U.S. House of Representatives]]

DistrictMemberPhoto
4th[[File:Dan Newhouse official congressional photo (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
5th[[File:Baumgartner Michael 119th Congress (cropped) (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]

Statewide offices

  • None

Legislature

  • Senate Minority Leader: John Braun
  • House Minority Leader: Drew Stokesbary

Election results

Presidential

ElectionPresidential TicketVotesVote %Electoral votesResult
1892Benjamin Harrison/Whitelaw Reid36,46041.45%
1896William McKinley/Garret Hobart39,15341.84%
1900William McKinley/Theodore Roosevelt57,45653.44%
1904Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks101,54069.95%
1908William Howard Taft/James S. Sherman106,06257.68%
1912William Howard Taft/Nicholas M. Butler70,44521.82%
1916Charles E. Hughes/Charles W. Fairbanks167,20843.89%
1920Warren G. Harding/Calvin Coolidge223,13755.96%
1924Calvin Coolidge/Charles G. Dawes220,22452.24%
1928Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis335,84467.06%
1932Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis208,64533.94%
1936Alf Landon/Frank Knox206,89229.88%
1940Wendell Willkie/Charles L. McNary322,12340.58%
1944Thomas E. Dewey/John W. Bricker361,68942.24%
1948Thomas E. Dewey/Earl Warren386,31542.68%
1952Dwight D. Eisenhower/Richard Nixon599,10754.33%
1956Dwight D. Eisenhower/Richard Nixon620,43053.91%
1960Richard Nixon/Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.629,27350.68%
1964Barry Goldwater/William E. Miller470,36637.37%
1968Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew588,51045.12%
1972Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew837,13556.92%
1976Gerald Ford/Bob Dole777,73250.00%
1980Ronald Reagan/George H. W. Bush865,24449.66%
1984Ronald Reagan/George H. W. Bush1,051,67055.82%
1988George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle903,83548.46%
1992George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle731,23431.97%
1996Bob Dole/Jack Kemp840,71237.30%
2000George W. Bush/Dick Cheney1,108,86444.56%
2004George W. Bush/Dick Cheney1,304,89445.60%
2008John McCain/Sarah Palin1,229,21640.48%
2012Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan1,290,67041.29%
2016Donald Trump/Mike Pence1,221,74736.83%
2020Donald Trump/Mike Pence1,584,65138.77%
2024Donald Trump/JD Vance1,530,92339.01%

Senatorial

ElectionSenatorial candidateVotesVote %Result
1914Wesley Livsey Jones130,47937.79%Won
1916Miles Poindexter202,28755.39%Won
1920Wesley Livsey Jones217,06956.40%Won
1922Miles Poindexter126,41042.93%Lost
1926Wesley Livsey Jones164,13051.31%Won
1928Kenneth Macintosh227,41546.45%Lost
1932Wesley Livsey Jones197,45032.70%Lost
1934Reno Odlin168,99434.02%Lost
1938Ewing D. Colvin220,20437.12%Lost
1940Stephen F. Chadwick342,58945.84%Lost
1944Harry P. Cain364,35644.44%Lost
1946Harry P. Cain358,84754.34%Won
1950Walter Williams342,46445.98%Lost
1952Harry P. Cain460,88443.53%Lost
1956Arthur B. Langlie436,65238.91%Lost
1958William B. Bantz278,27131.38%Lost
1962Richard G. Christensen446,20447.31%Lost
1964Lloyd J. Andrews337,13827.79%Lost
1968Jack Metcalf435,89435.26%Lost
1970Charles W. Elicker170,79016.01%Lost
1974Jack Metcalf363,62636.08%Lost
1976George M. Brown361,54624.25%Lost
1980Slade Gorton936,31754.17%Won
1982Douglas Jewett332,27324.28%Lost
1983 (special)Daniel J. Evans672,32655.41%Won
1986Slade Gorton650,93148.67%Lost
1988Slade Gorton944,35951.09%Won
1992Rod Chandler1,020,82946.01%Lost
1994Slade Gorton947,82155.75%Won
1998Linda Smith785,37741.59%Lost
2000Slade Gorton1,197,20848.64%Lost
2004George Nethercutt1,204,58443.74%Lost
2006Mike McGavick832,10639.91%Lost
2010Dino Rossi1,196,16447.64%Lost
2012Michael Baumgartner1,213,92439.55%Lost
2016Chris Vance1,329,33840.99%Lost
2018Susan Hutchison1,282,80441.57%Lost
2022Tiffany Smiley1,299,32242.63%Lost
2024Raul Garcia1,549,18740.64%Lost

Gubernatorial

ElectionGubernatorial candidateVotesVote %Result
1889Elisha P. Ferry33,71157.68%Won
1892John McGraw33,28137.01%Won
1896Potter C. "Charley" Sullivan38,15441.68%Lost
1900John M. Frink49,86046.81%Lost
1904Albert E. Mead74,27851.34%Won
1908Samuel G. Cosgrove110,19062.56%Won
1912Marion E. Hay96,62930.35%Lost
1916Henry McBride167,80944.44%Lost
1920Louis F. Hart210,66252.25%Won
1924Roland H. Hartley220,16256.41%Won
1928Roland H. Hartley281,99156.22%Won
1932John Arthur Gellatly207,49733.75%Lost
1936Roland H. Hartley189,14128.12%Lost
1940Arthur B. Langlie392,52250.24%Won
1944Arthur B. Langlie400,60448.12%Lost
1948Arthur B. Langlie445,95850.50%Won
1952Arthur B. Langlie567,82252.65%Won
1956Emmett T. Anderson508,04145.00%Lost
1960Lloyd J. Andrews594,12248.87%Lost
1964Daniel J. Evans697,25655.77%Won
1968Daniel J. Evans692,37854.72%Won
1972Daniel J. Evans747,82550.78%Won
1976John Spellman687,03944.43%Lost
1980John Spellman981,08356.68%Won
1984John Spellman881,99446.69%Lost
1988Bob Williams708,48137.79%Lost
1992Ken Eikenberry1,086,21647.84%Lost
1996Ellen Craswell940,53842.04%Lost
2000John Carlson980,06039.68%Lost
2004Dino Rossi1,373,22848.87%Lost
2008Dino Rossi1,404,12446.76%Lost
2012Rob McKenna1,488,24548.46%Lost
2016Bill Bryant1,476,34645.49%Lost
2020Loren Culp1,749,06643.12%Lost
2024Dave Reichert1,709,81844.28%Lost

References

References

  1. "[http://www.wsrp.org/ContactUs.aspx Contact Us] {{Webarchive. link. (2010-04-11 ." Washington State Republican Party. Retrieved on May 13, 2010.)
  2. Cohn, Nate. (June 19, 2017). "The 15 Best-Educated Districts in the U.S., and Why It Matters in the Georgia Race". [[The New York Times]].
  3. Brunner, Jim. (November 10, 2020). "Republican Loren Culp lost King County by the worst margin in at least four decades in Washington governor's race". [[The Seattle Times]].
  4. Johnson, Kirk. (27 November 2012). "In West's 'Democratopolis,' Winning an Election With Only 8 of 39 Counties". New York Times.
  5. (12 February 2007). "Bush, William Owen".
  6. "Cayton, Horace (1859-1940)". HistoryLink.
  7. "Hurn, Reba".
  8. "Stokes, Charles".
  9. "C. Montgomery Johnson". University of Virginia Social Networks and Archival Context Project.
  10. (10 January 1971). "Johnson Warns Leaders". Walla Walla Union-Bulletin.
  11. (August 2007). "Loss of Michael K. Ross—Washington State's Last Black Republican Legislator". [[Seattle Medium.
  12. Postman, Dave. (5 September 1999). "Washington's 19th Century ManJack Metcalf's Days In Congress Are Numbered, Along With The Spirit Of An Older Northwest". The Seattle Times.
  13. Postman, Dave. (14 December 2007). "Once-mighty GOP on the Eastside takes another hit". The Seattle Times.
  14. Modie, Neil. (11 August 2005). "Where have Seattle's lefties gone?". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  15. "ADVANCED SEARCH DETAILED CONTRIBUTIONS". Washington Public Disclosure Commission.
  16. Westneat, Danny. (30 August 1998). "Patrons Of Politics: Washington State's Top 50". The Seattle Times.
  17. (2019-11-25). "A Former Washington State Republican Leader Looks Back: How Did It Come to This?".
  18. Brunner, Jim. (November 21, 2020). "Loren Culp, refusing to concede Washington gubernatorial race, turns on top Republicans". [[The Seattle Times]].
  19. (2021-02-19). "WA state GOP remains divided over false 2020 election fraud claims".
  20. (2021-03-27). "Republicans in Washington state still pushing the election conspiracy that won't die".
  21. Camden, Jim. (26 June 2021). "GOP lawmaker tours Cyber Ninjas 'audit,' considers changes in Washington called unnecessary {{!}} The Spokesman-Review".
  22. Brunner, Jim. (2021-08-13). "Washington Republican legislators push election fraud narrative at hearing on Sunday".
  23. Krieg, Hannah. (8 March 2021). "WA looking at ranked-choice voting among election reform ideas {{!}} Crosscut".
  24. Westneat, Danny. (16 December 2020). "'Prepare for war': A local GOP official goes all-in with election conspiracy theories". [[The Seattle Times]].
  25. Walters, Daniel. (2024-08-06). "WA GOP chairman says party ‘lost a lot of talent’ to sanctions and infighting".
  26. Walters, Daniel. (2024-08-06). "‘Devolving into a democracy’: What’s behind the Washington GOP’s messy, inconsistent stand against American democracy".
  27. Westneat, Danny. (2024-04-24). "The WA GOP put it in writing that they’re not into democracy".
  28. "About". Washington Federation of Republican Women.
  29. Rolf, Amy. (8 February 2008). "UW's GOP fans few but dedicated". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  30. Modie, Neil. (28 April 2013). "Republican Liberty Caucus elects leaders in Washington". Yakima Herald.
  31. Postman, David. (14 February 2005). "Election dispute attracts 5 who lost race". Seattle Times.
  32. Smith, Erik. (29 August 2013). "Former Auditor Brian Sonntag No Longer a Democrat". Washington State Wire.
  33. (5 January 2007). "Log Cabin Republicans appoint new leader, Seattle native, to top post". Seattle Gay News.
  34. "Delegate to GOP convention is following family tradition".
  35. "The Political Graveyard: Washington Republican Party offices".
  36. "Former Justice Goodloe Dies -- Jurist Championed Conservative Causes".
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