McKenna concedes governor's race to Inslee
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - Democrat Jay Inslee secured victory Friday in Washington's race for governor, triumphing over his Republican rival after a grueling campaign that drew more than $40 million in spending.
GOP candidate Rob McKenna conceded defeat Friday night after late ballot returns failed to turn in his favor as the campaign had hoped. Inslee, a former congressman who first ran for governor in 1996, now sustains roughly three decades of Democratic control at the top of Washington state government.
Inslee thanked McKenna for what he described as a gracious conversation Friday night and said the state needs to unite to deal with the challenges of the day.
"It's time to go build a working Washington," Inslee said. "Let's get to work."
Inslee won the office on a message of economic growth, vowing to invest in specific clusters of industries such as green energy and life sciences. He also emphasized his goals of making government more efficient and that he would be able to rebalance the state's budget without new taxes.
Despite his moderate message in this Democratic-leaning state, Inslee well underperformed President Barack Obama, who was winning the state by 13 percentage points. Inslee was winning Friday by a 51-49 margin.
Of the state's 12 daily newspapers, 11 of them endorsed McKenna, and even current Democratic Gov. Chris Gregoire had expressed skepticism about Inslee's vow to fund education without taxes. She supported Inslee's candidacy, however.
McKenna had also cast himself as a moderate with a plan to increase funding for education. Still, he found himself forced to explain why he joined other Republican attorney generals in a challenge to Obama's health care law, and he opposed the passage of gay marriage during a year in which Washington voters approved it.
McKenna's campaign had held out hope this week that late ballots would break in their favor. But many of the counties who posted updated results Friday night showed McKenna actually performing worse than he did earlier in the week. McKenna conceded defeat.
Randy Pepple, who managed McKenna's campaign, said they struggled in part due to how poorly the party's presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, did in Washington state.
McKenna told supporters in a video message that he was very disappointed by the results. He said the campaign was an enriching experience and that he planned to continue public service in some way. How that would look was up in the air, he said. He also wished Inslee best on his work as governor.
"The new administration will face many vexing issues, not least how to adequately fund and reform our schools," McKenna said "I'm hopeful that all of Washington's elected leaders will work together to move us forward."
While the GOP has come close in recent gubernatorial elections in Washington - most notably the 2004 race in which Dino Rossi lost to Gregoire by 133 votes - the party hasn't won the race since 1980. Voters ousted that candidate, John Spellman, at the end of his first time, around the time McKenna was student body president at the University of Washington.
Republicans had been cultivating McKenna as a potential gubernatorial candidate for years, 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 grew up in the Seattle area but built roots on the eastern side of the state, where he got his start as an attorney. Appealing to voters in the Republican-friendly territory of eastern Washington, Inslee talked on the campaign trail and in interviews about his experiences prosecuting drunk drivers and growing alfalfa.
Inslee won a seat in Congress on the eastern side of the state but lost the job in the 1994 Republican sweep. He and his family moved west to Bainbridge Island, and Inslee took his first run at the governor's seat in 1996 but lost in a primary to eventual Gov. Gary Locke.
Seeking a different seat in Congress, Inslee won in 1998 and held the post for more than 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.
Inslee is already working on forming a team to help him transition into office. But he also planned to give his staff some rest after a grueling campaign and to take a breather himself.
"At the top of the list is: enjoy this moment," Inslee said.
GOP candidate Rob McKenna conceded defeat Friday night after late ballot returns failed to turn in his favor as the campaign had hoped. Inslee, a former congressman who first ran for governor in 1996, now sustains roughly three decades of Democratic control at the top of Washington state government.
Inslee thanked McKenna for what he described as a gracious conversation Friday night and said the state needs to unite to deal with the challenges of the day.
"It's time to go build a working Washington," Inslee said. "Let's get to work."
Inslee won the office on a message of economic growth, vowing to invest in specific clusters of industries such as green energy and life sciences. He also emphasized his goals of making government more efficient and that he would be able to rebalance the state's budget without new taxes.
Despite his moderate message in this Democratic-leaning state, Inslee well underperformed President Barack Obama, who was winning the state by 13 percentage points. Inslee was winning Friday by a 51-49 margin.
Of the state's 12 daily newspapers, 11 of them endorsed McKenna, and even current Democratic Gov. Chris Gregoire had expressed skepticism about Inslee's vow to fund education without taxes. She supported Inslee's candidacy, however.
McKenna had also cast himself as a moderate with a plan to increase funding for education. Still, he found himself forced to explain why he joined other Republican attorney generals in a challenge to Obama's health care law, and he opposed the passage of gay marriage during a year in which Washington voters approved it.
McKenna's campaign had held out hope this week that late ballots would break in their favor. But many of the counties who posted updated results Friday night showed McKenna actually performing worse than he did earlier in the week. McKenna conceded defeat.
Randy Pepple, who managed McKenna's campaign, said they struggled in part due to how poorly the party's presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, did in Washington state.
McKenna told supporters in a video message that he was very disappointed by the results. He said the campaign was an enriching experience and that he planned to continue public service in some way. How that would look was up in the air, he said. He also wished Inslee best on his work as governor.
"The new administration will face many vexing issues, not least how to adequately fund and reform our schools," McKenna said "I'm hopeful that all of Washington's elected leaders will work together to move us forward."
While the GOP has come close in recent gubernatorial elections in Washington - most notably the 2004 race in which Dino Rossi lost to Gregoire by 133 votes - the party hasn't won the race since 1980. Voters ousted that candidate, John Spellman, at the end of his first time, around the time McKenna was student body president at the University of Washington.
Republicans had been cultivating McKenna as a potential gubernatorial candidate for years, 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 grew up in the Seattle area but built roots on the eastern side of the state, where he got his start as an attorney. Appealing to voters in the Republican-friendly territory of eastern Washington, Inslee talked on the campaign trail and in interviews about his experiences prosecuting drunk drivers and growing alfalfa.
Inslee won a seat in Congress on the eastern side of the state but lost the job in the 1994 Republican sweep. He and his family moved west to Bainbridge Island, and Inslee took his first run at the governor's seat in 1996 but lost in a primary to eventual Gov. Gary Locke.
Seeking a different seat in Congress, Inslee won in 1998 and held the post for more than 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.
Inslee is already working on forming a team to help him transition into office. But he also planned to give his staff some rest after a grueling campaign and to take a breather himself.
"At the top of the list is: enjoy this moment," Inslee said.
Good. Teabaggers have repeatedly shown themselves to be one sandwich short of a picnic. The last thing Washingtonians, or any thinking society, needs is an extreme right-wing religioso ideologue anywhere near the levers of power.
 @Old29 the word is "religious" and have fun when your left wing loons bankrupt this country..who are you going to go running to when your freebies are gone?
 @Echo Sands The word is religioso, I don't get any freebies.
Yea it just a bad deal to want the Gov. to live within thier means. Be held responsible for thier actions. Stop Wastefull spending. I am so glad this Election is Over. No more Neg TV adds declaring the other person worse then satan himself. What was it the Obama said in 08? Oh Yea if you don't have a record to run on, then Paint you're running mate as someone the people will run from. You do know that Obama is now going after the 2nd Ad. After he found out he won Re-Election he signed an order for the UN concerning the Right to Bare Arms.
 @cpt.iceman The right to bare arms. Hahaha.Â
 @Old29 So, let us know how you feel about idiots who can come up with no better term than "teabaggers" to describe their opponents. Can't you be just a bit more clever? You and your ilk are vile and despicable. But, since your president is comfortable using the term, why should you be any different? He's lowered the bar to allow people like you to feel comfortable in your sleaziness.
 @HenryBowman  @Old29 How about American Taliban
 @HenryBowman OK. Scratch "Teabaggers." How does "pernicious right-wing eel excrement" work for you?
 @HenryBowman The best you can do is an ad hominem attack? Can't you be just a little more clever?
 @lee986321  @HenryBowman Mind your own businees. This is what passes for dialog on this site.
 @Old29  @HenryBowman Both of you Neanderthals Grow up
He will not be the Governor of Washington, but the Governor of King County instead. You would think Washington and Oregon would get smart but I was mistaken. I hope Oregon enjoys their new sales tax that's coming.
Another four years of  Washington sliding deeper into the toilet that Gregoire and her puppets, the voters from King county, started, eight years ago.  Washington will be far behind the rest of the nation, if and when, we start to get out of this recession.
"Both candidates vowed to not raise taxes. Those policies will be put to the test in January, when lawmakers begin negotiations over how to deal with a budget shortfall and the need for more education funding."
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Inslee will reneg. Promises are rarely kept. The unions will complain bitterly and scream the sky is falling until he gives in.
@RalphCramden When was the last time you ever heard of a Politition Keeping thier promises?
 @cpt.iceman Â
Ahhhh....never?