Senator Barbara Bailey (R-Oak Harbor) announced her retirement from the State Senate in a letter to Gov. Jay Inslee on August 16. Sen. Bailey served in the Legislature for 16 years in both the House and the Senate. She will officially step down on September 30.
In her letter to Gov. Inslee, she said that she is hoping to spend more quality time with her family and church and work with her husband on projects and ventures important to them.
Christine Cribb, the Executive Director of the Oak Harbor Chamber of Commerce announced that she intends to seek the appointment to the State Senate upon Sen. Bailey’s retirement on September 30. She says she was encouraged to seek the appointment by Sen. Bailey.
Cribb has led the Oak Harbor chamber for five years and previously served on the Oak Harbor school board. The Republican PCOs in Island, Skagit, and Snohomish counties will choose three people to be submitted to the Island and Skagit county commissioners and the Snohomish County Council who will officially appoint someone to fill the seat. That person will face Democrat Island County Commissioner Helen Price Johnson, among other potential challengers, in the 2020 election.
After failing to get any traction in his vanity run for president, Gov. Inslee finally threw in the towel telling MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, “It’s become clear I’m not going to be carrying the ball — I’m not going to be president, so I’m withdrawing tonight from the race.”
He returned home to Washington and within hours announced his intention to run for a third term as governor. By running again he also effectively ended the campaigns or potential campaigns of scores of Democrats who were lining up to run to succeed him or fill vacancies created by those who would.
The Seattle Times editorial board says that Gov. Inslee should reconsider his decision to run for a nearly unprecedented third term as governor. The noted, “If Inslee relinquished the scepter, it would have a cascading effect on the political organization chart. The current state attorney general, lands commissioner and King County executive all would be gubernatorial candidates. That would spur healthy competition, new policy debates and a system refresh at multiple levels of government.”
As evidenced by his vanity run for the White House, this isn’t about the party but about Inslee himself. They ended by thanking Inslee for his service but saying, “but now it’s time to give others a turn.”
Senate Republican Leader Mark Schoesler penned a piece for the Washington AG Network encouraging people to attend their local fairs.
Schoesler, a wheat farmer himself, says, “Fairs are part of our rich agricultural heritage, with great entertainment and learning opportunities that are good for the entire family.” He notes that while fairs are always a fun time, they also educate attendees about farming and ranching.
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