State GOP Tells Its Moderate Wing to Stop Using the R-Word

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Republicans in Washington are being swept up in the tides of fearful faction, notably in an attack from the way-out right against members of the party who used to win elections.

ā€œI call on the ā€˜Mainstream Republicansā€™ to disband immediately or remove the name Republican from their name,ā€ King County GOP chairman Joshua Freed posted on his website Sunday evening.  Freed was a distant fourth-place finisher in last Augustā€™s gubernatorial primary and later ran as a write-in for lieutenant governor. ā€œRemove the name Republican from your name or completely dissolve,ā€ he told Mainstream Republicans of Washington, describing the group as ā€œa very clear and embarrassing minority in the Republican Party.ā€

Mainstream Republicans were quick and vigorous in condemning the January 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection by Trump supporters, saying the assault should sadden all ā€œresponsible Republicans.ā€ 

The object of Freedā€™s wrath is a moderate GOP group that stages an annual Cascade Conference in Leavenworth.  The gathering serves as a reminder of how Republicans were once competitive at the polls ā€“ we had polls then ā€“ and governed successfully. The most recent conference saw ex-Gov. Dan Evans lead a hike into the Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area, which he helped create.  Ex-Sen. Slade Gorton enjoyed correcting a journalist serving on a panel.  Former U.S. Rep. Sid Morrison served up wine at the bar.  The GOPā€™s Secretary of State dynasty was on display. Promising legislators such as newly named State Rep. Alex Ybarra displayed their wares.

The conference has heard from right-wing radio jock Jason Rantz but was also a forum for (now retired) State Sen. Maureen Walsh of Walla Walla to lay out her case for abolishing the death penalty.  It features elected officials and vigorous issue discussion, while the partyā€™s Lincoln Day dinners often see statewide candidates serving as warmup acts for talk show hosts.

Of course, President Trump has never been popular with the Mainstream, or with Washington voters.  Both Evans and Gorton said at the 2019 conference that they would not vote to reelect the 45th president. Trump lost the Evergreen State by a margin of 800,000 votes in November and took just 39 percent of the vote.

Along with other King County Republican leaders, Joshua Freed ought to show up at the Cascade Conference and learn how to win elections.  The GOP has been hemorrhaging legislative seats in the stateā€™s largest population center.

The party lost two 30th District state House of Representatives seats in 2016.  A special State Senate election in the 45th District (Redmond-Kirkland) cost Republicans control of the Washington State Senate.  Two GOP legislators in the 5th District (east King County) bit the dust in 2018.  U.S. Rep. Kim Schrier used King County votes to become the first Democrat to represent the 8th Congressional District since it was created in 1982. If you want to visit a King County town represented in Olympia by a Republican, buckle your seat belt and head all the way up to Skykomish.

A former Bothell mayor, Freed sued Gov. Inslee last year over COVID-19 restrictions and was one of the Republicans who signed on to resist the school sex-education program passed by Democrats in the Legislature.  The stateā€™s voters affirmed sex ed in the November election.

The Republican right has helped turn Washington into a deep blue state.  The GOP hasnā€™t elected a Governor since John Spellman in 1980, and last won a U.S. Senate race in 1994.  The Evergreen State hasnā€™t been actively contested in a presidential race since 2000.

Actually, itā€™s the King County Republican Party that has a record of factionalism, far more than the Mainstream Republicans. In the 1960s and 1970s, the party was controlled by the hard right under Chairman Ken Rogstad and waged internal war against Gov. Evans and the moderately liberal state party.  Its King County political boss, Prosecutor Charles Carroll, was unseated by reformer Chris Bayley amidst the tolerance policy scandal and gamblersā€™ payoffs to police.

In short, King County Republicans are in a deep hole.  Freed has dug it deeper by attacking the most attractive and electable folks left in his party.

Joel Connelly
Joel Connelly
I worked for Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1973 until it ceased print publication in 2009, and SeattlePI.com from 2009 to 6/30/2020. During that time, I wrote about 9 presidential races, 11 Canadian and British Columbia electionsā€Ž, four doomed WPPSS nuclear plants, six Washington wilderness battles, creation of two national Monuments (Hanford Reach and San Juan Islands), a 104 million acre Alaska Lands Act, plus the Columbia Gorge National Scenic Area.

4 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks Joel for telling it like it is. Washington state Republicans could learn from their Democrat counter parts how to balance far left and moderate factions. Democrats have succeeded in bringing party factions together. Republicans seem hard baked in ideology from pro-life to racist tendencies, anti-LGBTQ and Darwinian economics. I would welcome a moderate Republican candidates as having a one-party dominated state delivers way too much power that inhibits objective over sight

  2. Pete: Well put. I grew up in Era where mainstream R’s — e.g. AG Gorton, State Land Commissioner Brian Boyle — provided a welcome alternative to what KING-TV pundit Don McGaffin dubbed “the sleaze wing of the Democratic Party.”

  3. Seeing Joel Connelly’s byline is a wonderful way to greet 2021. There aren’t many people in media anymore that have an institutional memory about politics in this state. None runs as deep as Joel’s.

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