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2008 Washington gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For related races, see2008 United States gubernatorial elections.

2008 Washington gubernatorial election

← 2004November 4, 20082012 →
 
CandidateChristine GregoireDino Rossi
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote1,598,7381,404,124
Percentage53.24%46.76%

County results
Congressional district results
Precinct results
Gregoire:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Rossi:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
Tie:     50%     No votes

Governor before election

Christine Gregoire
Democratic

Elected Governor

Christine Gregoire
Democratic

Elections in Washington (state)
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The2008 gubernatorial election in Washington was held on November 4, 2008. RepublicanDino Rossi and incumbent Democratic GovernorChristine Gregoire emerged from the August 19 primary. This made the 2008 election a rematch between the candidates from the2004 election, the closest gubernatorial election in the state's history. In contrast to the recounts and months of legal challenges in their previous contest, Gregoire was the clear winner on November 5 with about 53% of the vote. With a margin of 6.48%, this election was the second-closest race of the2008 gubernatorial election cycle, behind onlythe election in North Carolina.

Timeline

[edit]
DateYearEventReferenceNotes
June 62008Filing deadline[1]
August 192008State primary[2]Same date as general primaries for other offices
November 42008General election[2]Same date as presidential election and other offices
November 262008General election[2]Last day for counties to deliver results to the state
December 42008General election[2]Results certified

[3]

Primary election

[edit]
Candidates for office
CandidateStated party preferenceWebsiteNotes
Christine GregoirePrefersDemocratic Party[1]Incumbent governor
Dino RossiPrefersG.O.P. Party[2]Ex-state senator, 2004 gubernatorial nominee
Will BakerPrefersReform Party[3]Out; lost primary
Duff BadgleyPrefersGreen Party[4]Out; lost primary
John W. Aiken Jr.PrefersRepublican Party[5]Out; lost primary
Christian Pierre JoubertPrefersDemocratic Party[6]Out; lost primary
Chris TudorStates No Party Preference[7]Out; lost primary
Javier O. LopezPrefersRepublican Party[8]Out; lost primary
Mohammad Hasan SaidStates No Party Preference[9]Out; lost primary
James WhitePrefersIndependent Party[10]Out; lost primary
Source:[4]

The Washington primary election was held August 19, 2008. For the first time, Washington ran atop-two primary, eliminating the "pick a party" primary usedsince 2004. Unlike traditional primaries, wherein each party with more than one candidate is reduced to a single person to appear on the general election ballot, the system simply reduces the entire crop of candidates from all parties down to the top two candidates, resulting in no more than two candidates appearing on the general election ballot for a given position. As a result, candidates from all parties were essentially running against each other. To allow for ideological identification, each candidate in a partisan race was allowed to indicate an arbitrary party preference.[5]

Controversy over Rossi's party preference

[edit]

Under the changes to election law made by the passage of Initiative 872, partisan contests are no longer tied to registered parties, but candidates are allowed to indicate an arbitrary "party preference" to appear next to their name on the primary and general election ballots.[6] An extreme example of this occurred in the 40th District race for state senator, where candidate Timothy Stoddard indicated a preference for the "Salmon Yoga" party.[7]

Republican candidateDino Rossi listed his party preference as "G.O.P." instead of the traditional party name "Republican". Critics of Rossi contended that the choice of party name was an attempt to distance himself from any negative opinions associated with the Republican Party.[8] Rossi's campaign argued that the difference was insignificant, saying voters are already aware that the terms refer to the same party.[9] However, anElway Research poll taken in August 2008 found that over 25% of registered voters were not aware that the term "GOP" meant the Republican Party.[10]

On September 23, the Washington State Democrats, alleging that the latter is a misrepresentation of his true party affiliation, filed a lawsuit against the Secretary of State to force the state to list Rossi to on the general election ballot as a Republican instead of with the "GOP Party" label.[11] AKing County Superior Court judge dismissed the suit, saying nothing in state law made the choice of party name illegal, but he acknowledged the potential confusion. Had the lawsuit succeeded, many counties would have had to reprint their ballots, and the already-cast absentee votes of military personnel may have become invalid.[12]

Results

[edit]
Results by county:
  Gregoire
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Rossi
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%

While the primary was officially held on August 19, 2008, some counties such asKing County allowedabsentee ballots to bepostmarked by that date in order to be valid. As a result, the primary vote tally was not officially certified until September 9, to allow time for mailed-in ballots to arrive and be counted by the counties. As an increasing number of counties allowed, encouraged, or mandated mail-in ballots for voters within the county, the number of such ballots was significant.[13]

Nonpartisan blanket primary results[a][14]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticChristine Gregoire696,30648.27%
RepublicanDino Rossi668,57146.35%
RepublicanJohn W. Aiken Jr.21,5641.49%
DemocraticChristian Pierre Joubert16,6461.15%
IndependentJames White10,8840.75%
GreenDuff Badgley9,7020.67%
IndependentChristopher A. Tudor5,6000.39%
ReformWill Baker5,2010.36%
RepublicanJavier O. Lopez4,9810.35%
IndependentMohammad Hasan Said3,0020.21%
Total votes1,442,457100.00%

General election

[edit]

Christine Gregoire andDino Rossi were declared the winners of the primary and placed on the ballot for the November 4 election, which coincided with the national election. However, with all Washington counties either exclusively or (in the case of Pierce and King counties) predominantly voting via mail-in ballot,[15] many votes were cast prior to that date. King County, the largest county in the state, and the one which carried Gregoire to victory in 2004, sent out overseas absentee ballots on October 5, and resident mail-in ballots on October 17.[16]

In Washington state, mail-in ballots only needed to be postmarked, not received, by November 4, meaning that valid ballots continued to be received and counted after that date.[17] For the 2008 election, counties had until November 26 to send results to the state, and the Secretary of State had until December 4 to certify all state results.[2]

Predictions

[edit]
SourceRankingAs of
The Cook Political Report[18]TossupOctober 16, 2008
Rothenberg Political Report[19]TossupNovember 2, 2008
Sabato's Crystal Ball[20]Lean DNovember 3, 2008
Real Clear Politics[21]TossupNovember 4, 2008

Endorsements

[edit]
Dino Rossi (R)

Newspapers

Polling

[edit]

Aggregate polls

Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
Christine
Gregoire (D)
Dino
Rossi (R)
Other/Undecided
[b]
Margin
Real Clear Politics[23]October 22 – November 2, 2008November 2, 200850.7%47.3%2.0%Gregoire +3.4%
%support01020304050602006/03/262008/07/102008/10/31Christine GregoireDino RossiUndecidedOpinion polling for the 2008 Washington gube...
Viewsource data.
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Christine
Gregoire (D)
Dino
Rossi (R)
Undecided
Survey USA[24]October 30-November 2, 200852%46%2%
Survey USA[25]October 26–27, 200850%48%2%
Rasmussen Reports[26]October 22, 200850%48%2%
Survey USA[27]October 12–13, 200848%47%5%
Rasmussen Reports[26]October 2, 200848%48%4%
Survey USA[28]September 21–22, 200850%48%2%
Strategic Vision[29]September 14–16, 2008800± 3.0%46%48%6%
Rasmussen Reports[26]September 10, 200846%52%2%
Survey USA[30]September 5–7, 200847%48%5%
SurveyUSA[31]August 11–12, 2008718± 3.7%50%48%2%
Rasmussen Reports[32]August 6, 200847%43%10%
Strategic Vision[33]July 25–27, 2008800± 3.0%47%45%8%
SurveyUSA[34]July 13–15, 2008666± 3.9%49%46%5%
Moore Information[35]July 9–10, 2008400± 5.0%45%45%11%
Rasmussen Reports[26]July 9, 200849%43%8%
Elway Poll[36]June 18–22, 2008405± 5.0%47%39%14%
Rasmussen Reports[37]June 9, 200850%43%7%
SurveyUSA[38]June 9, 2008637± 4.0%50%47%3%
Rasmussen Reports[39]May 12, 200852%41%7%
Elway Poll[40]April 21–22, 2008405± 5.0%43%38%19%
SurveyUSA[41]April 14–16, 2008634± 4.0%50%46%4%
SurveyUSA[42]April 7, 2008607± 4.1%48%47%5%
Rasmussen Reports[43]March 27, 200847%46%7%
Rasmussen Reports[44]February 28, 200846%47%7%
Washington Poll[45]February 7–18, 2008300± 5.6%54%42%4%
Elway Poll[46]January 3–6, 200840548%35%17%
Washington Poll[47]October 22–29, 2007601± 4.0%47%42%11%
Strategic Vision[48]October 5–7, 2007800± 3.0%47%45%8%
Strategic Vision[49]March 24–26, 2006800± 3.0%38%51%11%

Police Guild press conference incident

[edit]

At an August 7 press conference held by the Seattle Police Officers Guild to declare its endorsement of Rossi, the Guild forcibly removed Kelly Akers, a Gregoire campaign staffer who was filming the event, from the premises. The Rossi campaign reiterated a standing policy to prevent opposing campaigns from filming Rossi's appearances, to deny them the ability to take "attack footage." Rossi's campaign staff includes a cameraman tasked with filming Gregoire appearances.[50]

Debates

[edit]

Five debates were held[51]between Gregoire and Rossi, the candidates in the general election.

DateTimeLocationSponsors
2008-09-209:00 PMFisher Plaza (Seattle)Fisher Communications,League of Women Voters,Seattle Post-Intelligencer
2008-09-257:30 PMSemiahmoo Resort (Blaine)Association of Washington BusinessComplete video of debate -C-SPAN
2008-10-017:00 PMCapitol Theatre (Yakima)KCTS 9,Yakima Herald-Republic
2008-10-097:00 PM*[52]KSPS-TV Studios (Spokane)KSPS-TV,Spokane Spokesman-Review[53]
2008-10-158:00 PM[54]TBDKING-TV,Seattle Times,NPR

*The Spokane debate was taped in the morning to be aired at the indicated time. All other debates were held and aired live.

The Gregoire campaign had sought a sixth debate inTacoma, sponsored by theTacoma News-Tribune. The Rossi campaign instead sought a sixth debate inVancouver, Washington, sponsored byThe Columbian. The local Camas-WashougalRotary Club went so far as to reserve a venue for October 8. The campaigns could not agree on either event.[55][56][57][58]

The Gregoire campaign had set aside August 15 for a pre-primary radio debate with Rossi on Seattle NPR stationKUOW-FM.[59] Rossi declined to appear, giving Gregoire solo airtime.[60]

Results

[edit]

Gregoire declared victory after late evening returns were posted, with 42% of the statewide vote counted, showing her with a 52% lead over Rossi.[61] By 10:30 PM PST (1:30 AM EST) all five major television networks had called the race for Gregoire.[62] The Rossi campaign called the networks' declarations "premature" and did not concede defeat that evening. Rossi held out hope that late ballots would carry him, as late returns had reversed an early Gregoire lead in2004. Rossi conceded the next morning.

Rossi conceded defeat in the gubernatorial election on November 5. In his concession speech, he indicated that he was not planning a return to politics.[63] Rossi's retirement from politics was short-lived: in2010 he ran in (and lost) the race for United States Senate againstPatty Murray.

2008 Washington gubernatorial election[64]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticChristine Gregoire (incumbent)1,598,73853.24%+4.37%
RepublicanDino Rossi1,404,12446.76%−2.11%
Majority194,6146.48%
Total votes3,002,862100.00%
DemocraticholdSwing+6.48%

By county

[edit]
County[65]Christine Gregoire
Democratic
Dino Rossi
Republican
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%
Adams1,45330.17%3,36369.83%-1,910-39.66%4,816
Asotin4,25443.92%5,43256.08%-1,178-12.16%9,686
Benton21,96830.26%50,63569.74%-28,667-39.48%72,603
Chelan12,08737.99%19,73062.01%-7,643-24.02%31,817
Clallam18,98749.42%19,43150.58%-444-1.16%38,418
Clark87,68348.99%91,30151.01%-3,618-2.02%178,984
Columbia70631.48%1,53768.52%-831-37.05%2,243
Cowlitz20,72346.38%23,95453.62%-3,231-7.23%44,677
Douglas5,12833.87%10,01366.13%-4,885-32.26%15,141
Ferry1,33038.33%2,14061.67%-810-23.34%3,470
Franklin6,36532.41%13,27667.59%-6,911-35.19%19,641
Garfield43432.01%92267.99%-488-35.99%1,356
Grant8,73231.94%18,60468.06%-9,872-36.11%27,336
Grays Harbor15,72953.98%13,40746.02%2,3227.97%29,136
Island20,89150.24%20,68849.76%2030.49%41,579
Jefferson12,58863.61%7,20036.39%5,38827.23%19,788
King583,35764.16%325,82035.84%257,53728.33%909,177
Kitsap62,47850.74%60,65649.26%1,8221.48%123,134
Kittitas6,98839.44%10,73260.56%-3,744-21.13%17,720
Klickitat4,53845.42%5,45454.58%-916-9.17%9,992
Lewis12,28335.47%22,34764.53%-10,064-29.06%34,630
Lincoln2,05234.66%3,86865.34%-1,816-30.68%5,920
Mason13,94249.58%14,18150.42%-239-0.85%28,123
Okanogan6,57539.27%10,16860.73%-3,593-21.46%16,743
Pacific5,69552.28%5,19847.72%4974.56%10,893
Pend Oreille2,57139.66%3,91260.34%-1,341-20.68%6,483
Pierce166,56251.10%159,36348.90%7,1992.21%325,925
San Juan7,04467.73%3,35632.27%3,68835.46%10,400
Skagit27,91550.33%27,54549.67%3700.67%55,460
Skamania2,56447.68%2,81352.32%-249-4.63%5,377
Snohomish167,17552.67%150,20547.33%16,9705.35%317,380
Spokane104,36948.11%112,57051.89%-8,201-3.78%216,939
Stevens7,77135.02%14,41864.98%-6,647-29.96%22,189
Thurston72,65257.88%52,88042.12%19,77215.75%125,532
Wahkiakum96041.92%1,33058.08%-370-16.16%2,290
Walla Walla9,40538.32%15,13761.68%-5,732-23.36%24,542
Whatcom54,24954.67%44,97545.33%9,2749.35%99,224
Whitman8,36348.46%8,89651.54%-533-3.09%17,259
Yakima30,17239.27%46,66760.73%-16,495-21.47%76,839
Totals1,598,73853.24%1,404,12446.76%194,6146.48%3,002,862
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

By congressional district

[edit]

Gregoire won five of nine congressional districts, with the remaining four going to Rossi, including one that elected a Democrat.[66]

DistrictGregoireRossiRepresentative
1st56%44%Jay Inslee
2nd52%48%Rick Larsen
3rd49.6%50.4%Brian Baird
4th35%65%Doc Hastings
5th45%55%Cathy McMorris Rodgers
6th54%46%Norm Dicks
7th79%21%Jim McDermott
8th49%51%Dave Reichert
9th54%46%Adam Smith

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^All party affiliations are given as "Prefers x Party". Independents were listed as "States No Party Preference". Rossi's official preference was "Prefers G.O.P. Party".
  2. ^Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Politics1."Politics 1-Washington".Archived from the original on June 12, 2008. RetrievedMay 31, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^abcde"Elections Calendar".Washington Secretary of State.Archived from the original on November 6, 2008. RetrievedNovember 5, 2008.
  3. ^Secretary of the State of Washington."Calendar".Archived from the original on May 29, 2008. RetrievedMay 31, 2008.
  4. ^Secretary of State
  5. ^"Announcing Washington State's NEW Top 2 Primary"(PDF). Washington Office of the Secretary of State. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on September 10, 2008. RetrievedAugust 20, 2008.
  6. ^"People's Choice Initiative of 2004 (Initiative 872)"(PDF). Washington Office of the Secretary of State. p. 2.Archived(PDF) from the original on May 10, 2009. RetrievedAugust 27, 2008. "Definitions" section, paragraph on the term "partisan office".
  7. ^"August 19, 2008 Top 2 Primary – Legislative District 40 – State Senator". Washington Office of the Secretary of State. Archived fromthe original on August 26, 2008. RetrievedAugust 27, 2008.
  8. ^Washington political blogger Goldy suggested that Rossi was "too ashamed to have the Republican brand attached to his name."Goldstein, David (June 5, 2008)."BREAKING: Dino Rossi quits Republican Party!".HorsesAss.org.Archived from the original on August 27, 2008. RetrievedAugust 20, 2008.
  9. ^Roberts, Gregory (June 6, 2008)."Rossi not exactly on ballot as Republican".Seattle Post-Intelligencer.Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. RetrievedAugust 20, 2008.
  10. ^The Elway press release to news organizations was reprinted inMapes, Jeff."Washington's current governor's race".Mapes on Politics. The Oregonian.Archived from the original on September 19, 2008. RetrievedNovember 7, 2018.
  11. ^Garber, Andrew (September 24, 2008)."Democrats sue to make Rossi call himself "Republican" instead of "GOP"".Seattle Times.Archived from the original on September 27, 2008. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  12. ^Johnson, Gene (September 26, 2008)."Seattle judge OKs ballot with 'GOP' Rossi".Seattle Times.Archived from the original on September 29, 2008. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  13. ^McGann, Chris (August 19, 2008)."Top-two primary kicks off today".Seattle Post-Intelligencer.Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. RetrievedAugust 21, 2008.
  14. ^Reed, Sam (August 19, 2008)."Governor".Secretary of State of Washington.Archived from the original on March 3, 2025. RetrievedOctober 21, 2025.
  15. ^Roberts, Gregory (February 7, 2008)."King County delays all-mail voting until 2009".Seattle Post-Intelligencer.Archived from the original on August 31, 2021. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  16. ^King County."King County Elections".Archived from the original on September 17, 2008. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  17. ^"Vote by Mail FAQ".Washington Secretary of State. Archived fromthe original on November 6, 2008. RetrievedNovember 5, 2008.
  18. ^"2008 Governor Race ratings".The Cook Political Report.Archived from the original on January 5, 2021. RetrievedMarch 4, 2021.
  19. ^"2008 Gubernatorial Ratings".Gubernatorial Ratings. The Rothenberg Political Report.Archived from the original on May 26, 2021. RetrievedMay 25, 2021.
  20. ^"THE LAST LAST WORD The Crystal Ball's Final Projections for the 2008 Election".Sabato's Crystal Ball. November 3, 2008. RetrievedDecember 25, 2021.
  21. ^"2008 Washington Governor Race".RealClearPolitics. November 4, 2008.Archived from the original on January 22, 2021. RetrievedMarch 5, 2021.
  22. ^Editorial Board, The Seattle Times (October 19, 2008)."Dino Rossi for governor".The Seattle Times.Archived from the original on March 16, 2016. RetrievedOctober 22, 2025.
  23. ^Real Clear Politics
  24. ^Survey USA
  25. ^Survey USA
  26. ^abcdRasmussen Reports
  27. ^Survey USA
  28. ^Survey USA
  29. ^Strategic Vision
  30. ^Survey USA
  31. ^SurveyUSA
  32. ^Rasmussen Reports
  33. ^Strategic Vision
  34. ^SurveyUSA
  35. ^Moore Information
  36. ^Elway Poll
  37. ^Rasmussen Reports
  38. ^SurveyUSA
  39. ^Rasmussen Reports
  40. ^Elway Poll
  41. ^SurveyUSA
  42. ^SurveyUSA
  43. ^Rasmussen Reports[permanent dead link]
  44. ^Rasmussen Reports
  45. ^Washington Poll
  46. ^Elway Poll
  47. ^Washington Poll
  48. ^Strategic Vision
  49. ^Strategic Vision
  50. ^Postman, David; Garber, Andrew (August 12, 2008)."Dem cameraman is evicted from Dino Rossi event".Seattle Times. Archived fromthe original on November 8, 2018. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  51. ^Hagey, Jason (September 8, 2008)."Debate schedule: Gregoire, Rossi preparing to face-off at least five times".Political Buzz. Tacoma News Tribune. Archived fromthe original on December 16, 2008. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  52. ^Brunt, Josh (October 9, 2008)."Gov. Gregoire, Rossi debate".Spokane Spokesman-Review.Archived from the original on October 12, 2008. RetrievedOctober 9, 2008.
  53. ^Brunt, Jonathan."Gov. Gregoire, Rossi debate budget".Spokesman Review.Archived from the original on 12 October 2008. Retrieved8 November 2018.
  54. ^Garber, Andrew (October 5, 2008)."The truth behind claims by Rossi, Gregoire".Seattle Times.Archived from the original on January 13, 2016. RetrievedNovember 8, 2018. (Sidebar: "Rossi-Gregoire debates")
  55. ^Hagey, Jason (September 26, 2008)."Gregoire, Rossi kick off debate schedule tonight".Tacoma News Tribune. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.[dead link]
  56. ^Hagey, Jason (September 8, 2008)."Debate schedule: Gregoire, Rossi preparing to face-off at least five times".Political Buzz. Tacoma News Tribune. Archived fromthe original on December 16, 2008. RetrievedDecember 15, 2008.
  57. ^"Chris Gregoire Too Busy to Debate Rossi in Clark County".Camas Washougal Watch. August 12, 2008. Archived fromthe original on July 18, 2011. RetrievedDecember 15, 2008.
  58. ^Durbin, Kathie (August 7, 2008). "Gregoire declines offers to debate Rossi locally".The Columbian.
  59. ^Mulick, Chris (August 5, 2008)."Gregoire, Rossi plan gubernatorial debates".Tri-City Herald. Archived fromthe original on February 4, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  60. ^Connelly, Joel (August 15, 2008)."Rossi to NPR: I won't show".Strange Bedfellows. Seattle Post-Intelligencer.Archived from the original on August 26, 2008. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2008.
  61. ^La Corte, Rachel (November 4, 2008)."Gregoire claims victory in Washington gov. rematch". Associated Press. RetrievedNovember 5, 2008.[dead link]
  62. ^Callaghan, Peter (November 4, 2008)."Networks call it for Gregoire. Is it real?".Political Buzz. Tacoma News Tribune. Archived fromthe original on December 16, 2008. RetrievedNovember 5, 2008.
  63. ^La Corte, Rachel (November 5, 2008)."Republican Rossi concedes Wash governor's race". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. RetrievedNovember 5, 2008.[dead link]
  64. ^Reed, Sam (November 4, 2008)."Governor".Secretary of State of Washington.Archived from the original on August 15, 2025. RetrievedOctober 18, 2025.
  65. ^Reed, Sam (November 4, 2008)."Governor - County Results".Secretary of State of Washington.Archived from the original on April 30, 2025. RetrievedAugust 8, 2025.
  66. ^"2008 General Data".sos.wa.gov.Archived from the original on May 20, 2024.

External links

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