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News / Northwest

GOP aims to flip Washington’s 8th Congressional District seat in key race

8th District crosses Cascades, includes central rural regions

By GENE JOHNSON, Associated Press
Published: October 28, 2022, 6:03am
3 Photos
FILE - U.S. Rep. Kim Schrier speaks to volunteers in Issaquah, Wash., Saturday, July 30, 2022. One of the key races that will help determine control of the U.S. House of Representatives is playing out in Washington's 8th Congressional District, where Schrier is seeking a third term against a challenge from Republican Matt Larkin.
FILE - U.S. Rep. Kim Schrier speaks to volunteers in Issaquah, Wash., Saturday, July 30, 2022. One of the key races that will help determine control of the U.S. House of Representatives is playing out in Washington's 8th Congressional District, where Schrier is seeking a third term against a challenge from Republican Matt Larkin. (Kori Suzuki/The Seattle Times via AP, File) (Associated Press files) Photo Gallery

SEATTLE — The Republican mayor of Wenatchee, a small city in central Washington’s orchard country, didn’t support Democrat Kim Schrier when she was first elected to Congress in 2018. Since then, though, he’s been impressed.

Schrier helped Wenatchee score major federal money for a new bridge. When the city was initially left out of additional transportation spending by Democrats in the state Legislature, Schrier stepped in again, helping secure tens of millions more. She also helped land money for body cameras for the police department.

And now as the GOP targets Schrier’s seat in hopes of retaking the House, Mayor Frank Kuntz has given the incumbent a full-throated endorsement, appearing in a campaign ad for her, and undercutting challenger Matt Larkin’s efforts to paint her as an extreme liberal.

“This is a results business, and she delivered the results,” Kuntz said in an interview.

Washington’s 8th Congressional District stretches across the Cascade Mountains, encompassing wealthy Seattle exurbs populated by tech workers and central Washington farmland. It’s one of two competitive seats in the state, along with southwest Washington’s 3rd District, that will help determine which party controls Congress come January.

Larkin, 41, is a lawyer and former Washington attorney general candidate who works for his family’s company, Romac Industries, which makes parts for water pipes. He topped several other Republicans, including King County Council Member Reagan Dunn, whose mother once held the seat, for the chance to try to stop Schrier from winning a third term.

Unlike some Republican candidates, Larkin acknowledges President Joe Biden was legitimately elected, though he also notes that many people disagree and are frustrated about it. He says both parties need to do a better job “giving a voice to these people who feel very disenfranchised.” Former President Donald Trump continues to lie about the election results.

Larkin has hammered Schrier on inflation, gas prices and crime, saying Democrats’ policies have aggravated all three. As a conservative business owner, he says, he’s better suited to handling the economy. Lowering taxes and ensuring energy independence would be priorities.

His campaign slogan, “Make crime illegal again,” is a play on Trump’s and earned him appearances on conservative cable shows. His focus on crime has also won him the support of four of the five elected sheriffs from counties that fall in the 8th District.

“My family has deep roots here — we homesteaded here over 165 years ago — and I’m passionate about this place,” he said. “I started to see it decline and I thought, if I’m not going to try to fix it, who is? We’ve got a bunch of real problems we’re trying to address and now inflation is choking people out on top of it all.”

He says that Schrier’s voting record, perfectly aligned with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s, is far out of touch with the district she represents.

Schrier, a pediatrician, is the only Democrat to hold the seat since the district was created in the early 1980s. She won reelection in 2020 against Army veteran Jesse Jensen, who used a playbook similar to the one Larkin has embraced: painting her as a Seattle-style liberal too extreme for the district.

And, as she did against Jensen, Schrier is stressing the results she’s achieved in office. Those include the Wenatchee road money, which will help bring the region’s apples, pears and cherries to market; securing broadband access for 200 homes in rural Entiat; and getting the city of Roslyn, best known as the setting for the TV show “Northern Exposure,” support for projects to reduce the risk of wildfire.

“What these mayors know is that I am meeting, I am listening, I am hearing what their priorities are, and then I am working my tail off to make sure I deliver,” Schrier said.

Schrier is also emphasizing she’s the only pro-choice female doctor in Congress. Given the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade, eliminating the right to an abortion under federal law, that’s crucial, she says.

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