In the final days of the campaign to represent Seattle in Congress, Pramila Jayapal and Brady Walkinshaw have been waging a war over one word: effectiveness.
The fight over which of these lefty Democrats can get more done is ongoing and complexâwant to get deep in it?âbut how about a simpler question: Are the candidates telling the truth when they talk about what they've accomplished?
In Jayapal's case, the answer appears to be not always.
Video and audio recordings obtained by The Stranger, as well as publicly available documents, show that in a series of campaign statements this year, Jayapal has stretched the truth about her role in killing a bad payday lending bill and about the impact of a policy she supported to expand access to contraceptives for people on Medicaid.
Before you keep reading, full disclosure: I was a member of the Stranger Election Control Board who voted to endorse Jayapal. Unlike Dan, I stand by that vote. The issues Iâve explored here may not change your mind, either. They're not Watergate. They're not fabricated military accomplishments. They may seem wonky or semantic. But facts do matter and Jayapal has been stretching some facts about her record in Olympia. So let's get into it.
PAYDAY LENDING
Throughout the campaign, Jayapal has taken credit for helping to âkillâ a payday lending bill in the state legislature last session.
The controversial Moneytree-backed proposal would have replaced two-week payday loans with loans that spread repayment out for longer. Opponents said this would hurt low-income people and weaken the stateâs strong payday lending protections.
Lynnwood Democrat Marko Liias sponsored the bill in the Republican-controlled state senate. Some other Democrats in the chamber were supportive, too. But several Democratic state senators, including Jayapal, fiercely opposed the bill and introduced dozens of amendments to try to kill it.
However, they didnât succeed in their effort to kill the senate bill. They lost that fight and the bill passed out of the senate, 30-18. It was later stopped in the state house, where lawmakers who worked on the effort say House Speaker Frank Chopp, who helps decide which bills get considered, consistently opposed the bill.
On the campaign trail, Jayapal has often brought up the payday lending bill fight as an example of her willingness to stand up to her own party.
âI stood up and introduced 87 amendments to kill that bill, against a democratic caucus member,â Jayapal said in an interview aired on the Laura Flanders Show on October 25. âAnd it was challenging, but we killed it.â
On The Strangerâs Blabbermouth podcast in June, Jayapal highlighted her accomplishments, including âintroducing 87 amendments to kill the bad payday lending bill.â
But the legislative record shows that Jayapal introduced only 13 amendments. In total, senators introduced 40 amendments. The characterization that Jayapal and other senators successfully killed the bill is also misleading because the bill did not in fact die in the senate; it passed.
In a statement, Jayapalâs campaign said she and Senator Sharon Nelson wrote 87 amendments. Of those, â40 were introduced; the rest couldnât be introduced because there was a last minute striker.â In other words, Jayapal did not actually introduce 87 amendments.
In a statement on November 1, Jayapalâs campaign said: âIt has not been disputed (at least not before today) that the floor fight put a spotlight on the payday lending bill which led to its death. The anti-consumer nature of the bill was spotlighted in the senate and the bill was sent to the house to die. Pramila and her colleaguesâ coordinated strategy protected thousands of Washington State families from higher interest rates from this predatory industry. Itâs what happens when you work togetherâyou win.â
Senator Mark Mullet, who fought the bill and supports Walkinshaw, says he and other senators gave speeches âto make sure people understood the flaws of the bill,â but âit was always clear Speaker Chopp was not supporting it [in the house].â
âItâs super accurate saying [Jayapal is] passionate against payday lenders,â Mullet says. âBut, like a lot of stuff in Olympia, you can't say one person is responsible for killing somethingâespecially when that person is in the minority in the chamber that the bill passed out of.â
Marcy Bowers, executive director of the Statewide Poverty Action Network, which lobbied against the bill (but does not endorse candidates in political campaigns), describes Jayapal as âthe champion in the senate. She organized the floor fight.â Bowers says senatorsâ public fight against the bill added pressure on the house to not let it move forward.
âItâs potentially an overstatement to imply she alone killed the bill,â Bowers says, âbut she certainly played a key role in it. I canât point to any one thing that was the key to killing the bill⌠We were using all the tools we had available to us.â
While Jayapal has increasingly strayed toward taking credit for killing the payday lending bill as her Congressional campaign has progressed, she was somewhat more clear about what happened during a June primary endorsement interview with The Stranger.
âI pushed back against bills and ran my own little filibuster on the senate floor with the payday lending bill,â she told The Strangerâs editorial board. â[I] introduced 87 amendments to kill that bill, which we were able to use that as the movement that then stopped payday lending from moving forward in the house and made it impossible for even Democrats to want to take that forward.â
While the âintroduced 87 amendmentsâ statement was and is false, the rest of her June statement is a closer-to-accurate description of what actually happened. Still, even we at The Stranger have been confused by all of this; in our general election endorsement of Jayapal we initially wrote that sheâd âfought and won against more senior Democrats in her chamber who tried to push through a destructive law backed by predatory payday lenders.â Weâve recently corrected our endorsement to make clear that Jayapal lost her fight in the senate.
EXPANDING CONTRACEPTIVE COVERAGE FOR WOMEN ON MEDICAID
Jayapal has taken credit for âexpanding access to contraceptives for women on Medicaidâ but has varied in how she explains exactly what happened. She has also greatly exaggerated the number of women affected by the change.
Hereâs what actually happened:
While the Affordable Care Act already required that Medicaid cover all forms of birth control in Washington, the reimbursement rates for long-acting contraceptives like IUDs were so low that some clinics were not offering those forms of birth control to patients on Medicaid.
In 2015, Jayapal introduced a bill to try to fix this by raising reimbursement rates for long-acting contraceptives. Republican senators balked and Jayapalâs 2015 bill didn't go anywhere. Later, Governor Jay Inslee included the increase to reimbursement rates for long-acting contraceptives in his budget proposal. Again, Republicans werenât having it. So Inslee simply directed the Washington State Health Care Authority to find a way to pay for the increased reimbursement ratesâabout $1 million a yearâin the authorityâs existing budget.
Jayapal did play a role here. She introduced the 2015 bill that Republicans refused to entertain. Then, according to Planned Parenthood representatives and the governorâs office, she kept consistent pressure on the governorâs office to get the effort funded by other means.
âI also credit the governor, but I give [Jayapal] a lot of credit for elevating this through that months-long process,â says Planned Parenthood lobbyist Jennifer Allen. (Planned Parenthoodâs political arm has endorsed Jayapal.) âNothing is written down with her name on it. She never did it for the glory. She did it because it was the right thing to do.â
In some cases, like a recent debate at Seattle University, Jayapal has referred to this effort as an example of her successfully passing âlegislation,â which isnât true.
In an interview for this story, Jayapal acknowledged that while she tries to refer to the increased reimbursement rates as a âpolicyâ victory, she may have used the word âlegislation.â (She did, twice.) This is significant beyond the semantic level because passed legislation is state law. Unless itâs repealed, it lasts forever. In contrast, policy victories that rely on a particular governorâs decisionâvictories like this oneâare only safe until a governor who disagrees comes into office.
At other times, like at this campaign event and in this Reddit AMA, Jayapal said the increased reimbursement rates for long-acting contraceptives benefited âmillionsâ of women. But there are not millions of women on Medicaid in Washington, and estimates from people close to the contraception coverage expansion process put the number of women affected by that policy change at somewhere between 7,000 and 30,000. Allen says the state estimated at the time that every year about 26,750 women on Medicaid would switch to long-term contraceptives like IUDs if they were available. The Jayapal campaign did not respond to a question about this discrepancy.
Like on the payday lending issue, Jayapal was more clear about exactly what sheâd achieved on long-lasting contraception reimbursement rates during the primary election. "[I] have been able to expand access to long-acting reversible contraceptives like IUDs for tens of thousands of women across our state by raising Medicaid reimbursement rates,â Jayapal said during her June endorsement meeting with The Stranger.
Both of these issues come on top of the clip Dan recently used here on Slog to attack Jayapal for taking too much credit for the passage of Seattleâs $15 minimum wage. In that clip, she says, âSome of you know me for actually passing a $15 minimum wage here in Seattle.â (Members of the cityâs minimum wage task force disputed her involvement. The task forceâs co-chair, David Rolf, meanwhile, credits Jayapal for making the issue central for Mayor Ed Murray during his election campaign. Jayapalâs campaign says she regrets the misstatement.)
Asked about the stretched truths concerning her record in Olympia, a spokesperson for Jayapalâs campaign provided some responses by e-mail and said: âItâs sad that this race has suddenly turned into the world's pettiest gotcha game. It doesnât serve anybody.â
To be clear, Jayapal is not the only candidate for political office to ever exaggerate her record. In fact, sheâd be something of an outlier if she didnât. Passing policies happens as the result of lots of peopleânot least among them activistsâpushing for certain policy changes and a lot of lawmakers voting for them. Then, those lawmakers go out and run as individuals, along the way taking individual credit for policies that they know were a group effort. But here, Jayapalâs statements about her achievements have, at times, veered from overgeneralizations into factual inaccuracies.
WHAT ABOUT WALKINSHAW?
If you havenât been shouting this question at the screen already, youâre probably asking by now: What about Walkinshaw? Well, Walkinshaw, too, has run his campaignâand made his effectiveness argumentâlargely on the basis of legislation he sponsored in Olympia. And heâs certainly made sweeping statements and taken credit for bills he sponsored but that ultimately passed with the help of the entire legislature.
âI've started the state's work on opiate addiction over the last three years and it's led to a set of results that are pretty far ranging, that are the reason the Seattle Police Department is able to carry naloxone,â Walkinshaw told The Stranger during an endorsement interview.
âI fought for the authorization of Sound Transit and did it in a way that [Representative] Jessyn Farrell and I passed legislation in the authorization of the transportation package that requires the development of affordable housing around light rail stations,â he said later.
Walkinshawâs website describes one piece of legislation he supported, the Certificate of Restoration of Opportunities, as âthe single most important piece of criminal justice legislation to come out of Olympia the past five years.â And he has taken credit for âlegislation that expands access to emergency contraceptivesâ for people leaving prison. He did sponsor that proposal, though it was the billâs senate companion that actually passed the legislature.
But those statements donât involve an untruth about whether and how he killed a bill (as with Jayapalâs statements about payday lending) or a huge exaggeration of the number of people affected (as with Jayapalâs claim that âmillions of womenâ benefitted from increased reimbursement rates for long-acting contraception).
âCampaigns are about communicating our records and how we've represented those to voters,â Walkinshaw says. âWhether [the] claims we're making are supported by the facts is important. Weâre electing a legislator. Legislative records matter.â
When I asked Jayapalâs campaign whether they had heard Walkinshaw exaggerate his record, a spokesperson said: âWe donât have hours of taped footage on Brady to compare notes and mince every word.â