
The Washington State Democratic party appears to be making the same mistakes the national party made in 2016.
Though the primary isnât until August 7th, accusations are flying in the race for the 8th Congressional District. Candidates and activists say high-ranking officials in the Washington State Democratic party have been working to ensure that Kim Schrier will be the partyâs sole candidate in the race.
One Democratic donor tells The Stranger he believes Washington State Democratic party chair Tina Podlodowski is âputting her thumb on the scaleâ in the race. Democratic candidate Jason Rittereiser says heâs heard from donors and activists that the party chair is âusing her power to attempt to manipulate the outcome of the primary election in favor of her preferred candidate,â Kim Schrier.
Party leaders also appear to be using their influence to winnow the field before voters get a chance to do so in the August primary. A former candidate, Chris Franco, says a party leader told him he wouldnât âmake any friendsâ if he filed for election.
Schrier denies receiving any âpreferential treatmentâ from the state party, and dismisses the other candidatesâ claims as sour grapes.
This is a huge year for Democrats in Washington state. National news outlets are reporting that Democratic challenger Lisa Brown is posing a credible threat to incumbent Cathy McMorris Rodgers in the stateâs deep-red 5th Congressional District. And with seven-term GOP Congressman Dave Reichert retiring at the end of his term, activists and Democratic party leaders are hopeful they can work together to flip the 8th district from red to blue for the first time since its inception. But with all this attention comes money. And with all this money comes pressure. Where should the moneyâor âresources,â as party officials like to call itâbe directed?
The Stranger spoke to Democratic candidates, a Democratic donor, and an activist with Indivisible WA-8 for this story. Some wanted to remain anonymous for fear of party reprisal. Most were scared to talk because they didnât want to, as one person put it, âblow up the Democratic partyâ before an important, closely-watched election that could flip the district from red to blue and amount to a pretty significant drop in the anticipated Democratic wave of 2018.
But everyone we spoke to fears the party hasnât learned from the king-making mistakes they say it made in 2016, and all wanted to clear the air in the hopes of returning power to the voters of Washingtonâs 8th. They say they want an open and fair election, and they think thereâs still time to have one.
Shannon Hader, a public health doctor who managed the Centers for Disease Controlâs HIV/TB unit before officially entering the race in January, told me over the phone sheâs âaware of shenanigans going on that seem to be driven by party leadership.â
âWe need an election, not a coronation,â Hader added, echoing a phrase she expressed at recent candidate forums in Auburn and Sammamish.
A Democratic donor who requested anonymity to speak freely told me that "the message from Tina has been write a check to Kim, or wait until after the primary. I and others have heard that over the last couple months," this person said.
But Podlodowski says she hasnât directed donors to give to one candidate or another. Over e-mail she writes: âIâve had several donors very frustrated with me since I wonât tell them which candidate to give to. My advice is twofold in that case: either wait and find out more until the donors feels sure, or invest in organizations like the State Party, the local legislative district organizations, or groups like Indivisible."
In response to that, the donor who spoke with The Stranger said: "I'm not going to say she says that in every call, but I know she has made more than a small number of calls with the message to write a check to Kim or wait until after the primary. She has clearly had her thumb on the scale."
"The last thing we need is party bosses in Seattle trying to dictate to working people in the 8th District who should represent them or for whom they should be able to vote,â Rittereiser said in a statement.
Schrierâs spokesperson, Katie Rodihan, pushed back on these statements from the other Democratic candidates. âTo say [Schrierâs] success and momentum are the result of a backroom deal is a desperate attempt by her opponents to dismiss the hard work that Kim is putting into this race and delegitimize the support that is receiving all over the 8th district.â
Rodihan suspects âthe real reason these candidates are saying this is because they come from outside the district, and theyâre not finding the support they thought theyâd get here. Kim is from the district, and thatâs one of the reasons why sheâs getting support.â
Rittereiser was born and raised in the district, but moved back in May of 2017 after time away. Hader was also born and raised in Auburn, but moved back into the district in November of 2017 after she stopped working for the CDC.
Haderâs frustration with party meddling in the race stems from her relatively late entrance. Due to the federal law, Hader had to wait to explore her candidacy until she was no longer a government employee, which meant she couldnât talk about running or raise any funds until November of 2017. She officially announced her candidacy early in January of 2018.
Another candidate who entered the race relatively late, Chris Franco, says Washington State Democrats executive director Karen Deal pressured him to stay out of the race in the 8th district.
Franco is a 32-year-old combat veteran with four kids. Heâs a white guy, but heâs also a second-generation immigrant whose grandparents are from Mexico. He works for King County as a program manager focused on equity and social justice, and heâs a Teamster (Local 117).
Though he and his family live in East Renton Highlandsâwhich is located approximately 1,000 feet away from the new borders of the 8th districtâheâs spent plenty of time in the district proper. He graduated from Central Washington University in Ellensburg, WA, and he was stationed at Joint Base Lewis-McChord for a stint during his eight years of service. (The military base is technically in Washingtonâs 10th district, but itâs close to east Pearce County, which is in the 8th.) Just as important as all that: Over the phone, he sounds like a no-bullshit guy who might more quickly garner the trust of the independent voters in the more rural parts of the district.
Francoâs profile is formidable in a district full of veterans, powerful unions, and growers interested in seeing Congress pass comprehensive immigration reform. But he says the party didnât treat him with much respect.
During a phone conversation on January 17th, Franco says Deal told him âsomething along the lines of âI would never tell anyone not to enter this race. That would be wrong. But if you file with the FEC youâre not going to make any friends.ââ â¨â¨Franco says he immediately got off the phone and filed with the FEC.
According to Franco, Deal later misrepresented him to members of his own union, telling one union official that Franco didnât prove he could âspeak to veterans issuesâ and that he couldnât even tell Deal what union he was part of.
âThat was just a slap in the freakinâ face,â Franco says. âI was a two-time company commander responsible for 260 soldiers. I helped them navigate opioid addiction, depression and suicide, VA coverage, and transitioning to homes. To try and make an argument that someone else can better represent veteranâs issues or labor issues is ludicrous.â
Dustin Lambro, political director for Teamerâs Local 117, declined to go into details about how Deal characterized Franco as a candidate, but said they did have a conversation about him.
âI think she was worried about his ability to win in that district,â Lambro said. âWhen there are a limited number of resources, it behooves the party to have less Democratic candidates in the race,â he added. âThatâs all Karen was doing when she talked to me.â
That said, Lambro thinks the party could have âhandled this situationâŚmore delicatelyâ and adds that Democrats need to have a âmore deliberative touch with people who are newly energized in this post-Trump world.â
Lambro said he hadnât known Franco before Deal called, either, but said he sounded like a âcompelling individual.â
Though Franco says Deal didnât actually âRolodexâ himâa practice where party officials ask a candidate to add up the amount of money they could raise from people on their phoneâs contact listâshe told him that in order to be a viable candidate he essentially needed to be able to raise $250,000 within the first month of his candidacy from the contacts in his phone.
That would be a steep climb for Franco. âMy network is veterans and teachersâwe donât come from money,â he said.
Though Franco had never heard of the term before, after I described it to him he said: âFor all intents and purposes, I got Rolodexed,â though he admits his connections with people he met during the course of his Leadership Tomorrow training may have helped him reach a high enough fundraising number to satisfy the Democratic official.
Franco suspects his voting record may have turned off the state party. Franco voted for Obama and wrote in Bernie Sanders in 2016.* He says he occasionally voted for Republicans, though he claims he never voted for Dave Reichert, the outgoing seven-term congressman. âThey were discouraged to see I was not super-duper left-leaning man, but thatâs another reason why Iâm a good fit for the 8th congressional district,â he said.
Though Obama and Clinton (barely) won the district in presidential races, Republicans overwhelmingly represent the district in the state house.
Franco also says Deal was âpersonally insultedâ by his entering the race because he had no elected experience, despite the fact that no one on the Democratic ticket has been elected to anything.
Furthermore, Franco says that during the phone conversation, he committed to dropping out of the race if he wasnât a top-three candidate come the FEC filing deadline on May 18. âI would have walked out of that race if I didnât have a shot in hell,â Franco said.
Heâs come forward about all this because he wants the people of the 8th to decide this race. âForce-feeding candidates down votersâ throats isnât the best way to represent the people,â Franco said. â¨â¨Franco ultimately decided to drop out of the race due to health complications involving his family. âThis is the year to focus on family but stay engaged as possible to flip the 8th and restore some moral justice to the process,â he said.
*Update* 5:04 p.m.
In a statement, Deal describes her version of the interaction with Franco. "When I talked to Chris about the possibility that he would jump into the crowded primary, I asked some toughâbut legitimateâquestions. Why does he want to run for Congress now after rarely voting in the last decade? He told me Trumpâs election motivated him to run, but he couldnât be bothered to vote in the primary or the general elections in 2017. I mean, there is a ballot box where he works and he still couldn't bring himself to vote. I asked him how he would ask primary voters to vote for him when he had never voted in a primary himself. He didn't have a good answer. I never said he could not run or 'rolodexed' him. To be accused of this is, frankly, insulting."
Franco admits that Deal is right about the proximity of his ballot box. "There's no excuse. There's not. I could have, but didn't. Fact is, I'm here now and wanting to fight for what's right," he said over e-mail.
Indivisible WA-8 founder Chris Petzold also reports having a dispiriting conversation with a state Democratic party official. The official told Petzold, whose group helped push Reichert into retirement, that âfeedback from people on the ground who are meeting candidates isnât meaningful. The race is just based on money and momentum, rather than who [voters] think can do the job.â Petzold says that same person told her that âonly 1 percent of the voters will meet the candidates, and so the whole thing is really about marketing.â
When I ran these comments by Podlodowski, she told me that they were âsimply not true,â and pointed to the partyâs canvasing efforts around the state.
Still, Petzold said those comments troubled her. âAll of us want the same thing, which to have a Democrat win,â she said. âBut if our candidate is being decided by the DCCC, the state party, or EMILYâs Listâthat could really extinguish the fire from the boots on the ground. Iâm considering this the most important midterm of my lifetime. Itâs making me extremely concerned.â
Former Democratic candidates in the race noted the partyâs emphasis on a candidateâs ability to raise money, too.
A staffer for Mona Das, a WA-8 candidate who dropped out of the race in mid-January due to trouble raising funds, told me they âgot the sense that the party was mostly concerned about fundraising at the early stage.â
In his departing statement, former Democratic candidate Toby Whitney warned against the âdistorting power of moneyâ in politics, calling it âthe biggest threat to our democracy.â
Hader worries that the partyâs emphasis on fundraising may scare off potential candidates and hurt the party in the longterm. âWhen you look at some of the candidates who are being affected, folks like Chris Franco and othersâthese folks are all part of the future of our party. Theyâre talented, committed, and each bring unique perspective and insight. It makes me mad that there would be any cause to try to discourage them or alienate them from participating in the Democratic party or party politics,â she said.
Entrepreneur Brayden Olson, another candidate in the race, says, âIf I were in a position of influence in the party, Iâd take a 'both/and' approach and look for opportunities to speak about the virtues of all of my candidates to media and donors. Iâd be talking about how excited I am to have so many great candidates in the race. Letâs make it a strength. Letâs make it something the Republicans are afraid of, not excited about.â
*The Stranger originally stated that records only show Franco voting last in 2008. Records actually show he voted in the last three presidential races, but not the midterms. We regret the error.