McMorris Rodgers in race, so is Yearout. No Dem in sight
Republican Cathy McMorris Rodgers formally began her congressional re-election campaign Wednesday with no Democrat admitting to a strong desire oppose her but a challenger on the right from the Constitution Party.
She said she wants to return for a fourth term to fight “reckless federal spending.” As a member of House Republican leadership, she has opposed the bailouts of banks and automakers, last year’s economic stimulus package and all versions of health care reform proposed by President Barack Obama or congressional Democrats.
She said she also wants to continue working to prepare Fairchild Air Force Base for the next generation of aerial tankers, help agriculture research at Washington State University and change health care reform.
Earlier this year she and other House Republicans agreed to an “earmark moratorium” and said they would not submit those requests this year. That was the second time McMorris Rodgers swore off earmarks, a process of directing federal funding to a specific program or project, usually in the member’s district. In 2008, when she led a GOP committee reviewing the budgeting process, she announced she would not submit earmark requests for her Eastern Washington district.
Last year McMorris Rodgers said she would submit earmarks that met standards
of transparency and accountability and would list them on the Internet. A site
she helped set up, sunshine.gop.gov, lists some $81 million in earmarks she
sponsored for projects ranging from highway projects in Spokane to new
facilities at Fairchild to a $48 million agriculture research project
at WSU.
While both of her moratoriums fell within election years, that wasn’t the
motivation, she said. In 2008, it was a personal decision, but this year she
agreed to the new moratorium out of respect for the Republican caucus. “There is
a better way to set budget priorities, and too many examples of abuse,”
she said.
McMorris Rodgers has already raised about $700,000 for a campaign, with
about 60 percent coming from individuals and about 40 percent from
political action committees. She said she expects to raise up to $2
million.
Right now she has no announced Democratic opponent, and none close to
entering the race. “Not yet,” was how state Democratic Party Chairman
Dwight Pelz answered a question about whether his party has a candidate
in the 5th District.
But Randall Yearout, a member of the Constitution Party, will try for a second time to unseat McMorris Rodgers.
Yearout, a crane operator and former saddle shop owner, ran in 2008,
finishing with fifth in a six-person primary with 5,268 votes, or 3
percent of those cast. The Constitution Party announced Wednesday he
would officially enter the race.
Yearout, who gives lectures on the Constitution, said he wants to fight
a “breathtaking federal encroachment into the sovereignty of the
states” and restore a limited federal government.
Under Washington’s primary system, the two candidates with the most
votes in the August primary are on the ballot in November, regardless
of party affiliation.