For the first time in years, there are 2 serious candidates for King County executive
Jul. 11—King County voters will have a real choice this year as they select an executive to lead the state's largest county for the next four years.
That doesn't seem like it should be news. It's a pretty low bar to clear — can we get just two people, running serious, funded campaigns, who want to lead the 12th largest county in the country, overseeing an annual budget of more than
But we haven't cleared that bar in more than a decade.
This year, as state Sen.
Constantine is seeking a fourth term as county executive, which, if he wins and serves the full term, would make him the longest-serving executive since
Nguyen, a first-term state senator, is trying to position himself as the more progressive choice, pushing for free public transit, a wealth tax on the richest county residents and the closure of the county's new youth jail and justice center.
"It's being proactive versus reactive," Nguyen said. "You need somebody who is willing to have a bit of urgency to actually get these things done."
Ballots for the
Constantine says his record of progressive achievements is "ample." He cites his role in creating Sound Transit 3 to expand mass transit; in transitioning county buses toward (eventually) an all-electric fleet; and in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. He says, more than just coming up with ideas, he has the experience to turn them into action.
"I have shown that I can take our broadly shared progressive values here in this community and make them real in policy, in budgets, in infrastructure," Constantine said.
While county executive is technically a nonpartisan office, both candidates are
There are three other candidates on the primary ballot.
None of the three other candidates has reported raising any money, according to state
Constantine has significantly out-fundraised Nguyen to date, raising more than
Constantine has also collected the bulk of the union endorsements, including the
Nguyen has the endorsement of several of his legislative colleagues, including
"Any race where you have an incumbent, particularly a longer-term incumbent, the issue is really about their job performance," said
True politicians compete
Constantine, 59, and Nguyen, 37, live about 10 blocks apart in
Constantine, a lawyer, has been in public office for the last quarter-century. First elected to the state House in 1996, he served five years in the House and the
In that 2009 election, Constantine faced longtime TV news anchor
If Constantine and Nguyen end up facing off in the general election, it will be a far different campaign.
Nguyen, a program manager at Microsoft, was elected to the state
Nguyen was born in White Center, the son of Vietnamese refugees. He talks about his life experience — caring for a father who was paralyzed in a car accident; taking the bus to work as a teenager — as providing the framework for his policy objectives.
He says he and state legislators elected with him — the most diverse class in
"What I think we need are people with the lived experiences and an urgency to fix these problems," Nguyen said. "Homelessness isn't waiting, you know, climate change isn't waiting; the racial inequities in our societies aren't waiting."
Nguyen criticizes Constantine for
Constantine said we're "turning the tide" on homelessness. He cited the recent creation — after years of delays — of the regional authority to coordinate spending among the county and its 39 cities. And he said new resources — a new 0.1% sales tax the state approved two years ago and federal emergency COVID funding — have allowed the county to do things like buy hotels to use as emergency housing that it couldn't do previously.
"I believe that we have now what we need to be able to get folks who've been on the streets housed, to clean up our neighborhoods, and our parks, and I think to create a new expectation that folks will not be sleeping outside," Constantine said.
Nguyen wants to make public transit free for everyone. He says the county could get permission from the state to create a new tax on big business to replace the lost fare revenue, much of which is already paid by businesses who subsidizing their employees' ORCA cards.
Constantine says the state has not offered funding or a new tax, and so making transit free would represent a cost savings to big businesses and would mean cuts in bus service.
Nguyen says
Constantine has pledged to close the juvenile detention facility by 2025 and noted that its average population has fallen from around 80 when he took office to 24 last month.
As two progressive
"After 12 years, I appreciate the incumbent's years of service for the county, but it's just simply time for change," Nguyen said.
Constantine, who flirted with a run for governor before Gov.
"It's hard to say what the future holds," he said. "But I'm certain that whatever comes next, the opportunity to serve will be at the center of it, the opportunity to make this place better will continue to drive my work."
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