Los Angeles Times

A buffer against Trump develops on West Coast

Democrats aim to add Washington state to the wall of resistance.

- By Mark Z. Barabak

REDMOND, Wash. — One year ago, Manka Dhingra was preparing for a celebratio­n, a gathering of family and friends to mark Hillary Clinton’s election as the nation’s first woman president.

Today, she is bearing the hopes and dreams of Democrats crushed by Clinton’s loss and trying to help the party pull itself from a deep hole.

A state Senate race pitting two campaign novices in the upscale suburbs east of Seattle has turned into a major battle between the two national parties, becoming the costliest legislativ­e contest in state history and serving as a test of the Trump effect far from the other Washington.

At stake is control of the state Capitol in Olympia. Democrats, who run the government­s in California and Oregon, hope to build a blue wall of resistance the length of the West Coast and get a shot of momentum ahead of 2018 by extending their legislativ­e winning streak under Trump.

The election Tuesday “is an awakening” for activists

“who might otherwise feel powerless about what’s going on in D.C.,” said Tina Podlodowsk­i, head of the state Democratic Party. “We can elect great people around the country who can stop the worst of the Trump agenda.”

For Republican­s, the contest is a fight to preserve their toehold in Olympia, to stop the worst excesses of Democratic rule and elect an exuberant millennial, Jinyoung Englund, whose family history — she is the child of Korean immigrants — and background reflect the changes remaking this thriving high-tech hub, a home to Microsoft, T-Mobile and SpaceX, among others.

As for Trump, Englund and her supporters insist the race has everything to do with local personalit­ies and issues and nothing whatever to do with the president or his policies. “It’s not an issue of Republican versus Democrat,” Englund said. “It’s an issue of one-party control and what does that mean.”

For residents, concerns include education funding — the schools are among the best in the state — and the hellish traffic that spills off backed-up freeways, sending cars snaking bumper-tobumper through their hilly neighborho­ods.

For the rest of the state, issues such as taxes, healthcare, climate change and voting rights all hinge on control of the Senate, where Republican­s — clinging to a single-vote majority — have served as a check on Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee and Democrats running the House. Tuesday’s election is to fill a seat vacated when a Republican senator died in office, leaving the chamber evenly split.

“If you have one-party rule … you can see what happens in Seattle,” said Susan Hutchison, the state GOP chair, using Republican shorthand depicting the city as a slough of drugs, homelessne­ss and wacky liberalism. “It’s dangerous.”

Still, despite those overtones, Trump’s presence looms as surely as the rain clouds hanging over this wet corner of the country.

Dhingra, 42, probably wouldn’t be a candidate if Trump hadn’t been elected. “I love my job,” said the veteran King County prosecutor and mother of two teens. “I love working with nonprofits. I love being involved with my kids in school.”

Dixie Swenson, 78, wouldn’t be among the legion of campaign volunteers along with her 81-year-old husband, Keith, if the pugnacious president hadn’t driven the two of them a little batty. “We spent a few weeks yelling at the TV and found that didn’t do any good,” Swenson said cheerily. “So we found a way to get involved.”

And the race might not have drawn national attention from the likes of former Vice President Joe Biden, who recently endorsed Dhingra, and record-shattering millions — $8.5 million and counting — had Democrats not been desperate to reverse their fortunes after the political devastatio­n of the last eight years. Under President Obama, Democrats lost more than 1,000 legislativ­e seats nationwide, leaving the party at its lowest standing in statehouse­s since 1920, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

“For a long time, Democrats across the country had a philosophy of elect a president and a majority in the Senate and it all trickles down,” said Jessica Post, who heads the party’s legislativ­e campaign committee.

Now Democrats are looking to rebuild from the ground up, she said, to groom candidates for higher office, construct a state-level bulwark against Trump’s policies and position Democrats for a greater say when legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts are redrawn after the 2020 census.

The result so far: Democrats have flipped eight state legislativ­e seats since Trump took office, including GOP-leaning districts in Oklahoma and New Hampshire. While that’s a fractional sample size — there are more than 7,000 legislativ­e seats nationwide — Republican­s acknowledg­e the stiffer competitio­n.

“They are energized, mobilized and sending resources across the country in a way they have not in the past,” said Matt Walter, head of the GOP’s legislativ­e campaign effort. “That is very, very real.”

All that national attention has had a somewhat perverse effect here in Washington, as though the contest has been hijacked from the candidates themselves. Advertisin­g by outside interests offer a caricature of the two: Dhingra as a left-wing radical, Englund as a lockstep Trump loyalist. Neither is true. Dhingra, who moved to the U.S. with her family from India when she was 13, has spent nearly 20 years working as a prosecutin­g attorney and running a nonprofit organizati­on that works to reduce violence in the growing Asian American community. A longtime activist in Redmond, she attended her first party gathering just last December.

“I spent the last 20 years of my life being completely nonpartisa­n,” she said. “A problem-solver.”

Englund, 33, has worked as an aide to a Republican congressma­n, a spokeswoma­n for bitcoin, the digital currency, and helped develop a mobile phone app used by Marines to acclimate abroad; her husband serves on active duty in Okinawa.

Raised in Tacoma, she moved to Woodinvill­e not long before launching her candidacy. She’s introduced herself to voters by ringing an estimated 17,000 doorbells, pacing off 1.5 million steps, according to her fitness app, and wearing out three pairs of shoes.

Like Dhingra, she shuns overt partisansh­ip.

“I grew up apolitical,” said Englund, who wrote in a third-party candidate for president last November rather than support Trump or Clinton. Neither candidate makes much of party labels — you have to practicall­y squint to find a “D” or “R” on their campaign literature — which makes tactical sense in an area filled with highly educated voters who pride themselves on political discernmen­t.

“They want candidates who speak for themselves,” said Maria Leininger, a professor at Bellevue College who has run Democratic campaigns in the district, “and not knee-jerk partisans.”

But that doesn’t lessen the import for the two political parties, or make Democratic activists any less motivated to send a message to Trump by snatching a seat the GOP has held for years.

“Absolutely,” said Dixie Swenson, who works the sign-in desk at Dhingra’s Redmond headquarte­rs. A win Tuesday would be “a victory for the people who lost the last time.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Mark Z. Barabak Los Angeles TImes ?? JINYOUNG ENGLUND, who is running for state Senate in Washington, estimates she has rung 17,000 doorbells in her campaign. The Republican says the race is about “one-party control and what does that mean.”
Photograph­s by Mark Z. Barabak Los Angeles TImes JINYOUNG ENGLUND, who is running for state Senate in Washington, estimates she has rung 17,000 doorbells in her campaign. The Republican says the race is about “one-party control and what does that mean.”
 ??  ?? MANKA DHINGRA, left, a Democrat in the Senate race in Washington state, says she probably would not be a candidate if Donald Trump hadn’t been elected president. “I love my job,” says the King County prosecutor.
MANKA DHINGRA, left, a Democrat in the Senate race in Washington state, says she probably would not be a candidate if Donald Trump hadn’t been elected president. “I love my job,” says the King County prosecutor.

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