Political party strength in Washington (state)
Washington ratified its constitution and held its first state elections in 1889, the year it was admitted to the union as a state. It established the positions of governor, lieutenant governor, Secretary of State, attorney general, state treasurer, state auditor, Commissioner of Public Lands, and Superintendent of Public Instruction. The position of insurance commissioner was legislatively established in 1907. All positions are elected to four-year terms, concurrent with presidential elections. Washington is one of three states that elects nine separate statewide officials, while six others elect ten.
The table also indicates the historical party composition in the State Senate, State House of Representatives, State delegation to the U.S. Senate, and State delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives. State senators are elected to four-year terms, with half elected every two years. State representatives are elected to two-year terms, and two from each of 49 legislative districts in separate elections.
While the U.S. state of Washington is considered a solidly Democratic state, it mainly elected Republican candidates during its first forty years of statehood. It currently holds the longest streak of Democratic governors in the nation, having last elected a Republican to the top executive office in 1980.[1][2][lower-alpha 1] Despite that, Republicans have held the Secretary of State since 1965. The office of auditor however has been held continuously by Democrats since 1933, when the national wave for President Franklin Roosevelt swept the party into every statewide race and congressional district except the uncontested superintendent of public education. That position was made nonpartisan in 1940. At the presidential level, Washington is part of the "blue wall", having voted for all Democratic nominees since 1988.
Prior to statehood, the President of the United States appointed a territorial governor and secretary of state, who served as acting governor when the governor was absent from the state. The position of attorney general was established in 1887, and only one person held office before statehood. A non-voting delegate was elected to the House of Representatives.
The nine members of the Washington Supreme Court are also elected statewide to six-year terms but on a nonpartisan basis and are not listed here. However all members of the court are considered liberal-leaning, matching the state's overall electorate.[3][4]
Voters do not register as members of political parties.
The tables below show the history of officeholders elected to statewide executive offices, the state legislature, and the U.S. Congress, as well as the winners of the state's electoral college votes.
For years in which a presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.
Key to parties: Democratic (D), Nonpartisan (NP), Populist (P), Republican (R), a tie or coalition within a group of elected officials.
Washington Territory
The first territorial superintendent of public education was elected by the legislature in 1861 to a three-year term, but the position was disestablished after just one year. It was reestablished in 1871, elected by the legislature to a two-year term.[5] The superintendent was chair of the governor-appointed board of education, which met in the hometown of the superintendent in several cities around the state until statehood when the office remained in Olympia.
Year | Executive offices | Territorial Legislature | United States Congress | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governor[6][7] | Sec. of State[7] | Attorney General | Treasurer | Auditor[8] | Supt. of Pub. Inst.[5] | Territorial Senate | Territorial House | U.S. House | |
1853 | Isaac Stevens (D) | Charles H. Mason | no such office | no such office | no such office | no such office | Columbia Lancaster (D) | ||
1854 | William Cock | Daniel R. Bigelow[9] | |||||||
1855 | James Patton Anderson (D) | ||||||||
1856 | J. M. Walker | ||||||||
1857 | LaFayette McMullen (D) | Henry R. Crosbie[10] | Isaac Ingalls Stevens (D) | ||||||
1858 | David L. Phillips | Urban E. Hicks | |||||||
1859 | Richard D. Gholson (D) | W. C. Rudledge | |||||||
1860 | Henry M. McGill | A. J. Moses | |||||||
1861 | William H. Wallace (R) | Leander Jay Sharpe Turney (D)[11][12] | Uzal G. Warbass | J. C. Head | B. C. Lippincott | William H. Wallace (R) | |||
1862 | William Pickering (R) | no such office | |||||||
1863 | Elwood Evans (D)[12] | David L. Phillips | R. M. Walker | George Edward Cole (D) | |||||
1864 | William Cock | ||||||||
1865 | Daniel R. Bigelow[9] | Urban E. Hicks | Arthur Armstrong Denny (R) | ||||||
1866 | George E. Cole (D) | Benjamin F. Harned | |||||||
1867 | Marshall F. Moore (R) | Ezra Leonard "Hood River" Smith | James Tilton | Alvan Flanders (R) | |||||
1868 | Benjamin F. Harned | John M. Murphy | |||||||
1869 | Alvan Flanders (R) | Selucius Garfielde (R) | |||||||
1870 | Edward S. Salomon (R) | ||||||||
1871 | James F. Scott | Hill Harmon | J. G. Sparks | Nelson Rounds | |||||
1872 | Elisha Peyre Ferry (R) | Josiah H. Munson | N. S. Potter | ||||||
1873 | Joseph C. Clements | John M. Murphy | Obadiah Benton McFadden (D) | ||||||
1874 | Henry G. Struve | Elisha Treat Gunn | |||||||
1875 | Francis Tarbell | John R. Wheat | Orange Jacobs (R) | ||||||
1876 | |||||||||
1877 | Thomas M. Reed | J. P. Judson | |||||||
1878 | Nicholas Owings (R) | ||||||||
1879 | Jonathan S. Houghton | Thomas Hurley Brents (R) | |||||||
1880 | William Augustus Newell (R) | ||||||||
1881 | Thomas N. Ford | C. W. Wheeler | |||||||
1882 | |||||||||
1883 | R. C. Kerr | ||||||||
1884 | Watson C. Squire (R) | ||||||||
1885 | J. C. Lawrence | Charles Stewart Voorhees (D) | |||||||
1886 | William McMicken | ||||||||
1887 | Eugene Semple (D) | James B. Metcalf | J. H. Morgan | ||||||
1888 | John M. Murphy | ||||||||
1889 | Miles Conway Moore (R) | Oliver Cromwell White | Frank Irvin Blodgett | John B. Allen (R) |
State of Washington
At statehood, the constitution established eight positions that would be elected statewide. The officials take office in the January following their election. The insurance commissioner was first elected in 1908.
Year | Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress | Electoral College votes[13] | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governor[6][14] | Lt. Governor[15] | Sec. of State[16][17] | Attorney General[18] | Treasurer[19][20] | Auditor[21][8] | Comm. of Pub. Lands[22][23] | Insurance Comm.[24] | Supt. of Pub. Inst.[25][5] | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I)[26] | U.S. Senator (Class III)[27] | U.S. House | ||
1889[28] | Elisha Peyre Ferry (R) | Charles E. Laughton (R) | Allan Weir (R) | William Carey Jones (R) | A. A. Lindsley (R) | Thomas M. Reed (R) | W. T. Forrest (R) | no such office | R. B. Bryan (R) | 34R, 1D | 61R, 8D, 1I | John B. Allen (R) | Watson C. Squire (R) | 1R | |
1890 | |||||||||||||||
1891 | 30R, 4D | 60R, 18D | |||||||||||||
1892 | Benjamin Harrison and Whitelaw Reid (R) | ||||||||||||||
1893 | John McGraw (R) | F.H. Luce (R) | James Price (R) | Orzo A. Bowen (R) | Leban R. Grimes (R) | C. W. Bean | 25R, 9D | 50R, 20D, 8P | vacant | 2R | |||||
1894 | |||||||||||||||
1895 | J.E. Frost (R) | 26R, 5D, 3P | 54R, 20P, 4D | John L. Wilson (R) | |||||||||||
1896 | William Jennings Bryan and Arthur Sewall/Thomas E. Watson (D/P) | ||||||||||||||
1897 | John Rankin Rogers (P) | Thurston Daniels (P) | Will Jenkins (P) | Patrick Henry Winston (P) | Cyrus Wilber Young (P) | Neal Cheetham (P) | Robert Bridges (P) | Frank J. Brown | 15P, 13R, 4D, 2SR[29] | 45P, 12R, 11SR, 10D | George Turner (D) | 1D, 1SR | |||
1898 | |||||||||||||||
1899 | 15R, 12P, 7D[30] | 68R, 9P, 1 Cit. | Addison G. Foster (R) | 2R | |||||||||||
1900 | William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt (R) | ||||||||||||||
1901 | John Rankin Rogers (D)[lower-alpha 2] | Henry McBride (R) | Samuel Nichols (R)[lower-alpha 3] | Wickliffe Stratton (R) | C.W. Maynard (R) | John D. Atkinson (R) | S.A. Callvert (R) | R.B. Ryan (R) | 26R, 8D | 59R, 21D | |||||
Henry McBride (R)[lower-alpha 4] | vacant | ||||||||||||||
1902 | |||||||||||||||
1903 | 33R, 9D | 80R, 14D | Levi Ankeny (R) | 3R | |||||||||||
1904 | Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W. Fairbanks (R) | ||||||||||||||
1905 | Albert E. Mead (R) | Charles E. Coon (R) | John Atkinson (R) | George G. Mills (R) | Charles W. Clausen (R) | E.W. Ross (R) | 38R, 4D | 90R, 4D | Samuel H. Piles (R) | ||||||
1906 | |||||||||||||||
1907 | 85R, 9D | ||||||||||||||
1908 | William Howard Taft and James S. Sherman (R) | ||||||||||||||
1909 | Samuel G. Cosgrove (R)[lower-alpha 2] | Marion E. Hay (R) | Walter Bell (R) | John G. Lewis (R) | John H. Schively (R) | Henry B. Dewey (R) | 39R, 3D | 88R, 6D | Wesley Livsey Jones (R) | ||||||
Marion E. Hay (R)[lower-alpha 4] | vacant | Ithamar Howell (R)[lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 5] | |||||||||||||
1910 | |||||||||||||||
1911 | William V. Tanner (R) | 38R, 4D | 84R, 13D | Miles Poindexter (R) | |||||||||||
1912 | Theodore Roosevelt and Hiram Johnson (Prog) | ||||||||||||||
1913 | Ernest Lister (D)[lower-alpha 2] | Louis Folwell Hart (R) | Edward Meath (R) | Clark V. Savidge (R) | H. O. Fishback (R) | Josephine Corliss Preston (R) | 27R, 9D, 6 Prog. | 49R, 29 Prog., 19D | 3R, 2 Prog. | ||||||
1914 | |||||||||||||||
1915 | 29R, 7 Prog., 6D | 79R, 13D, 5 Prog. | 4R, 1D | ||||||||||||
1916 | Woodrow Wilson and Thomas R. Marshall (D) | ||||||||||||||
1917 | W. W. Sherman (R) | 37R, 5D | 83R, 14D | ||||||||||||
1918 | |||||||||||||||
1919 | Louis Folwell Hart (R)[lower-alpha 6] | vacant | L. L. Thompson (R) | 39R, 3D | 87R, 10D | 5R | |||||||||
1920 | Jay Hinkle (R)[lower-alpha 5] | Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge (R) | |||||||||||||
1921 | William J. Coyle (R) | Clifford L. Babcock (R) | 40R, 1D, 1FL | 94R, 2FL, 1D | |||||||||||
1922 | |||||||||||||||
1923 | John H. Dunbar (R) | 39R, 2FL, 1D | 84R, 9D, 4FL | Clarence C. Dill (D) | |||||||||||
4R, 1D | |||||||||||||||
1924 | Calvin Coolidge and Charles G. Dawes (R) | ||||||||||||||
1925 | Roland H. Hartley (R) | W. Lon Johnson (R) | W.G. Potts (R) | 40R, 2D | 92R, 5D | ||||||||||
1926 | |||||||||||||||
1927 | 89R, 8D | ||||||||||||||
1928 | Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis (R) | ||||||||||||||
1929 | John Arthur Gellatly (R) | Charles W. Hinton (R) | Noah D. Showalter (R) | 41R, 1D | 91R, 6D | ||||||||||
1930 | |||||||||||||||
1931 | 90R, 7D | ||||||||||||||
1932 | Elijah S. Grammer (R) | Franklin D. Roosevelt and John Nance Garner (D) | |||||||||||||
1933 | Clarence D. Martin (D) | Victor Aloysius Meyers (D) | Ernest Hutchinson (D)[lower-alpha 2] | Garrison Hamilton (D) | Otto A. Case (D) | Cliff Yelle (D) | Albert C. Martin (D) | William A. Sullivan (D) | 25D, 21R | 70D, 29R | Homer Bone (D) | 6D | |||
1934 | |||||||||||||||
1935 | 41D, 5R | 93D, 6R | Lewis B. Schwellenbach (D) | ||||||||||||
1936 | |||||||||||||||
1937 | Phil H. Gallagher (D) | Stanley F. Atwood (D) | 37D, 9R | 91D, 8R | |||||||||||
1938 | Belle Reeves (D)[lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 5] | ||||||||||||||
1939 | 40D, 6R | 73D, 26R | |||||||||||||
1940 | Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry A. Wallace (D) | ||||||||||||||
1941 | Arthur B. Langlie (R) | Smith Troy (D) | Otto A. Case (D) | Jack Taylor (D) | Pearl Anderson Wanamaker (NP) | 37D, 9R | 68D, 31R | Monrad Wallgren (D) | |||||||
1942 | |||||||||||||||
1943 | 27D, 19R | 59D, 40R | 3D, 3R | ||||||||||||
1944 | Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman (D) | ||||||||||||||
1945 | Monrad Wallgren (D) | Russell H. Fluent (D) | Otto A. Case (D) | 32D, 14R | 63D, 36R | Hugh Mitchell (D) | Warren Magnuson (D) | 4D, 2R | |||||||
1946 | |||||||||||||||
1947 | 23R, 23D[31] | 72R, 27D | Harry P. Cain (R) | 5R, 1D | |||||||||||
1948 | Earl Coe (D)[lower-alpha 5] | Harry S. Truman and Alben W. Barkley (D) | |||||||||||||
1949 | Arthur B. Langlie (R) | Tom Martin (D) | Jack Taylor (D) | 27R, 19D | 67D, 32R | 4R, 2D | |||||||||
1950 | |||||||||||||||
1951 | 25D, 21R | 54D, 45R | |||||||||||||
1952 | Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (R) | ||||||||||||||
1953 | Emmett T. Anderson (R) | Don Eastvold (R) | Charles R. Maybury (R) | Otto A. Case (D) | 25R, 21D | 58R, 41D | Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson (D) | 6R, 1D | |||||||
1954 | |||||||||||||||
1955 | 24R, 22D | 50D, 49R | |||||||||||||
1956 | |||||||||||||||
1957 | Albert Rosellini (D) | John Cherberg (D) | Victor Aloysius Meyers (D) | John J. O'Connell (D) | Tom Martin (D) | Bert L. Cole (D) | Lloyd Andrews (NP) | 31D, 15R | 56D, 43R | ||||||
1958 | |||||||||||||||
1959 | 35D, 14R | 66D, 33R | |||||||||||||
1960 | Richard Nixon and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R) | ||||||||||||||
1961 | Lee I. Kueckelhan (D) | Louis "Louie" Bruno (NP) | 36D, 13R | 60D, 39R | 5R, 2D | ||||||||||
1962 | |||||||||||||||
1963 | 32D, 17R | 51D, 48R | 6R, 1D | ||||||||||||
1964 | Lyndon B. Johnson and Hubert Humphrey (D) | ||||||||||||||
1965 | Daniel J. Evans (R) | Lud Kramer (R)[lower-alpha 3] | Robert S. O'Brien (D) | Robert V. Graham (D) | 60D, 39R | 5D, 2R | |||||||||
1966 | |||||||||||||||
1967 | 29D, 20R | 55R, 44D | |||||||||||||
1968 | Hubert Humphrey and Edmund Muskie (D) | ||||||||||||||
1969 | Slade Gorton (R) | Karl Hermann (D) | 27D, 22R | 56R, 43D | |||||||||||
1970 | |||||||||||||||
1971 | 29D, 20R | 51R, 48D | 6D, 1R | ||||||||||||
1972 | Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew (R) | ||||||||||||||
1973 | Frank Brouillet (NP) | 30D, 19R | 57D, 41R | ||||||||||||
1974 | |||||||||||||||
1975 | Bruce Chapman (R)[lower-alpha 5] | 62D, 36R | |||||||||||||
1976 | Gerald Ford and Bob Dole (R) | ||||||||||||||
1977 | Dixy Lee Ray (D) | Richard G. Marquardt (R) | 5D, 2R | ||||||||||||
1978 | |||||||||||||||
1979 | 49D, 49R[lower-alpha 7] | 6D, 1R | |||||||||||||
1980 | Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush (R) | ||||||||||||||
1981 | John Spellman (R) | Ralph Munro (R) | Ken Eikenberry (R) | Brian Boyle (R) | 25R, 24D[lower-alpha 8] | 56R, 42D | Slade Gorton (R) | 5D, 2R | |||||||
1982 | 55R, 43D[lower-alpha 9] | ||||||||||||||
1983 | 26D, 23R | 54D, 44R | Daniel J. Evans (R) | 5D, 3R | |||||||||||
1984 | 53D, 45R | ||||||||||||||
1985 | Booth Gardner (D) | 27D, 22R | |||||||||||||
1986 | |||||||||||||||
1987 | 25D, 24R | 61D, 37R | Brock Adams (D) | ||||||||||||
1988 | 25R, 24D[lower-alpha 10] | Michael Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen (D) | |||||||||||||
1989 | Joel Pritchard (R) | Dan Grimm (D) | Judith Billings (NP) | 63D, 35R | Slade Gorton (R) | ||||||||||
1990 | |||||||||||||||
1991 | 58D, 40R | ||||||||||||||
1992 | Bill Clinton and Al Gore (D) | ||||||||||||||
1993 | Mike Lowry (D) | Christine Gregoire (D) | Brian Sonntag (D) | Jennifer Belcher (D) | Deborah Senn (D) | 28D, 21R | 65D, 33R | Patty Murray (D) | 8D, 1R | ||||||
1994 | |||||||||||||||
1995 | 25D, 24R | 61R, 37D[lower-alpha 11] | 7R, 2D | ||||||||||||
1996 | 62R, 36D[lower-alpha 12] | ||||||||||||||
1997 | Gary Locke (D) | Brad Owen (D) | Mike Murphy (D) | Terry Bergeson (NP) | 26R, 23D | 56R, 42D | 6R, 3D | ||||||||
1998 | 57R, 41D[lower-alpha 13] | ||||||||||||||
1999 | 27D, 23R | 49D, 49R[lower-alpha 14] | 5D, 4R | ||||||||||||
2000 | Al Gore and Joe Lieberman (D) | ||||||||||||||
2001 | Sam Reed (R) | Doug Sutherland (R) | Mike Kreidler (D) | 25D, 24R | Maria Cantwell (D) | 6D, 3R | |||||||||
2002 | 50D, 48R[lower-alpha 15] | ||||||||||||||
2003 | 25R, 24D | 52D, 46R | |||||||||||||
2004 | John Kerry and John Edwards (D) | ||||||||||||||
2005 | Christine Gregoire (D) | Rob McKenna (R) | 26D, 23R | 55D, 43R | |||||||||||
2006 | |||||||||||||||
2007 | 32D, 17R | 62D, 36R | |||||||||||||
2008 | 63D, 35R[lower-alpha 16] | Barack Obama and Joe Biden (D) | |||||||||||||
2009 | Jim McIntire (D) | Peter J. Goldmark (D) | Randy Dorn (NP) | 31D, 18R | 62D, 36R | ||||||||||
2010 | 61D, 37R[lower-alpha 17] | ||||||||||||||
2011 | 27D, 22R | 56D, 42R | 5D, 4R | ||||||||||||
2012 | |||||||||||||||
2013 | Jay Inslee (D) | Kim Wyman (R) | Bob Ferguson (D) | Troy Kelley (D) | 25R Coalition, 24D[lower-alpha 18] | 55D, 43R | 6D, 4R | ||||||||
2014 | 26R Coalition, 23D[lower-alpha 19] | ||||||||||||||
2015 | 25R, 24D[lower-alpha 20] | 51D, 47R | |||||||||||||
2016 | 50D, 48R[lower-alpha 21] | Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine (D) | |||||||||||||
2017 | Cyrus Habib (D) | Duane Davidson (R) | Pat McCarthy (D) | Hilary Franz (D) | Chris Reykdal (NP) | ||||||||||
2018 | 25D, 24R[lower-alpha 22] | ||||||||||||||
2019 | 28D, 21R[lower-alpha 23] | 57D, 41R | 7D, 3R | ||||||||||||
2020 | Joe Biden and Kamala Harris (D) | ||||||||||||||
2021 | Denny Heck (D) | Mike Pellicciotti (D) | |||||||||||||
Year | Governor | Lt. Governor | Sec. of State | Attorney General | Treasurer | Auditor | Comm. of Pub. Lands | Comm. of Ins. | Supt. of Pub. Inst. | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I) | U.S. Senator (Class III) | U.S. House | Electoral College votes |
Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress |
Notes
- This statistic includes only states; the District of Columbia has been controlled by elected Democrats since 1975.
- Died in office.
- Resigned.
- As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term.
- Initially appointed by Governor to fill vacancy; later elected in his own right.
- As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term, and was later elected in his own right.
- A power-sharing agreement was negotiated, and co-Speakers from both parties were elected. All committees were co-chaired and evenly divided between the parties.
- A senator switched parties from Democrat to Republican, giving the Republicans the majority.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Republicans to the Democrats.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Democrats to the Republicans, flipping the chamber.
- Was 60-38 GOP, but a representative switched parties from Democrat to Republican.
- Another representative switched parties from Democrat to Republican.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Democrats to the Republicans.
- A power-sharing agreement was negotiated, and co-Speakers from both parties were elected. All committees were co-chaired and evenly divided between the parties.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Republicans to the Democrats, breaking the tie and flipping the chamber.
- A representative, Fred Jarrett, switched parties from Republican to Democrat.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Democrats to the Republicans.
- A coalition of 2 Democrats and 23 Republicans controlled the Senate Majority.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Democrats to the Republicans.
- One conservative Democrat caucuses as part of the Republicans.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Republicans to the Democrats.
- A special election flipped a seat from the Republicans to the Democrats. One conservative Democrat caucuses as part of the Republican minority.
- One conservative Democrat caucuses as part of the Republican minority.
References
- "What 2014 elections say about 2016 governor's race". SeattlePI. September 29, 2014. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
- Brunner, Jim (August 11, 2012). "McKenna win would end drought for GOP in races for governor". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
- "State Supreme Court: activist justices, or just different?". The Seattle Times. 2015-09-12. Retrieved 2018-11-29.
- "Political outlook of state supreme court justices - Ballotpedia". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2018-11-29.
- Biennial Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction. Washington Superintendent of Public Instruction. 1917.
- "Washington Territorial and State Governors - Washington State Library - WA Secretary of State". Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- Ficken, Robert (2005). "Figureheads of State" (PDF). Washington State Historical Society.
- Taylor, Briahna. The Citizen's Advocate: History of the Washington State Auditor's Office Washington State Auditor's Office. Olympia: Washington State Department of Printing, 2007.
- "Daniel Richardson Bigelow". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved 2020-02-06.
- "Henry R. Crosbie". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Message from Acting Governor L. Jay S. Turney to the Ninth Annual Session of the Legislative Assembly, Washington Territory, December 19, 1861 ยท Civil War Pathways". pathways.omeka.net. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- "Library Jewel #3: Letters, photos of 1860s secretary of WA Territory". From Our Corner. 2015-04-28. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- "Elections Search Results: President/Vice President". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: Governor". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: Lieutenant Governor". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Washington's Secretaries of State - Past and Present - Office - WA Secretary of State". Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- "Elections Search Results: Secretary of State". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: Attorney General". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Our History; Washington State Treasurers Past and Present". Washington State Treasurer. Retrieved 2020-02-06.
- "Elections Search Results: State Treasurer". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: State Auditor". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: Commissioner of Public Lands". Washington Secretary of State.
- Washington State Yearbook: The Evergreen State Government Directory. Olympia, WA: Washington Roll Call. 2017.
- "Elections Search Results: Insurance Commissioner". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: Superintendent of Public Instruction". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: U.S. Senator". Washington Secretary of State.
- "Elections Search Results: U.S. Senator". Washington Secretary of State.
- Barton, C.M. Legislative Manual of Washington, 1891-1892 (PDF). p. 262.
- A coalition between Democrats, Populists, and Silver Republicans elected a Populist, W.H. Plummer, as President Pro Tempore, and organized the chamber. p. 52
- A coalition between Democrats and Populists elected a Populist-turned-Democrat, Augustus High, as President Pro Tempore, and organized the chamber. p. 38 p. 54
- A coalition of Republicans and nine conservative Democrats elected a Republican President Pro Tempore, Victor Zednick. p. 142 p. 140