Democrat Thomas Clark is running for the 31st Legislative District, House Position 2. Clark served in the Navy for six years and worked at Boeing for three decades supporting engineering development and system testing.
While Clark is running as a Democrat, he believes there is room for independence within a party. He does not have a detailed campaign platform but does support expanding access to technology for students and campaign finance reforms to reduce the influence of big corporations in politics. Clark told The Seattle Times that he wants to focus on police accountability and reforming Washington's upside-down tax code. He recently earned the support of a number of progressive organizations.
Clark is running against Republican Eric Robertson. Robertson has served in law enforcement for most of his career, aside from his time as a state representative from 1994 to 1998. As a representative, Robertson was accused of racial bias when he called in state troopers to search a Black teen who had come to testify against a bill in the Legislature. Now, Robertson is campaigning to "defend not defund" law enforcement and has used the #BlueLivesMatter hashtag on his personal Facebook without offering policy recommendations about how to strengthen police accountability.
Clark is the clear choice in this race.
Democrat Thomas Clark is running for the 31st Legislative District, House Position 2. Clark served in the Navy for six years and worked at Boeing for three decades supporting engineering development and system testing.
While Clark is running as a Democrat, he believes there is room for independence within a party. He does not have a detailed campaign platform but does support expanding access to technology for students and campaign finance reforms to reduce the influence of big corporations in politics. Clark told The Seattle Times that he wants to focus on police accountability and reforming Washington's upside-down tax code. He recently earned the support of a number of progressive organizations.
Clark is running against Republican Eric Robertson. Robertson has served in law enforcement for most of his career, aside from his time as a state representative from 1994 to 1998. As a representative, Robertson was accused of racial bias when he called in state troopers to search a Black teen who had come to testify against a bill in the Legislature. Now, Robertson is campaigning to "defend not defund" law enforcement and has used the #BlueLivesMatter hashtag on his personal Facebook without offering policy recommendations about how to strengthen police accountability.
Clark is the clear choice in this race.