Incumbent Alicia Rule is running for re-election to House Position 1 for the 42nd Legislative District. Rule owns a therapy practice and previously served on the Blaine City Council and as president of the Blaine Downtown Development Association.
Rule brought her expertise in counseling to the Legislature in her first term by focusing on health care and youth services. Some of the bills she sponsored include increasing access to outdoor education, encouraging young people to participate in fishing and shellfishing, and ensuring that services like counseling are available to public employees. Rule also stepped up quickly to support her community by passing legislation to provide relief for farmers, ranchers, and communities affected by flooding in northwest Washington.
She is running for re-election to continue working to increase shelter options, create more living-wage jobs in Whatcom County, and keep our communities safe. In addition, Rule is passionate about preserving the environment of Whatcom County and has pursued local conservation efforts both as a volunteer and a city council member.
Rule faces Republican Tawsha Dykstra Thompson, who has served as a police officer for almost 25 years in Bellingham. She is running to bring a conservative and regressive agenda to Olympia that emphasizes the role of law enforcement in the district. Thompson wants to criminalize homelessness, characterizing law enforcement as the "brakes" on mental health or addiction issues despite the fact that arrests don't address the root causes of these issues and often make them worse. She opposes making billionaires pay their share of the resources we all use.
Republican politicians keep stoking fears and promising that the answer is always to put more and more people in jail. We need leadership that aims to address the many places where our country lags behind - in education, health, food security, housing, and more.
Rep. Alicia Rule has embodied the ethos of fully supporting the community and has earned your vote in the 42nd District.
Incumbent Alicia Rule is running for re-election to House Position 1 for the 42nd Legislative District. Rule owns a therapy practice and previously served on the Blaine City Council and as president of the Blaine Downtown Development Association.
Rule brought her expertise in counseling to the Legislature in her first term by focusing on health care and youth services. Some of the bills she sponsored include increasing access to outdoor education, encouraging young people to participate in fishing and shellfishing, and ensuring that services like counseling are available to public employees. Rule also stepped up quickly to support her community by passing legislation to provide relief for farmers, ranchers, and communities affected by flooding in northwest Washington.
She is running for re-election to continue working to increase shelter options, create more living-wage jobs in Whatcom County, and keep our communities safe. In addition, Rule is passionate about preserving the environment of Whatcom County and has pursued local conservation efforts both as a volunteer and a city council member.
Rule faces Republican Tawsha Dykstra Thompson, who has served as a police officer for almost 25 years in Bellingham. She is running to bring a conservative and regressive agenda to Olympia that emphasizes the role of law enforcement in the district. Thompson wants to criminalize homelessness, characterizing law enforcement as the "brakes" on mental health or addiction issues despite the fact that arrests don't address the root causes of these issues and often make them worse. She opposes making billionaires pay their share of the resources we all use.
Republican politicians keep stoking fears and promising that the answer is always to put more and more people in jail. We need leadership that aims to address the many places where our country lags behind - in education, health, food security, housing, and more.
Rep. Alicia Rule has embodied the ethos of fully supporting the community and has earned your vote in the 42nd District.
Because of a Tim Eyman initiative, the Legislature is required to submit any bill it passes that closes tax loopholes or raises revenue to a non-binding advisory vote. The Legislature had a historically productive 2022 session, resulting in several advisory votes appearing on the ballot. We hope the Legislature will change the law to remove these meaningless measures in the future.