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Clark County Auditor Greg Kimsey has served the public in this role since 1999. He is a certified election administrator and a former union member. Before joining the auditor’s office, Kimsey held leadership positions in business and finance including as the chief financial officer for a Vancouver-based company.
Kimsey is proud of his office’s track record of accuracy and accountability in election results. He has shared that every audit has confirmed the original results since he took office. For his consistent and responsive leadership, he was once named “Auditor of the Year.” If re-elected, he wants to keep bringing integrity and accuracy to the office to build trust in our democratic systems and deliver quality licensing and recording services for the county.
Kimsey's opponent, Brett Simpson, is a Trump Republican running on an “election integrity” platform that promotes distrust in our auditor’s office and further spreads the lie that the 2020 election results were invalid. He works in construction and land development and is a member of the Washington Election Integrity Coalition United. This conspiracy group was sanctioned by the state attorney general’s office for bringing a meritless fraud lawsuit against the state aimed at overturning the 2020 election results.
Clark County voters deserve an auditor who will honor the will of the people and follow the facts on election security, not the words of a former president who wants to illegally install himself and others from his party into office.
Greg Kimsey is the clear choice in this race. He deserves your vote to remain Clark County auditor.Last updated: 2023-04-05Greg Kimsey
Clark County Auditor Greg Kimsey has served the public in this role since 1999. He is a certified election administrator and a former union member.Clark County Auditor Greg Kimsey has served the public in this role since 1999. He is a certified election administrator and a former union member. Before joining the auditor’s office, Kimsey held leadership positions in business and finance including as the chief financial officer for a Vancouver-based company.
Kimsey is proud of his office’s track record of accuracy and accountability in election results. He has shared that every audit has confirmed the original results since he took office. For his consistent and responsive leadership, he was once named “Auditor of the Year.” If re-elected, he wants to keep bringing integrity and accuracy to the office to build trust in our democratic systems and deliver quality licensing and recording services for the county.
Kimsey's opponent, Brett Simpson, is a Trump Republican running on an “election integrity” platform that promotes distrust in our auditor’s office and further spreads the lie that the 2020 election results were invalid. He works in construction and land development and is a member of the Washington Election Integrity Coalition United. This conspiracy group was sanctioned by the state attorney general’s office for bringing a meritless fraud lawsuit against the state aimed at overturning the 2020 election results.
Clark County voters deserve an auditor who will honor the will of the people and follow the facts on election security, not the words of a former president who wants to illegally install himself and others from his party into office.
Greg Kimsey is the clear choice in this race. He deserves your vote to remain Clark County auditor.Greg Kimsey
Clark County Auditor Greg Kimsey has served the public in this role since 1999. He is a certified election administrator and a former union member.
Advisory Vote 39
This spring, Democrats in Olympia passed Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill 5974, which included a small increase in aircraft fuel taxes. This change would raise an estimated $14 million in public revenue and help our state achieve its climate goals.
This bill was sponsored by some of Washington’s most progressive lawmakers and passed with a clear majority in the session. The legislation will help our state create a sustainable future where generations can thrive with clean air and water.
Vote “Maintained” on State Advisory Vote 39.
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.