Other Candidates
Spokane treasurer Michael Baumgartner is the leading Republican candidate in this race to replace Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers. Baumgartner served two terms as a state senator for the 6th Legislative District and previously worked at the U.S. embassy in Baghdad for the State Department.
Baumgartner is a very far-right candidate. In his first campaign in 2009, he proposed to ban all abortions and supported the Republican platform to withdraw from the United Nations, privatize Social Security, and eliminate the federal Department of Education. Though his website doesn't list extensively what his policy priorities are this year as of late June, Baumgartner supports right-wing border policies as well as uncompassionate and ineffective responses to our neighbors suffering from mental illness, substance abuse, and/or housing insecurity.
Another candidate in this race is a former police officer and current Legislative District 7 representative Jacquelin Maycumber. Maycumber was originally appointed to the House in 2017 and she has been a very right-wing voice in office. Last year, she opposed bills to expand access to reproductive health care, ensure that Washington students have the basics, and require the state’s private prisons to respect human rights and dignity.
Rene' Holaday, a self-described “MAGA Christian patriot,” is one of the most extreme candidates in this crowded race. Holaday is a radio personality and author. She led the 51st state movement, which advocated for the division of Washington across the Cascades. Now, she is running to fight the “Communists” in Congress as the kind of “killer” Donald Trump would be proud of.
Rick Valentine Flynn, a farmer and writer, is another conservative in this race. Flynn is a disabled veteran who served in the Air Force and currently works as a member of the Spokane County Water Conservancy Board. His platform in this race is more moderate. Flynn criticized the overruling of Roe v. Wade as a historically bad political move by the GOP and has stated that the right to abortion should remain a personal one without interference. He wants to protect gun ownership but has shared some support for reform aimed at curtailing the epidemic of mass shootings in communities across the country.
Former state senator Brian Dansel is also in this race. He previously served as both a Ferry County commissioner and a state senator for Legislative District 7. In 2017, he was appointed by Trump to serve as the state executive director of the Farm Service Agency within the United States Department of Agriculture. Now, Dansel is running on a Washington Republican Party-endorsed platform to bring conservative values to Congress but has yet to release a detailed campaign platform as of mid-June.
Nurse Bobbi Bennett-Wolcott is another Democrat in this race. Bennett-Wolcott has spent more than 40 years in nursing, specializing in maternity care, midwifery, and women’s health, and currently serves as a clinical assistant professor at Washington State University. She has no prior political experience but identifies strongly with her Eastern Washington community. Unfortunately, she offers no policy ideas or specific campaign focuses in this race and instead espouses the broad values of strong communication and community collaboration for the office. She lacks a campaign website as of late June.
Spokane treasurer Michael Baumgartner is the leading Republican candidate in this race to replace Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers. Baumgartner served two terms as a state senator for the 6th Legislative District and previously worked at the U.S. embassy in Baghdad for the State Department.
Baumgartner is a very far-right candidate. In his first campaign in 2009, he proposed to ban all abortions and supported the Republican platform to withdraw from the United Nations, privatize Social Security, and eliminate the federal Department of Education. Though his website doesn't list extensively what his policy priorities are this year as of late June, Baumgartner supports right-wing border policies as well as uncompassionate and ineffective responses to our neighbors suffering from mental illness, substance abuse, and/or housing insecurity.
Another candidate in this race is a former police officer and current Legislative District 7 representative Jacquelin Maycumber. Maycumber was originally appointed to the House in 2017 and she has been a very right-wing voice in office. Last year, she opposed bills to expand access to reproductive health care, ensure that Washington students have the basics, and require the state’s private prisons to respect human rights and dignity.
Rene' Holaday, a self-described “MAGA Christian patriot,” is one of the most extreme candidates in this crowded race. Holaday is a radio personality and author. She led the 51st state movement, which advocated for the division of Washington across the Cascades. Now, she is running to fight the “Communists” in Congress as the kind of “killer” Donald Trump would be proud of.
Rick Valentine Flynn, a farmer and writer, is another conservative in this race. Flynn is a disabled veteran who served in the Air Force and currently works as a member of the Spokane County Water Conservancy Board. His platform in this race is more moderate. Flynn criticized the overruling of Roe v. Wade as a historically bad political move by the GOP and has stated that the right to abortion should remain a personal one without interference. He wants to protect gun ownership but has shared some support for reform aimed at curtailing the epidemic of mass shootings in communities across the country.
Former state senator Brian Dansel is also in this race. He previously served as both a Ferry County commissioner and a state senator for Legislative District 7. In 2017, he was appointed by Trump to serve as the state executive director of the Farm Service Agency within the United States Department of Agriculture. Now, Dansel is running on a Washington Republican Party-endorsed platform to bring conservative values to Congress but has yet to release a detailed campaign platform as of mid-June.
Nurse Bobbi Bennett-Wolcott is another Democrat in this race. Bennett-Wolcott has spent more than 40 years in nursing, specializing in maternity care, midwifery, and women’s health, and currently serves as a clinical assistant professor at Washington State University. She has no prior political experience but identifies strongly with her Eastern Washington community. Unfortunately, she offers no policy ideas or specific campaign focuses in this race and instead espouses the broad values of strong communication and community collaboration for the office. She lacks a campaign website as of late June.