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Gloria Ochoa-Bruck

Judge Gloria Ochoa‑Bruck is running for re-election for Spokane Municipal Court, Position 3. Before being elected in 2021, she served the Kalispel Tribe as associate judge for Kalispel Tribal Court and as chief judge for Spokane Tribal Court. Since being elected as judge for the first time in 2021, she has taken an approach of balancing restorative justice and rehabilitation with compassionate accountability and community safety. 

Ochoa‑Bruck is also a member of the Washington State Disability Justice Task Force, representing municipal and district judges, and has contributed to efforts to ensure courts are accessible and equitable for individuals with disabilities.

Gloria Ochoa-Bruck makes a great choice for voters seeking a candidate with extensive elected experience.

Last updated: 2025-10-17

Judge Gloria Ochoa‑Bruck is running for re-election for Spokane Municipal Court, Position 3. Before being elected in 2021, she served the Kalispel Tribe as associate judge for Kalispel Tribal Court and as chief judge for Spokane Tribal Court. Since being elected as judge for the first time in 2021, she has taken an approach of balancing restorative justice and rehabilitation with compassionate accountability and community safety. 

Ochoa‑Bruck is also a member of the Washington State Disability Justice Task Force, representing municipal and district judges, and has contributed to efforts to ensure courts are accessible and equitable for individuals with disabilities.

Gloria Ochoa-Bruck makes a great choice for voters seeking a candidate with extensive elected experience.

Last updated: 2025-10-17

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Election Day November 4, 2025
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Statewide Ballot Measures

VOTE APPROVED

Approve 8201 to grow WA Cares Funding!

SJR 8201 will grow Washington’s long-term care fund for aging people and people with disabilities, keeping premiums low, without costing taxpayers a single penny. Also known as the “Allow Investment of Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Fund Amendment," SJR 8201 is a constitutional amendment adding accountability protections to our long-term care fund, requiring that 100% of investment income be used for long-term care.

If passed, SJR 8201 would increase the state’s long-term care fund for vulnerable Washingtonians by at least $67 billion over the next 50 years by allowing the nonpartisan Washington State Investment Board to diversify investments. In the state legislature, 128 legislators voted in favor of the measure, and only 16 were opposed. Additionally, it has the support of groups such as the Washington State Nurses Association, the Washington State Council of Fire Fighters, Planned Parenthood, and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Vote APPROVED on SJR 8201 to protect and grow our state’s independent long-term care fund for aging adults and people with disabilities.

Last updated: 2025-10-09

SJR 8201 will grow Washington’s long-term care fund for aging people and people with disabilities, keeping premiums low, without costing taxpayers a single penny. Also known as the “Allow Investment of Long-Term Services and Supports Trust Fund Amendment," SJR 8201 is a constitutional amendment adding accountability protections to our long-term care fund, requiring that 100% of investment income be used for long-term care.

If passed, SJR 8201 would increase the state’s long-term care fund for vulnerable Washingtonians by at least $67 billion over the next 50 years by allowing the nonpartisan Washington State Investment Board to diversify investments. In the state legislature, 128 legislators voted in favor of the measure, and only 16 were opposed. Additionally, it has the support of groups such as the Washington State Nurses Association, the Washington State Council of Fire Fighters, Planned Parenthood, and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Vote APPROVED on SJR 8201 to protect and grow our state’s independent long-term care fund for aging adults and people with disabilities.

Last updated: 2025-10-09

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