2026 Washington House of Representatives election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2026 Washington House of Representatives elections

 2024
November 3, 2026
2028 

All 98 seats in the Washington House of Representatives
50 seats needed for a majority
 
Leader Laurie Jinkins Drew Stokesbary
Party Democratic Republican
Leader's seat 27thTacoma 31stAuburn
Current seats 59 39
Seats needed Steady Increase 11

Incumbent Speaker of the House

Laurie Jinkins
Democratic



The 2026 Washington House of Representatives election will be held on November 3, 2026, alongside the other 2026 United States elections.[1] Voters will elect two members of the Washington House of Representatives in all 49 of the U.S. state of Washington's legislative districts to serve a two-year term.[2]

Elections will be held concurrently with the 2026 US midterm election, as well as elections to the US House of Representatives, Washington State Senate, Washington Supreme Court, and various county and local offices.[3] Primary elections will be held on August 4, 2026 using a top-two primary where all candidates are listed on the same ballot and the two candidates with the most votes advance to the general election.[4][5]

Going into the 2026 election, only the 26th District has members of the House who are from different parties. An additional two districts have a State Senator whose political party is different than both members of the House from that district. The 10th District has two Democratic members of the State House with a Republican State Senator while the 18th District has two Republican members of the State House with a Democratic State Senator.

Republicans hold both house seats in 6 legislative districts which Kamala Harris won in 2024: District 12 (Harris +1), District 14 (Harris +0.5), District 17 (Harris +4), District 18 (Harris +1), District 25 (Harris +0.5), and District 35 (Harris +0.5). Republicans hold one of two house seats in one District which Kamala Harris won in 2024: District 26 (Harris +5).

On December 10th, 2025, the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee (DLCC) announced that attaining a supermajority in the Washington House of Representatives was one of their targets for 2026.[6] A supermajority of 66 seats would require Democrats to net gain 7 seats in 2026. Republicans currently control 13 seats in the State House that Kamala Harris won in 2024 which would be the most likely targets for Democrats to attempt to flip.

On April 16th, 2026, the Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC) announced that they would be investing in Washington state legislative races to protect incumbents and flip seats. They did not announce investments in any specific races at that time.[7][8]

Retirements

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
Sabato's Crystal Ball[23] Safe D January 22, 2026

Summary of results by district

District Posi Incumbent Party Elected Representative Outcome
1st 1 Davina Duerr Dem TBD
2 Shelley Kloba Dem TBD
2nd 1 Andrew Barkis Rep TBD
2 Matt Marshall Rep TBD
3rd 1 Natasha Hill Dem TBD
2 Timm Ormsby Dem TBD
4th 1 Suzanne Schmidt Rep TBD
2 Rob Chase Rep TBD
5th 1 Zach Hall Dem TBD
2 Lisa Callan Dem TBD
6th 1 Mike Volz Rep TBD
2 Jenny Graham Rep TBD
7th 1 Andrew Engell Rep TBD
2 Hunter Abell Rep TBD
8th 1 Stephanie Barnard Rep TBD
2 April Connors Rep TBD
9th 1 Mary Dye Rep TBD
2 Joe Schmick Rep TBD
10th 1 Clyde Shavers Dem TBD
2 Dave Paul Dem TBD
11th 1 David Hackney Dem TBD
2 Steve Bergquist Dem TBD
12th 1 Brian Burnett Rep TBD
2 Mike Steele Rep TBD
13th 1 Tom Dent Rep TBD
2 Alex Ybarra Rep TBD
14th 1 Gloria Mendoza Rep TBD
2 Deb Manjarrez Rep TBD
15th 1 Chris Corry Rep TBD
2 Jeremie Dufault Rep TBD
16th 1 Mark Klicker Rep TBD
2 Skyler Rude Rep TBD
17th 1 Kevin Waters Rep TBD
2 David Stuebe Rep TBD
18th 1 Stephanie McClintock Rep TBD
2 John Ley Rep TBD
19th 1 Jim Walsh Rep TBD
2 Joel McEntire Rep TBD
20th 1 Peter Abbarno Rep TBD
2 Ed Orcutt Rep TBD
21st 1 Strom Peterson Dem TBD
2 Lillian Ortiz-Self Dem TBD
22nd 1 Beth Doglio Dem TBD
2 Lisa Parshley Dem TBD
23rd 1 Tarra Simmons Dem TBD
2 Greg Nance Dem TBD
24th 1 Adam Bernbaum Dem TBD
2 Steve Tharinger Dem TBD
25th 1 Michael Keaton Rep TBD
2 Cyndy Jacobsen Rep TBD
26th 1 Adison Richards Dem TBD
2 Michelle Caldier Valdez Rep TBD
27th 1 Laurie Jinkins Dem TBD
2 Jake Fey Dem TBD
28th 1 Mari Leavitt Dem TBD
2 Dan Bronoske Dem TBD
29th 1 Melanie Morgan Dem TBD
2 Sharlett Mena Dem TBD
30th 1 Jamila Taylor Dem TBD
2 Kristine Reeves Dem TBD
31st 1 Drew Stokesbary Rep TBD
2 Josh Penner Rep TBD
32nd 1 Cindy Ryu Dem TBD
2 Lauren Davis Dem TBD
33rd 1 Edwin Obras Dem TBD
2 Mia Gregerson Dem TBD
34th 1 Brianna Thomas Dem TBD
2 Joe Fitzgibbon Dem TBD
35th 1 Dan Griffey Rep TBD
2 Travis Couture Rep TBD
36th 1 Julia Reed Dem TBD
2 Liz Berry Dem TBD
37th 1 Sharon Tomiko Santos Dem TBD
2 Chipalo Street Dem TBD
38th 1 Julio Cortes Dem TBD
2 Mary Fosse Dem TBD
39th 1 Sam Low Rep TBD
2 Carolyn Eslick Rep TBD
40th 1 Debra Lekanoff Dem TBD
2 Alex Ramel Dem TBD
41st 1 Janice Zahn Dem TBD
2 My-Linh Thai Dem TBD
42nd 1 Alicia Rule Dem TBD
2 Joe Timmons Dem TBD
43rd 1 Nicole Macri Dem TBD
2 Shaun Scott Dem TBD
44th 1 Brandy Donaghy Dem TBD
2 April Berg Dem TBD
45th 1 Roger Goodman Dem TBD
2 Larry Springer Dem TBD
46th 1 Gerry Pollet Dem TBD
2 Darya Farivar Dem TBD
47th 1 Debra Entenman Dem TBD
2 Chris Stearns Dem TBD
48th 1 Osman Salahuddin Dem TBD
2 Amy Walen Dem TBD
49th 1 Sharon Wylie Dem TBD
2 Monica Stonier Dem TBD

District 1

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 2

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 3

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

The incumbent is Democrat Timm Ormsby who is retiring.[9]

Candidates

Declared
Filed Paperwork
Declined
  • Timm Ormsby (Democratic), incumbent state representative (retiring)[9]

Position yet to be specified

Candidates

Filed paperwork
  • John Kness (Republican)[42]

District 4

Position 1

The incumbent is Republican Suzanne Schmidt who is retiring to run for Spokane County Commission district 4.[16]

Candidates

Filed paperwork
Declined
  • Suzanne Schmidt (Republican), incumbent state representative (running for Spokane County Commission)[16]

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 5

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork
  • Zach Hall (Democratic), incumbent state representative[50]
  • Aimee Warmerdam (Democratic)[51]

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 6

Position 1

The incumbent is Republican Mike Volz who is retiring to focus on his other position as Spokane County Treasurer.[17]

Candidates

Declared
  • Isaiah Paine (Republican), officer for the Spokane Home Builders Association[53]
Filed paperwork
Declined

Position 2

The incumbent is Republican Jenny Graham who is retiring.[18]

Candidates

Declared
Declined

Endorsements

Jonathan Bingle (R)
State legislators
Local officials

District 7

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 8

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 9

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 10

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position yet to be specified

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 11

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 12

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
  • Stacy Willoughby (Democratic), Bank Branch Manager, Chelan Valley Hope board president, board member of Lake Chelan Chamber of Commerce[84][85][86][87]
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
  • Adam James (No party preference), pastor[89]
Filed paperwork

District 13

Position 1

Candidates

Declared

Position 2

The incumbent is Alex Ybarra, who is retiring to run for the state senate seat vacated by Sen. Judy Warick who is retiring.[19]

Candidates

Declared
Filed Paperwork
Declined
  • Alex Ybarra (Republican), incumbent state representative (running for state senate)[19]
Withdrawn
  • Jeff Leichleiter (Republican), Tim's Cascades Potato Chips founder[101][102][103]

District 14

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
  • Chelsea Dimas (Democratic), Washington State Human Rights commissioner and runner-up for this district in 2024[104]
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

District 15

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

The incumbent is Republican Jeremie Dufault, who is retiring to run for State Senate.[20] He was initially challenging incumbent Nikki Torres (R-Pasco) before she decided to run for State Senate in the 8th District to replace Matt Boehnke (R-Kennewick). Sen. Boehnke is running for U.S. House in Washington's 4th congressional district to replace retiring incumbent Dan Newhouse (R-Sunnyside).[109][110]

Candidates

Filed paperwork
Declined

District 16

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

District 17

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
  • Ben Christly (Democratic), Navy veteran and small business owner[119]
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
  • Diana Perez (Democratic), Vancouver city councilmember (2022–present)[121]
Filed paperwork
Withdrawn

District 18

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
  • Randi Knott (Democratic), ranch owner and retired government affairs director[125]
  • Stephanie McClintock (Republican), incumbent state representative[125]

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork
  • John Ley (Republican), incumbent state representative[126]
  • Deken Letinich (Democratic), union advocate and candidate for this district in 2024[127]

District 19

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 20

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 21

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
  • Jason Moon (Democratic), Mukilteo city council president and member (2022–present) and candidate for this seat in 2024[144][145]

Endorsements

Strom Peterson (D)
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State legislators
Local officials
Individuals

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 22

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 23

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 24

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
  • Aiden Hamilton (Republican), high school student[156][157]
Filed paperwork

Position 2

The incumbent is Democrat Steve Tharinger, who is retiring after dealing with health issues during the 2026 legislative session.[10][160]

Candidates

Declared
Declined

District 25

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 26

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
Filed Paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Incumbent Representative Michelle Caldier Valdez announced that she would not run for re-election citing personal priorities and the evolving political direction of her district.[21]

Declared
Declined

District 27

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 28

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 29

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

The incumbent is Democrat Sharlett Mena, who is retiring to run for State Senate to replace the retiring Steve Conway (D-Tacoma).[11]

Candidates

Declared
Filed Paperwork
  • Darek Blum (Republican)[208]
Declined

District 30

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position yet to be specified

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 31

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 32

Position 1

The incumbent is Democrat Cindy Ryu, who is retiring to run for State Senate against incumbent Jesse Salomon (D-Shoreline).[228] Both the Washington State Democratic Party Chair Shasti Conrad and the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee have indicated that they do not plan to intervene in this race before the primary and likely would not get involved in the general election if the race is between two Democrats.[229]

Candidates

Declared
Filed Paperwork
Declined

Endorsements

Chris Bloomquist (D)
State legislators
Will Chen (D)
Local
Former elected officials
Jenna Nand (D)
State legislators
Local officials
Keith Scully (D)
State legislators

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork
Endorsements
Imraan Siddiqi (D)
State legislators
Local
  • Keith Scully, Mayor and Council member for Shoreline (2022-present) (2016-present)[246]
  • Naren Briar, Bellevue City Council member (2026-present)[246]

District 33

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork
  • Yuri Marinchik (No party preference)[254]

District 34

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 35

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 36

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 37

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork
  • Kelabe Tewolde (Democratic), associate director at Rainier Scholars, Seattle planning commissioner[264][265][266]

Position 2

The incumbent is Democrat Chipalo Street, who is retiring to run for State Senate to replace incumbent Rebecca Saldaña (D-Seattle). Sen. Saldaña is retiring to run for the King County Council seat vacated by Girmay Zahilay when he won his election to become King County Executive in 2025.[267]

Candidates

Declared
Potential
Declined
  • Chipalo Street (Democratic), incumbent state representative (running for State Senate)[13]

District 38

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position yet to be specified

Candidates

Filed paperwork
  • Annie Fitzgerald (Democratic), candidate for the district in 2024[275][276]

District 39

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

The incumbent is Republican Carolyn Eslick, who is retiring.[22]

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork
Declined

Endorsements

Steve Ewing (R)
State legislators
Local officials
Ida Keeley (D)
Local officials
Robert Sutherland (R)
Organizations
  • 39th Legislative District Republican committee[284]

District 40

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 41

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 42

Position 1

Candidates

Declared

Position 2

Candidates

Declared

District 43

Position 1

Candidates

Declared

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 44

Position 1

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position yet to be specified

Candidates

Filed paperwork
  • Tonya Stadlman (Republican), property manager[305]

District 45

Position 1

Candidates

Declared

Position 2

The incumbent is Democrat Larry Springer who is retiring.[14]

Candidates

Declared
Declined

District 46

Position 1

Candidates

Declared

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
Filed paperwork
  • Rodney Thornley (No party preference), teacher[322][323]

District 47

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Filed paperwork

District 48

Position 1

Candidates

Filed paperwork

Position 2

Candidates

Declared
  • Jessica Forsythe (Democratic), Redmond city councilmember[333]
Filed paperwork

District 49

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI