Politics & Government

Inslee to Resign from Congressional Seat to Focus Full-Time on Gubernatorial Campaign

The seven-term congressman's resignation will be effective on March 20.

The Democratic candidate for Washington governor, Jay Inslee, today announced that he will step down from his seat in Congress to focus full time on his campaign and talking to voters about rebuilding Washington’s economy and creating jobs for the nearly 300,000 people still out of work.

“I am excited about focusing full-time on talking about my job-creation agenda and building a new economy for Washington state,” Inslee told a group of supporters at his campaign headquarters today. “We have a great chance to seize our own destiny, build our own industries, and create our own technological revolutions right here at home.”

“I am not one for half measures or half-hearted efforts,” continued Inslee. “I am going to leave everything on the field. I am going everywhere and I am going to listen to everybody. If you have an idea, I want to hear it. If you have a problem, I want to know it. If you have a business, I want to help you grow it. I am all in.”

Find out what's happening in Mercer Islandwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Inslee, who is currently leading in fundraising and running neck-in-neck with his opponent based on recent polls, said he made the decision very recently after watching the GOP presidential nominees visiting Washington with what Inslee described as a “divisive social issues agenda” and then seeing state Republicans offer budget proposals that slashed education funding.

“It was a difficult decision, but what I need to do right now is focus all my attention on talking to people about what’s really important – creating jobs and growing our economy,” said Inslee.

Find out what's happening in Mercer Islandwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Because Inslee resigned after a special election deadline of March 6, the congressional seat will remain vacant until a new congress is sworn in next year.

Inslee has represented the 1st Congressional District, which includes Northwest Seattle and its surrounding suburbs to the north and east, since the late 1990s. His resignation is effective March 20.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Mercer Island