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[October 11, 2024]
By CLAIRE RUSH and HALLIE GOLDEN
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — In their battle for Congress, national Republicans
and Democrats are keenly eyeing the Pacific Northwest, where two of the
most competitive U.S. House races in the country are playing out.
Oregon’s GOP-held 5th Congressional District and Washington state’s
Democratic-held 3rd Congressional District are considered toss-ups,
meaning either party has a good chance of winning.
Both districts are purple — meaning a blend of Republican red and
Democratic blue — and feature freshman incumbents who narrowly flipped
their seats in the 2022 midterms. And with turnout typically higher in
presidential elections than in midterms, political experts say they’ll
be watching to see which candidates are able to mobilize more voters —
especially moderates and independents.
“These races could determine who controls the House of Representatives
in the next Congress,” said Chandler James, assistant professor of
political science at the University of Oregon. “The Pacific Northwest is
kind of where the center of a lot of action is.”
Washington's 3rd Congressional District
An intense rematch is playing out in southwest Washington, where
first-term Democratic Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez is defending her seat
against Donald Trump-backed Republican Joe Kent. Both candidates are
trying to frame the other as the extreme choice.
The Republican-leaning district featuring sprawling farmlands as well as
the suburbs of Portland, Oregon, narrowly went for Trump in 2020, making
it a crucial target for the GOP this year.
Gluesenkamp Perez has sought to showcase herself as an
independent-minded moderate. Her actions during her tenure have ranged
from co-sponsoring a bill to protect medication abortion to voting in
favor of a resolution rebuking Vice President Kamala Harris’s role in
the handling of the U.S.-Mexico border. She was also ranked by the Lugar
Center and the Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy as
having one of the most bipartisan voting records in the U.S. House.
She has outraised Kent, bringing in $6.7 million compared to his $1.4
million, according to the most recent quarterly federal campaign finance
records.
Kent, a former Green Beret who has promoted Trump’s lie that the 2020
election was stolen, has blamed his opponent for things he sees as bad
policy by the Biden administration, including its border policy. He has
cited inflation and illegal immigration as top concerns while seeming to
dull down some of his more extreme positions. In the past on social
media he has called abortion an “evil stain on our humanity,” but in a
debate on Monday, he said he doesn’t support a federal ban.
“He is saying exactly what the pollsters tell him to, but we know what
he believes,” Gluesenkamp Perez said in response.
Both have honed in on the economic issues plaguing parts of the region,
especially the rural areas, according to Mark Stephan, associate
professor of political science at Washington State University Vancouver.
“They’re both trying to claim that they care more than the other one
about small communities, rural areas, the economic vitality of Southwest
Washington,” he said.
Gluesenkamp Perez came out of nowhere to narrowly win the seat two years
ago against Kent in a district that hadn’t been in Democratic hands for
over a decade. She replaced Jaime Herrera Beutler, a more moderate
Republican who lost the 2022 primary in part because she voted to
impeach Donald Trump after the Jan. 6 insurrection.
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Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Pérez, D-Wash., speaks during a
Washington 3rd District debate at KATU studios on Monday, Oct. 7,
2024, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)
There is no registration by party in the state, but for presidential
primaries, Washingtonians must declare a party. In the primary this
March, Republican voters outnumbered Democrats by nearly 30,000 in
the district. However, a spokesperson from the Secretary of State’s
office cautioned that this doesn’t indicate who will win.
Oregon's 5th Congressional District
The boundaries of Oregon’s 5th District were significantly redrawn
following the 2020 census. It encompasses disparate regions spanning
part of Portland and its wealthy and working-class suburbs, as well
as rural agricultural and mountain communities and the fast-growing
central Oregon city of Bend on the other side of the Cascade Range.
In the 2022 midterms, the first elections to be held in the 5th
after redistricting, GOP U.S. Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer flipped a
seat that had been held by Democrats for roughly 25 years. But this
November, she’s facing a different opponent — Janelle Bynum, a state
representative who previously beat her in legislative elections in
the district and has the backing and funding of national Democrats.
Bynum was elected to the Oregon House in 2016, representing the
suburbs southeast of Portland. She says she would seek to codify the
abortion protections of now-overturned Roe v. Wade into federal law
if elected.
Before her election to Congress, Chavez-DeRemer was a former mayor
of the Portland suburb of Happy Valley and small business owner. She
has endorsed Trump and highlighted her endorsements from law
enforcement groups. She says she doesn't support a national abortion
ban, despite previously expressing support for the U.S. Supreme
Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade and its federal abortion
protections.
If Bynum wins in November, she'll be Oregon’s first Black member of
Congress. Chavez-DeRemer became the first Latina member of Congress
to represent Oregon, along with Democratic U.S. Rep. Andrea Salinas
in the state’s 6th Congressional District, when both were elected in
the 2022 midterms.
Democrats hold a slight advantage in voter registration in the 5th,
but roughly a third of voters are unaffiliated, and the two
candidates have sought to appeal to the district’s purple hue. Bynum
describes herself on her campaign website as a “common-sense,
pragmatic leader,” while Chavez-DeRemer has highlighted her work on
bipartisan bills. They've both tried to paint their opponent as
extreme or radical.
In terms of campaign fundraising, Chavez-DeRemer has outpaced Bynum,
raking in about $4 million compared to her opponent’s $2.4 million,
the most recent quarterly federal campaign finance records show.
The separate fundraising arms for both parties in the U.S. House
have each reserved over $6 million in ads in the Portland media
market, which includes parts of Oregon's 5th and Washington's 3rd
districts.
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