Bill Driscoll may be optimistic, but so much favors Derek Kilmer

There is a new poll in the right column. I see someone has already voted in it.

Speaking of surveys, an earlier post referred to survey work done by Republican Bill Driscoll, running to replace Democrat Norm Dicks in the 6th Congressional District. His campaign didn’t release the questions, but sent a fundraising pitch suggesting the polls show he has a shot.

Another poll with a pretty huge sample size (40 percent) was the 2012 Primary. In that one state Sen. Derek Kilmer, D-Gig Harbor, polled about as well as anyone might have expected. Out of seven candidates he pulled in 53.4 percent of the votes. Sure, Kilmer was the only Democrat. But for Driscoll to have the shot he thinks he has, he has to hope the anti-Barack Obama sentiment in the 6th District is overwhelming, that Mitt Romney manages to have people excited by November and that people get to know Driscoll by then, too. And not just get to know him, to like him more than they like Kilmer.

It’s not impossible, and turnout for the primary was low. But you also can’t assume that those for whom Jesse Young or Doug Cloud was the first choice will automatically go with Driscoll in the general election. Most will, but the question will be whether there would be enough. Recent electoral history suggests Kilmer’s percentages in the general election might even go up from where they ended in the primary.

Driscoll is campaigning as a “Non-Politician.” It’s one of the titles on his website, between “Marine Corps Veteran” and “Businessman.” Running as an outsider can work sometimes, when the general public is mad at the incumbents. The public was mad at Congressional incumbents in 2006 and in 2010. They probably will be again in 2014.

In this race there are no incumbents. The Democratic candidate, though, has a political record. Unfortunately for Driscoll, Kilmer’s record is not as polarizing as, say, Nancy Pelosi.

On Monday Kilmer was recognized by a Tacoma company that makes residential wood boilers. They acknowledged Kilmer for his help in getting regulatory prohibitions against those boilers removed. Washington had been the only state where wood boilers couldn’t be sold. The result of Kilmer’s efforts with state regulators, said Greenwood Clean Energy’s president, Michael Kuehner, was the company took work that had been occurring in Canada and Mexico and brought it to Washington. That’s 16 jobs, with an outlook for double that, according to the press release Kilmer’s campaign sent out.

Over the next three months, look for Kilmer to repeat that story, and the one about the theater and apartment development in Bremerton, and the new hospital in Gig Harbor.

Driscoll has a different kind of record. He will tell you that he volunteered to rejoin the Marines long after he had to. That will certainly play well with many. He will also ally himself more with Republican fiscal ideals, which again will play well with many.

Driscoll also says he will go after bipartisan solutions, but Kilmer makes the case he has a record of working across the aisle in Olympia. And Kilmer’s focus on business certainly casts him in a different light than, say it again, Nancy Pelosi.

If you go to Washingtonvotes.org, you can parse out Kilmer’s record.

During the 2011-12 session there were more than 2,000 bills introduced in each chamber. More than 700 passed and there were nearly 1,100 votes. Of those, only 55 were decided by a margin of 10 or less. I picked that number as the marker where a single vote is most important. Kilmer voted against his party on seven of those votes, 12.7 percent of the time. By comparison, state Sen. Michael Baumgartner, R-Spokane, (He’s the one running against Democrat Maria Cantwell for her Senate seat. He’s also the one who had unkind words for a reporter from Publicola. Look it up.) voted against his party four times in those same 55 votes, or 7.3 percent. Tim Sheldon, D-Shelton, known as a maverick for voting against the majority of his party often, voted against his party 81.8 percent of the close votes. I guess that means if Sheldon were a Republican he would have voted against his party 18.9 percent of the time.

In the House I upped the vote difference to 20 or less. There were 158 of those. Republican Jan Angel voted against her party 12.7 percent of the time, same percentage as Kilmer. Democrat Larry Seaquist went against party 4.4 percent, and Democrats Sherry Appleton and Kathy Haigh each voted against their party three times, 1.9 percent.

Of the 51 bills Kilmer introduced as the prime sponsor, 41 had Republican co-sponsors.

Here’s another stat Driscoll will have to overcome. In the two previous Congressional election years that were run with the Top Two format, Norm Dicks ran against multiple candidates in both. In each primary he topped 50 percent. Worse for Driscoll, Dicks’ percentage went up in each general election.

The penny in the picture tells you why Derek Kilmer’s name appears before Bill Driscoll’s in the poll on the right. In the past I’ve gone alphabetic, but decided to flip a penny here. Heads it’s Driscoll. Tails it’s Kilmer. You see what happened.

If you read on you can read the press release Kilmer’s campaign sent about Greenwood Clean Energy’s praise for Kilmer.

Derek Kilmer Recognized by Tacoma Manufacturer For Creating Jobs
 
Tacoma – State Senator Derek Kilmer was recognized today by a local green technology company that credits his hard work for allowing them to bring family-wage manufacturing jobs from Canada and Mexico to Tacoma.

Senator Kilmer, who is endorsed by Rep. Norm Dicks to succeed him as WA’s 6th Congressional District representative, was honored at a ceremony held by Greenwood Clean Energy and attended by Tacoma Mayor Marilyn Strickland to commemorate the return of Greenwood’s manufacturing jobs to Washington and the certification of Greenwood’s residential wood boiler product line in Washington.

Greenwood credits Senator Kilmer for facilitating the certification of their energy-efficient wood boiler in Washington state, which was the only state nationwide where residential wood boilers were not allowed to be sold. Greenwood has moved its manufacturing operation to Tacoma, where it now has 16 employees. It expects to soon double that number due to the certification.  

The event was held at 11am on Monday, August 20 at Tacoma Steel Supply, where Greenwood’s manufacturing facility is located, at 701 East 64th Street in Tacoma.

“Senator Kilmer has a track record as a real job creator, advocate for small businesses, and champion for common sense regulatory reform,” said Michael Kuehner, President of Greenwood Clean Energy. “Senator Kilmer cleared the way for us to bring our manufacturing from Canada and Mexico to Pierce County and unveil our environmentally friendly new product line in Washington, where it will allow middle-class families across the state to warm their homes economically and efficiently.

“That’s why, even though I am not someone who normally gets involved in politics, I am supporting Derek Kilmer’s campaign for Congress. I know Senator Kilmer truly understands the struggles small businesses are facing, and he will deliver the nonpartisan leadership we need to get people back to work and get our economy back on track.”

“It was my honor to help Greenwood Clean Energy reverse the outsourcing trend and bring desperately needed jobs back to Tacoma,” said Senator Kilmer, whose day job is as the Vice President of the Economic Development Board of Tacoma-Pierce County. “We should be rolling out the red carpet for companies that want to invest in our communities, not setting up roadblocks. My priority as a public servant is helping small businesses get people back to work, and that is the focus I intend to bring to Congress.”

For his work in the state legislature, Sen. Kilmer is the three-time recipient of the Washington Economic Development Association’s LEADER of the Year Award and has also been named a “Legislative Business Star” by Enterprise Washington’s Business Institute.

Greenwood Clean Energy manufactures next generation, high-efficiency, wood boilers and wood furnaces for residential space and water heating applications. Greenwood appliances are available through dealers throughout the U.S., Canada, UK, and New Zealand.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Before you post, please complete the prompt below.

Please enter the word MILK here: