During the conversation yesterday with state Sen. Tim Sheldon,
D-Potlatch, I asked him about other whispers he’s hearing down in
Olympia about the impact of redistricting.
By the way, I called Sheldon because he has been through two of
these before.
Sheldon mentioned that he thinks Brinnon could become part of
the 35th District because the area is part of the Mason County
Public Utility District.
In years past there have been conversations about extending the
23rd District into Jefferson County. I don’t think it has been
seriously considered by the group of redistricting commissioners,
but there is some sentiment that Port Townsend is a good match with
Bainbridge Island. Geographically it is a stretch.
What may make more sense to some is linking Bainbridge to a
district in Seattle. Still, not very likely, and one commenter on
the story thought the notion ridiculous.
I read our stories from 1991 and 2001 and in both cases there
was a large group who thought Kitsap should only have two
legislative districts. I’m not sure why that would be better
politically for this area. At first glance it does seem like more
is better. Bremerton itself is represented by nine different
legislators, even though not one legislator is actually from
Bremerton.
One of the impacts of redistricting worth watching is that 35th
District swing. The district will still likely take in all of Mason
County. It’s the fringes that are worth taking notice of.
The reason I believe we are more likely to lose the 35th
District, or at least part of it, is because of where the
incumbents live. Sheldon (Potlatch) and state Rep. Kathy Haigh
(Shelton) both are in Mason County. Fred Finn lives near Olympia in
Thurston County.
Several months ago I did another story on
redistrictings and spoke with the man many agree is
the state’s foremost expert on the subject, Dick Morrill. By e-mail
he told me, “The commission’s first unwritten rule is to protect
incumbents.”
So you would think, assuming what Morrill said is true, that the
35th District’s emphasis in the redistricting plan would favor
Thurston County over Kitsap. I don’t know specifically where the
population growth has happened in Thurston County, so it could be
that the 35th won’t change much at all. Sheldon said he thought not
many incumbents will find themselves in a new district.
Sheldon also said state Rep. Marko Liias, D-Edmonds, is
considering running for Congress should Jay Inslee run for
governor, as practically everyone is assuming. What isn’t so clear,
however, is what district Liias will live once redistricting is
done. If Inslee does announce he’s running for governor, there’s no
incumbent to protect, so the First Congressional District could see
wild swings.
This again goes to the idea that all of Kitsap County could be
in one congressional district represented by Norm Dicks. Imagine
that. And if Bainbridge were lumped with Seattle legislatively, we
could have 12 legislators representing the county.
Here’s a cliche for you: The possibilities are endless.
Actually, they’re not. They pretty much range from Kitsap having
one or two members of Congress and two-four legislative districts.
That’s not exactly endless, is it.