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CCRP Newsletter March 1, 2026

CCRP Newsletter March 1, 2026

Official Clark County, WA Republican Party‍

Representing over 350 Precincts with Precinct Committee Officers (PCO), elected by local precinct residents.‍

Legislative Action Committee Update - Week 7

We are in the last full week of Legislative session in Olympia and the majority Democrat party keeps pushing their unfavorable bills, despite extremely high turnout in the committee sign-ins.

As long as they don’t find a way to extend session, or call a special session, politicking should be over on March 12. 

Last week:

  • The Millionaires Tax was heard Feb. 24. The chair started by announcing that there was fraudulent Committee Sign In activity. Rick Vermeers suggested that maybe the system should verify voter ID and citizenship. What a novel idea!
    You can watch 2 hours of joy here: SB 6346 on TVW. 
    Apparently, according to Sen. Jamie Pederson, they pay more attention to those who show up in person. And a whole bunch of other nonsense around the public’s participation. Brandi Kruse does a good job covering the proceedings in the Feb. 24 Undivided Broadcast on YouTube (and podcasts)
    Then, on Friday Feb. 27 Finance Committee Exec. Session 8 am, they considered amendments for over an hour before voting. The Vote on TVW ended up with 9 in favor, 6 opposed. Notably, moderate Democrat Amy Walen sided with the Republicans and voted against.
  • And the other ugly bill that will be politicized to unseat sheriffs - SB 5974 - was heard in Executive Session Feb. 24. Many amendments were proposed, and it passed out of committee on party lines 6-3. Yes, Republicans only have three seats on the Community Safety committee. This bill is headed to the House floor probably this week.

Actions for the next week:

Public hearings in committees are completely winding down and most of the bills we track are heading for finance committee and budgeting hearings. Our PRO/CONs are still as effective, but if you submit written comments, make sure to address funding challenges. Debating the issues is not done in finance committees.

On March 2, Executive sessions will hear E3SHB 1710, 2SHB 2333.

Write letters and call your legislators on key bills too. Any communication might yield information that they’re about to change a vote and not go with the anti-ICE, anti-sheriff, pro-tax insanity that will assuredly seal fates for some legislator elections in the fall.

SB 6084 (CON) This bill codifies an errant court decision that it is okay to vote in two elections as long as it is not the same election--multistage voting. This allows persons to vote in two states, and it appears that it will allow registering and voting in two different counties as long as it is not the same election time period. So, if you don’t have an election to vote in at your home, you can vote in an election at your summer home in a different county. Note: There is no longer a requirement to live in the jurisdiction for 30 days. You can register and vote instantly in any jurisdiction. Your registration would be cancelled in your original jurisdiction, but you can “move” back whenever you wish.

HB 2741 (CON). This new bill guts the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) process with respect to electric transmission siting in Washington State and assigns the authority to site transmission projects to an appointed Board. Currently, there is a large group of residents in Clark County who are looking for alternatives to PacifiCorp’s Transmission Line through Clark County from Swift Dam to Troutdale, Oregon. They are relying largely on the SEPA, which gives Clark County the environmental lead for this project. Passage of this bill would subvert their ability to require PacifiCorp to offer alternatives to the currently proposed route.


Washington State Bills and Legislation

The Washington State Legislature's 2026 regular session began on Monday, January 12. This is a short session lasting up to 60 days, with an expected end date of Thursday, March 12, 2026.

Remember that public hearing committee registrations close 1 hour before meeting start time. Written comments can be submitted by the end of the day of a committee public hearing.

The full set of weekly bill action suggestions are posted on the CCRP Legislative Action Committee Page.

Committee Schedules, Agendas, and Documents

House Floor Activity Report

Senate Floor Activity Report

Hearings Are Available To Watch - https://tvw.org/

Conservative Resources

Nancy D Churchill - Subscribe to a free account to access

Conservative Ladies of Washington

FPIW Action - Clear interface with suggestions, links, and timely information.

Bill Bruch's Legislative Bills List-with committee dates


Clark County Council discusses resolution on unity

‍Once again, the Clark County Council is discussing a resolution.

Earlier in February, the council voted to approve a resolution to make it clear the county does not work with federal immigration officials. During discussion of that resolution, the council specifically voted to put the word “local” in front of law enforcement, to show the council only supports “local law enforcement” but not all law enforcement. That resolution also used the word “fear” and implied that federal officials use racial profiling, are overly aggressive, and undermine public trust and community safety.

Now the councilors want a resolution on unity. Read the article on ClarkCounty Today


Reformcast E7: Anti-ICE Resolution, School Scandal Deepens, Library Shakeup with Gary Wilson

  • Councilor Sue Marshall’s anti-ICE resolution

  • Ridgefield School District controversy

  • Fort Vancouver Regional Library turmoil:

    • Two board members resign amid disputes over “equity” language and intellectual freedom for minors.

    • Rob and guest Gary Wilson discuss parental rights, library governance, and possible county interference in board direction.

  • Charter Review Commission update:

    • New proposals could change how executive positions—like sheriff and auditor—are chosen.


WA State Dems Angry when Public opposes Income Tax bill - Accuses public of FRAUD!

‍Washington State's Democratic Party leadership grew furious and angry when the public was willing to overwhelmingly sign in opposed to the income tax proposal they were attempting to push through the legislature.  At first they claimed it was "bots," then they said they didn't care, and then they said it must be "fraud."  These are the same people who pretend the election system is perfect, can't find fraud at DCYF or the Dept of Commerce, and want to pretend like there is no corruption anywhere in Washington State.  But, when the public dares to push back, it must be fraud of course...


Ten Minutes of Why the State Income Tax Proposal is a Bad Idea for Washington State

‍Washington has said no to a state income tax more than ten times straight at the ballot box. This video shows the testimony delivered to the State House Finance Committee hearing on February 24, 2026. You'll see WPC research staff and other highlights outlining why the income tax would be a bad idea for Washington state. 100K people signed up to oppose the income tax.

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