Cowan to challenge Baumgartner in 6th
The head of a local movie production company said he will challenge an incumbent senator in Spokane’s 6th Legislative District next year.
Democrat Rich Cowan, chief executive officer of North by Northwest, said Tuesday he will run against Republican Sen. Mike Baumgartner, contending the incumbent’s views on some issues are too extreme for the district.
One of his main goals if elected, Cowan said, would be to find a way to complete the North Spokane Corridor, a roadway that has been discussed for more than a half century and under construction for more than a decade. . .
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“We need to finish what we started,” Cowan said Tuesday. The next phase of the project would have received some $480 million from a transportation proposal that called for a 10.5 cent increase in gasoline taxes, but that package that was blocked in the Senate on the final day of the second special session.
Baumgartner voted with the predominantly Republican Majority Coalition Caucus to block that package. Cowan said he should have worked to pass it to help finish the corridor.
But the proposal only had part of the money needed to finish the corridor, Baumgartner countered, and didn’t address some problems with transportation projects, such as high costs and cost-overruns from mistakes. Any transportation package that comes out of the Legislature should have the roughly $750 million needed to complete the corridor, he said.
The Senate needs to be less partisan and more cooperative, Cowan said, to come up with more “sensible, moderate approaches to solutions.” He criticized Baumgartner for opposing the state’s expansion of Medicaid under the federal Affordable Care Act, and for supporting letter grades for schools, which he contends is simplistic and counterproductive way to evaluate public schools.
The coalition caucus, which Baumgartner joined, was the first bipartisan group to control the Senate in years. But it failed to produce moderate legislation on some issues, Cowan said. It should have passed the Reproductive Parity Act, which would have required any insurance company that offered maternity services to cover abortions, he said. That bill passed the House but died in the Senate when it failed to get a vote by the full chamber before a key deadline. Baumgartner also voted with the coalition on the procedural vote that kept the parity act from coming to the floor.
Baumgartner said he doesn’t support funding abortion coverage, but contended his bipartisan credentials include supporting operating budgets for the last three years that passed with votes from both parties and work to block tuition increases this year at state colleges and universities. The 6th District includes parts of Spokane’s South Hill, West Central, Indian Trail and Whitworth neighborhoods as well as most of the West Plains. It has been the scene of some of the state’s most expensive senate races in recent years, including Baumgartner’s successful challenge to Democratic Sen. Chris Marr in 2010
Both Cowan and Baumgartner ran unsuccessfully last year for congressional seats. Cowan challenged U.S. Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers for Eastern Washington’s 5th District seat. Baumgartner ran against U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell.