Skip to main content

'Hey guys, how you doin'?' How Washington's folksy governor introduces his national ambition

As Washington Gov. Jay Inslee inches closer to a likely run for president, he's starting to sound more and more like a candidate on the stump than a two-term incumbent, even when addressing audiences at home. 

At a recent legislative forum in Olympia, Inslee recounted his first foray into politics 30 years ago and told the story behind one of his first votes as a freshman state lawmaker to extend unemployment benefits to migrant farm workers.  

"I got underdogs in my heart all the time," Inslee, a Democrat, said sounding Clintonesque. "I get a little steamed about these things when there's not something fair to working people, so I took that vote."

He noted that it was an unpopular vote at the time in his conservative central Washington legislative district. 

In recent speeches, TV appearances and interviews, Inslee has begun introducing himself to a broader national audience and, in the process, reintroducing himself to Washington voters who've twice elected him governor. 

Like most politicians, Inslee has an origin story. He dusted it off for the legislative forum in Olympia in January. It was the mid-1980s and he and his wife Trudi were raising "three feral sons" in Selah, Washington. The local high school was overcrowded, but voters had previously rejected several bond measures to build a new school. The school had gotten so crowded, there was talk of "double-shifting" students, according to Inslee.

"I kind of looked around and said 'Well, let's try again,' and nobody else would except Trudi and Bill and Sally Douglas," Inslee said, referring to his wife and the other couple they teamed with to co-chair another bond campaign. This time it passed.

But then state funding to help build the school didn't come through.

"Trudi suggested that if I really wanted to do something about this, I ought to run for the Legislature and I did," Inslee said.

While Inslee has told slightly different versions over the years, this is always how the story of his journey into politics begins. Inslee served two terms in the Washington House before he was elected to Congress from the Republican-leaning 4th Congressional District. He served one term, voted for the federal assault weapons ban and was swept out in the 1994 Republican Revolution. 

In 1996, Inslee ran for governor but lost in the primary. Eventually, he and Trudi moved to Bainbridge Island where he again ran for Congress, this time from the 1st Congressional District, and won. He went on to serve seven terms.

It was during this time that Inslee found his signature issue: climate change. In 2007, Inslee published a book, "Apollo's Fire: Igniting a Clean Energy Economy" and began, in Al Gore fashion, sounding the alarm on the need to address global warming. He also sponsored federal climate change legislation. 

In 2012, Inslee resigned his seat in Congress to run again for governor. He beat Republican Rob McKenna, the state's attorney general. From day one, climate change was a front-and-center issue in the Inslee administration. At his inauguration, Denis Hayes, the president and CEO of the Bullitt Foundation and an Earth Day organizer, framed Inslee's election as groundbreaking. 

"Jay Inslee is the first political chief executive in American history to be elected principally on a platform of combating climate change," Hayes said in a speech in the Capitol rotunda. 

Six years later, Inslee is serving his second term as governor and "seriously considering" a run for president on a platform of fighting climate change — an issue he says is no longer an abstraction.

"What used to be a graph on a chart is now ash on the hood of your car in Seattle when you wake up last summer and the swimming pools in Wenatchee and Tri-Cities are closed because kids can't go outside and can't breathe," Inslee said at the legislative forum in January, referring to the impacts of forest fire smoke.

As governor, however, Inslee has been stymied in his efforts to enact a cap-and-trade system or a carbon tax. Republicans, who controlled the state Senate for several years, actively blocked the proposals and warned they would raise energy prices and put Washington at a competitive disadvantage. Inslee's fellow Democrats in the House, meanwhile, proceeded cautiously on ambitious climate legislation.

"One of the things with Gov. Inslee is, to a very large degree, he's trying to run an international or a national policy platform out of Olympia," said Republican state Sen. Doug Ericksen, the former chair of the energy committee and a frequent foe of Inslee on climate change legislation. "It's really a square peg in a round hole."

In a recent interview, Ericksen noted that Washington — with its abundant hydropower — is already a low carbon-emitting state. Inslee argues, however, that in the absence of federal action, states like Washington should lead on climate change. He frequently notes that Washington is a member of the United States Climate Alliance, a coalition of 18 states plus Puerto Rico, that have committed to advancing the goals of the Paris Agreement on climate change.

This year, Inslee has pivoted away from trying to put a price on carbon, following the defeat of a carbon fee measure put forward by voters in November. Instead, he's proposing a suite of measures to reduce carbon pollution. They include a low-carbon fuel standards and a clean electricity initiative. 

"One of the things I've learned is that there's no silver bullet here, there's kind of silver buckshot," Inslee said last month in a speech to students at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire. 

Colorful one-liners like that prompted Seattle Times reporter Jim Brunner in 2013 to coin the term "Inslee-isms." 

Inslee has been serving them up fast and furiously of late. His most oft-repeated line nowadays is: "You know they can't build a birdhouse in Washington, D.C." 

At the legislative forum in Olympia, he waxed poetic about working "in the vineyards of democracy." 

And on his recent trip to New Hampshire, which holds the first-in-the-nation presidential primary, Inslee said spoke of getting out ahead of an issue like climate change because, "You always want to skate to where the puck's gonna be." 

Inslee often casts himself as a politician on the right side of history. But to his political opponents he can seem like a grandstander and a partisan. 

"He does bring a bit of that Washington, D.C. partisanship to Washington state," Ericksen said. 

But Ericksen, who co-chaired President Donald Trump's campaign in Washington and later worked for his transition team, is also quick to offer a postitive take on Inslee.

"He's a good guy, don't get me wrong," Ericksen said. "Jay has great personality strengths in terms of his ability on retail politics and to communicate out there on the stump."

Those retail politics skills were on display last month when Inslee met Ericksen's daughter, Elsa, during a stop at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, where she's a freshman. The two took a picture together and Inslee joked, "I always say you should honor your father except when it comes time for voting." 

As Inslee explores a run for president, he's also burnishing his credentials as governor. In the process, he's talking up his home state. 

"I've got a fantastic story to tell, unsurpassed by anywhere else in the country," Inslee said earlier this year. 

It's a story, Inslee said, of a state that's tackled education funding, raised the minimum wage, passed paid family leave and expanded access to voting. He often notes that Washington is ranked as a stop state for employers and for workers. He also highlights his recent proposals to address orca recovery, pardon people with marijuana convictions and create a public health insurance option. 

Of course, Republicans have a long list of what they consider to be Inslee's failures and shortcomings. For instance, they point to the decertification of Western State Hospital and the resulting lost of $53 million in federal funds a year. They also criticize Inslee for his embrace of new and higher taxes, including a new capital gains tax, especially after saying he wouldn't advocate for higher taxes during his 2012 campaign. 

Inslee, who clearly relishes being governor and hasn't ruled out a run for a third term, tends to shrug off the criticisms. He says the taxes are need to fund the state's "moral" and "constitutional" obligations. His latest budget proposal includes plans to overhaul the state's crippled mental health system, including funding for the pre-design of a new state psychiatric hospital. 

But Inslee also seems to delight in campaigning. At Saint Anselm College, he walked around the small room introducing himself by first name to the students.

"Hey guys, how you doin'? Jay," he said to one table. When he came to a student in a football jacket and found out he was a wide receiver, Inslee said: "Oh man, I'd like to throw to you. If I'd had a wide receiver like you, I could have been in the NFL for sure."

Inslee played quarterback at Seattle's Ingraham High School. He also played on the school's championship basketball team. Today, Inslee is known for taking 100-mile bike rides. A self-professed "doodler," he also paints and sketches as a way to unwind. 

Asked by a student in New Hampshire who he draws inspiration from, Inslee mentioned his late parents and his three grandchildren. He then described a recent walk he took with his 10-year-old grandson who calls him Bobo.

"He says, 'Bobo, you know we are all nature,'" Inslee said. "I just think from the mouths of babes comes wisdom."

Inslee told the students that if he does his job right his grandchildren will have salmon, snow and clean air when they grow up. [Copyright 2019 Northwest News Network]

Correction, 9:12 a.m., 2/11/2019: This story has changed to correct the order of the Congressional districts in which Inslee ran.

Why you can trust KUOW