Vice President Kamala Harris has likely captured Washington’s 12 electoral votes in the presidential election, but the results nationwide are not yet known.
After the first vote count in Washington on Tuesday, Harris and her running mate Gov. Tim Walz had 59% of the Washington vote, followed by 39% for former President Donald Trump and his running mate Sen. J.D. Vance, and other candidates took less than 1% of the vote.
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Washington voters have chosen the Democratic nominee for president each election since 1988, but for the four presidential elections before that, Washington picked the Republican nominee. In the 2020 election, Washington voters chose President Joe Biden over Trump by a 58% to 39% margin.
Although in the Western half of the United States, only California and Texas have more electoral votes than Washington, presidential candidates do not usually spend much time campaigning here because the state has become such a reliable vote for the Democratic nominee.
But over the state’s 135-year history, the presidential vote has regularly gone back and forth between the Republican and Democratic parties; and once, in 1912, Washington voters chose the Progressive Party candidate for president.