U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell appears headed toward reelection with 60% of the votes tallied in the first statewide ballot drop Tuesday.
Her GOP challenger, Dr. Raul Garcia, was trailing with 40% as of Tuesday evening. Votes will continue to be counted over the following days.
Cantwell, 65, lives in Edmonds and has served as a senator for more than 20 years. She moved to Washington in 1983 and served three terms in the state House from 1986 to 1992. Cantwell then was elected to the U.S. House in 1992, but lost her reelection campaign in 1994. She took down Republican U.S. Sen. Slade Gorton in 2000 and has held the Senate seat since.
She chairs the Senate Commerce, Science & Technology Committee, where one of her accomplishments was sponsoring the CHIPS & Science Act, which allocated nearly $250 billion over five years for technology research and manufacturing. This included four semiconductor projects in the Pacific Northwest, creating an estimated 2,880 jobs.
Her campaign has spent nearly $3.6 million, compared to Garcia’s campaign spending of $617,000, according to federal campaign disclosure records.
Yakima physician Raul Garcia has worked as an emergency room doctor for more than 25 years, and has described himself as a Cuban immigrant who fought for the American Dream. He dropped his bid for governor and instead chose to run for U.S. Senate early in the election cycle. Previously, he ran unsuccessfully for governor in 2020, losing in the primary. Garcia calls himself a moderate conservative, and says he takes a “common sense” approach to policy issues.