Endorsements & Elections

30th LD

Defending Our Majorities

Last year, we saw a surge of anti-union candidates win local office. This year, they’re challenging our allies in the Legislature in the 30th LD.  

Our union endorsed the incumbents, who have 100% labor voting records: Sen. Claire Wilson is a critical vote for our values in the Senate, and Rep. Jamila Taylor has led on our Behavioral Health priorities and Criminal Legal System reform. 

Kristine Reeves, a former Representative who we helped elect in 2016, is running this year to replace one of our retiring allies, Rep. Jesse Johnson. 

Why We Care

Defending our progress on Safe Staffing — If Republicans take back these seats, we’ll lose votes on Safe Staffing &  could even lose our pro-union majority in the House.

Solidarity with champions for our values – Sen. Wilson & Rep. Taylor have stood with us on our biggest fights. Now big business wants to replace them with their handpicked candidates. 

Supporting Candidates of Color who reflect our communities  part of our Racial Justice work is using our power to make our Legislature represent all of us.

Endorsed 2020 & 2022!

Sen. Claire Wilson

On Our Issues:

Bio

For the past four years, Claire has represented the 30th district, advocating for accessible early education, safe and healthy communities, comprehensive sex ed, accessible transportation, environmental protections and more. She also serves as an advisory board member on the Washington State Family and Community Trust Organization and as a Senate member to the Department of Children, Youth, and Family (DCYF) Oversight Board.

Prior to her election to the Washington State Senate, Claire spent 25 years working for the Puget Sound Educational Service District (PSESD), specializing in early education and family involvement. Prior to working for the PSESD, Claire taught pregnant and parenting teens at Mt. Tahoma High School, worked as a nutrition educator, and ran a WIC clinic in rural Montana following graduate school.

Claire also has taken a leadership role advocating for kids and families in Federal Way as the School Board President of the Federal Way Public Schools Board of Education, on the State Advisory Committee for Head Start State Collaboration Office (HSSCO), on the Expanded Learning Opportunities Council (ELOC) representing WSSDA’s 295 School Board’s across the state, and as a board member of the Sidekick collective, Region 2 King County, Washington State School Directors Association (WSSDA), and Building Better Futures (BBF) Partnership of Greater Kent Community.

Claire has extensive volunteer experience in South King County and beyond and currently serves on the Advisory Board of the Washington Family Engagement Trust, as an advisor to the Washington State Leadership Board and the WA State LGBTQ Commission, as a member of FUSION Federal Way Advisory Council, she has served in South King County on her local PTA, as a member of  Citizens for Federal Way Schools, and as a Board member of The Sidekick Collective.

Claire is a proud lesbian woman and mother of two adult children.  She is a Washington State-native, grew up in Seattle and graduated from Roosevelt High School and Washington State University.  She received her Master’s Degree from the University of Northern Colorado. Now a long-term resident of the 30th LD, Claire has lived in South King County since 1999.

Endorsed 2020 & 2022!

Rep. Jamila Taylor

On Our Issues:

Bio

Jamila (pronounced JAH-MEE-LAH) Taylor is a public interest attorney and a long-time community advocate. She grew up in California and Oregon with her parents and two brothers. Her father, Quintard, a history professor, and mother, Carolyn, a Girl Scout office administrator, raised her to value education and serving her community. Jamila joined the Girl Scouts in the first grade and is a lifetime member; and continues to volunteer in King County.

She has served on several nonprofit boards and devoted thousands of hours to various community service opportunities including leading many youth development programs and organizational development committees. Jamila joined her first board of directors in 1993 with the American Red Cross of Lane County (Oregon) while she was in high school.

Outside of her passion for community service, Jamila has spent most of her professional career serving the public good.  Following her graduation from high school in Oregon, Jamila attended Virginia State University where she studied Sociology. After working a number of years in the private sector, Jamila earned her law degree at the University of Oregon School of Law. While in law school, she dove into diversity and equity efforts in the legal profession via the Black Law Students Association and served on its Western Region and National Executive Boards. Among her many law school activities, Jamila also began to volunteer for an organization that would eventually become BlackPast.org, a free online resource for African American history. BlackPast.org has reached more than 31 million visitors worldwide since its launch in 2007.

Jamila moved to King County in 2007 to begin her legal career. Deeply impacted by the economic recession in 2008, she was unable to find work as an attorney after she passed the bar exam. In the face of this challenge, Jamila focused on volunteerism and social activism. This led her to an opportunity to provide consulting services on behalf of the Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle (“ULMS”) in November 2008 for the Seattle Youth Violence Prevention Initiative (“SYVPI”).  By 2009, she was hired on to be the Central Area Network Coordinator / Director of Street Outreach where she coordinated community interventions and supported hundreds of young people experiencing family, peer or gang conflict; court involvement; school suspension or expulsion; homelessness or other risk factors. Jamila continued her efforts as the Central Area Network Coordinator when the program moved from ULMS to Therapeutic Health Services in 2011. To enhance her work with SYVPI, Jamila graduated from Leadership Tomorrow in 2013. There, Jamila connected with private sector, nonprofit and government leaders to address a broad spectrum of regional challenges in the Puget Sound. This led to an opportunity to serve on the Highline College Foundation Board of Directors.

Like many people, Jamila has experienced financial challenges. In 2012, Jamila suffered a medical emergency causing her to be hospitalized in the ICU for five days. After leaving the hospital, she then faced the mounting medical bills not covered by her health insurance.  Constantly squeezed by her law school, medical and consumer debt, she could barely afford the rent in Seattle. Jamila had to move about several times over the course of six years. She struggled to find affordable housing in Seattle as she moved from Belltown, Queen Anne, Southeast Seattle and then to Renton.

In early 2014, Jamila left THS and SYVPI to launch her own legal practice and nonprofit consulting business, NW Prosper Law. Her clients included everyday people who need help with family law matters and nonprofits seeking guidance on program/organization development and workshop facilitation. Starting her own business also afforded Jamila the flexibility to help care for her mother, Carolyn, and twin brother, William, who are both facing serious chronic illnesses.  Jamila frequently traveled from the Seattle area to Eugene to help her mother and brother.  As their needs grew, Carolyn and William decided to move to King County. Jamila, Carolyn and William made Federal Way their new home in late 2014.

When Carolyn and William were comfortably settled into their new life in Federal Way, Jamila continued her community endeavors. As part of the 2016 graduate of the Washington Leadership Institute, she and her fellow co-hort members produced voter engagement videos available on www.diversevotes.org. Jamila joined Washington’s largest public interest law firm in 2017, Northwest Justice Project, as a staff attorney assisting crime victims, mostly domestic violence survivors, with their civil needs. In 2018, Jamila was promoted to Statewide Advocacy Coordinator where she works to enhance community collaborations, help crime victims access civil legal services, and support crime victim attorneys across the Washington state. Her work allows her to partner and collaborate with prosecutors, criminal defense attorneys, community-based organizations and other advocates seeking to end the cycle of crime victimization. She led the Loren Miller Bar Association’s Judicial Evaluation Committee and was recognized by the organization for her efforts to reinvigorate that committee.

Jamila currently serves as an appointee to the Federal Way Human Services Commission and on the board of the Judicial Institute. Lastly, Jamila is completing her term as as the Vice-President of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. – Delta Upsilon Omega Graduate Chapter and helps to develop its community service efforts throughout Seattle and King County.

Endorsed Candidate for 2022!

Kristine Reeves

On Our Issues:

Bio

Kristine grew up the daughter of a single mother who struggled with substance abuse and relied heavily on social services including Head Start and food stamps. In and out of foster care and even homeless at points in her childhood, Kristine’s journey to elected state representative, a Director of Economic Development in the Commerce Department, and happily married mother of two children is a testimony to the value of public education and the critical investment of public-school educators in transforming her life and helping her break the cycle of poverty. The first in her family to graduate from college, Kristine received her bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Washington State University (Go Cougs!) and a master’s degree in Organizational Leadership from Gonzaga University in Spokane.

Helping Veterans and Military Families 

Kristine is the daughter, granddaughter and twin sister of veterans, which fuels her passion for military families. She has served the state as an immigration advisor to several higher education institutions helping hundreds of international students pursue education opportunities in the United States. Then as the South Sound Regional Director and Statewide Veterans Representative for US Senator Patty Murray, she worked on veterans’ health care, improving military transition and workforce development. She worked for 6.5 years in the Washington Commerce Department as the Director of the Military and Defense Sector, where she helped foster economic opportunities for military families, veterans, and the community. In this role, Kristine helped secure millions of dollars in federal grants to improve private sector job growth, supported military personnel transitioning to private sector jobs, and supported the 1900+ small businesses in the defense sector supply chain during the Department of Defense downsizing.

Achievements

Kristine’s hard work combined with a unique background and professional perspective played an important role in multiple achievements that have provided a national model for progressive action:

  • ensuring educators can afford to live and work in the communities in which they teach our kids

  • launching a Career Connect program that’s linking tens of thousands of students with apprenticeships and on-the-job training

  • passing the country’s most progressive paid family leave policy to care for loved ones or newborns

  • creating the country’s first long term health care benefit to help seniors stay in their homes

  • pushing for the state’s first environmental justice directive to combat climate change and protect communities of color

  • leading the effort to make childcare more accessible and affordable for ALL working families