

Dave Reichert, the former Republican congressman and King County Sheriff, and Bob Ferguson, the Democratic three-term state attorney general, will meet in Seattle for a live debate at 8 p.m.
Carleen Johnson
The Center Square Washington
Washington state gubernatorial candidates Dave Reichert and Bob Ferguson are preparing for their first televised debate on Tuesday.
Reichert, the former Republican congressman and King County Sheriff, and Ferguson, the Democratic three-term state attorney general, will meet in Seattle for a live debate at 8 p.m. on KING 5, following the presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump.
The Center Square reached out to both the Reichert and Ferguson campaigns on Monday, but only received a response from Reichert, who said he expects Ferguson to continue negative attacks that have shown up in campaign ads.
“He’s got a lot more money than we do, so his ads have been out there and his attacks continue,” Reichert said.
“The problem with Bob’s attacks is they are all lies,” he continued. “He says that I want to reduce teacher pay, and that’s not true. It was taken out of context from a discussion of our education budget.”
Reichert said Ferguson can’t stand on his own record.
“The only thing he can do is lie about my positions and spread fear,” Reichert claimed. “He cannot stand on his own record, so what he has to try and do is destroy my character and credibility.”
Political strategist Ron Dotzauer of Strategies 360 told The Center Square Ferguson is the obvious frontrunner, but Reichert is the more likeable candidate.
“Likeability becomes a major factor in debates,” Dotzauer explained. “People are watching and thinking, ‘Is this somebody I’d like to sit down and have a cup of coffee with?’”
Dotzauer’s golden rule in any debate is to not say anything to set the campaign back.
“Do no harm,” he said. “Don’t screw up, and that means no misstatements or factual errors, because debates can’t necessarily help a candidate that much, but it can hurt them.”
Dotzauer worked on the Booth Gardner campaign. Gardner served as governor of Washington from 1985 to 1993.
“Booth Gardner was not a very good debater, so I set up a debate on Halloween night, knowing people weren’t going to be watching,” he said.
As for the gubernatorial debate following the highly anticipated presidential debate?
“I think there will be a hell of a viewership for the presidential debate, but I’m not sure about the gubernatorial debate,” said Dotzauer, who suggested viewers may be glued to commentary following the presidential debate and skip the gubernatorial debate. “If I was Bob Ferguson, I would have picked this time, and if you’re Dave Reichert, you’d probably have a different time because he needs to score some points.”
Reichert said his focus will be on crime, the economy, homelessness and education.
“We have a minute and 15 seconds to answer a question,” he said. “I think we get a 45 second response time.”
The candidates will be standing at podiums and there will be no live audience.
Reichert said he gave Ferguson the choice of going first or second for the opening and closing statements at the debate.
“I always like to test personalities,” he said. “I let him choose, and of course he chose last for both.”
The Center Square reached out to Ferguson’s campaign for comment but did not receive a response.
Ferguson and Reichert were the top two vote getters in Washington’s Aug. 6 primary election, advancing to the general election.
The candidates will meet again on Sept. 18 in Spokane.
This report was first published by The Center Square Washington.
Also read:
- 18th District lawmakers to host town hall meeting on Saturday, March 28, in Battle GroundStephanie McClintock and John Ley will meet with Battle Ground constituents to answer questions, review the new income tax, and discuss the effects of the $80 billion budget.
- POLL: After hearing state leaders describe the I-5 Bridge as vulnerable in an earthquake, what is your reaction?State and local leaders describe the I-5 Bridge as structurally at risk but recommend drivers continue crossing it while complex replacement plans unfold.
- Opinion: Historical state income tax and another massive operating budget highlight the end of the 2026 legislative sessionRep. John Ley details the passage of a state income tax, an expanding $80 billion budget, and new Clark County infrastructure funding following the 2026 legislative session.
- VIDEO: Legal challenges certain as Gov. Ferguson prepares to sign new income taxSenate Minority Leader John Braun and other legislators expect legal challenges and initiative efforts to follow Gov. Ferguson’s signature on Washington’s new income tax law affecting high earners and businesses.
- Opinion: Fighting for transparency in Washington governmentA recent court decision allows Washington lawmakers broad new secrecy over internal records, as advocates report rising obstacles to government transparency and public engagement.







