
WAGOP offers school board candidates that it supports in these districts includes voter data, precinct analysis, fundraising advice and tools, policy training and human resources to assist with doorbelling, outbound phone calls and public events
The Washington State Republican Party (WAGOP) is expanding its program for supporting conservative, results-oriented school board candidates from races in a few dozen districts two years ago to more than 60 districts in 2025. Click here for the list of WAGOP-targeted school board races and candidates.

“Our school board program was a great success when we launched it 2023,” says WAGOP Chairman Rep. Jim Walsh. “That year, we targeted 36 races and helped the winning candidates in 32 of those contests. That result surprised many people. This year, we’re targeting twice as many races in 61 school districts around the state. Our goal is to build on proven success and help grow the conservative caucus among locally elected school directors in Washington.”
The 61 school districts that have WAGOP-targeted school board races this year are:
- Aberdeen
- Battle Ground
- Bellingham
- Bethel
- Blaine
- Cashmere
- Central Valley
- Cheney
- Damman
- Eastmont
- Eatonville
- Edmonds
- Ellensburg
- Enumclaw
- Everett
- Evergreen
- Federal Way
- Ferndale
- Highline
- Hood Canal
- Issaquah
- Kelso
- Kennewick
- Kent
- Lake Washington
- Longview
- Lyle
- Lynden
- Mary Walker
- Mead
- Mercer Island
- Meridian
- Mount Vernon
- Mossyrock
- Napavine
- North Kitsap
- Northshore
- Omak
- Oroville
- Pasco
- Peninsula
- Pioneer
- Port Angeles
- Port Townsend
- Puyallup
- Quilcene
- Riverside
- Sedro-Woolley
- Selah
- Shelton
- Snohomish
- Steilacoom
- Sumner-Bonney Lake
- Sunnyside
- Tacoma
- Toledo
- Toutle
- West Valley
- White Pass
- Yakima
- Zillah
“This is a geographically diverse, demographically diverse group of districts,” says Chairman Walsh. “We didn’t cherry-pick easy races in districts where common-sense conservatives already run things. We’re targeting districts that we need to win, to fix our struggling public school system here in Washington.”
The specific help WAGOP offers school board candidates that it supports in these districts includes voter data, precinct analysis, fundraising advice and tools, policy training and human resources to assist with doorbelling, outbound phone calls and public events.
“Great candidates for school boards come in all shapes—some have years of experience in public schools, others are concerned parents or grandparents new to K-12 education policy and politics,” adds Chairman Walsh. “So, their needs are different. And their districts are different. WAGOP offers each a menu campaign tools and support, from which the candidate can choose the pieces that help most. We don’t tell candidates how to run. We just give them the support to run effectively. And to win.”
In some of these 61 Washington school districts, WAGOP is supporting more than one candidate. In a few districts, WAGOP is supporting slates of candidates that—if elected—will have operational majorities on their boards. More details on these candidates, including their names and links to their campaign web sites are now available.
“Providing a high-quality basic education to the children of Washington is the paramount duty of our state government,” Chairman Walsh concludes. “In recent years, our state government has struggled to fulfill that duty. Washington has fallen from having one of the top three or four public school systems in the United States to ranking below Mississippi. The WAGOP program for supporting common-sense school board candidates helps return our focus to excellence in reading, writing, math, and the hard sciences. This is part of fixing our broken K-12 public school system. It’s critical that this program grows and succeeds.”
Also read:
- Former legislator and County Chair Eileen Quiring O’Brien announces candidacy for Clark County auditorFormer Clark County Chair Eileen Quiring O’Brien has announced her candidacy for county auditor following Greg Kimsey’s decision not to seek re-election.
- WA Democrats push for mid-decade redraw of congressional mapsWashington Democrats have introduced a constitutional amendment that would allow congressional redistricting outside the normal post-census cycle, drawing sharp partisan debate.
- County Council votes to increase sales tax for yet-to-be-finalized plan for affordable housingClark County Council approved a sales tax increase intended for housing-related uses despite concerns from one councilor that no final spending plan is in place.
- Opinion: Majority party policies still making life more expensive for WashingtoniansRep. John Ley outlines his opposition to new taxes, raises concerns about state spending, and details legislation he plans to pursue during the 2026 Washington legislative session.
- Fluoride fights bubble up around WashingtonCity councils across Washington are debating whether to remove fluoride from drinking water as dental and health experts cite long-standing evidence of its safety and benefits.







