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Wednesday, November 03, 2004 - Page updated at 05:30 P.M.

Gregoire, Rossi race comes down to the wire

By David Ammons
The Associated Press

ALAN BERNER / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Christine Gregoire squeezes past television cameras as the local media join her family watching election returns in her Westin Hotel suite.
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Both Dino Rossi and Christine Gregoire knew that their intense rivalry for governor might produce a tight finish.

After more than a year of campaigning, debates, a furious ad blitz and record spending of over $12 million, they ended up in a virtual tie, each crossing the finish line in a photo-finish early today with 49 percent of the vote, according to the Associated Press.

Hundreds of thousands of mail-in ballots remain uncounted and it could be a week or more before the race is decided. "We've waited 20 years, I guess we can probably wait another week," Rossi told supporters late last night at the Meydenbauer Center in Bellevue. "Stay tuned."

Gregoire also was not ready to declare the race over.

"It's going to be a little bit longer," she told a crowd of Democrats at Seattle's Westin Hotel. "But I'm coming back down here as the next governor of the great state of Washington."

But late last night Rossi pulled ahead in several major counties, including Pierce, Snohomish and Spokane.

It's become a traditional pattern for Democrats running statewide. In the 2000 U.S. Senate race, for instance, Democrat Maria Cantwell upset incumbent Republican Slade Gorton by winning just King and three other counties.

Republican Party Chairman Chris Vance predicted Rossi would gain ground as the mail-in votes are counted. But state Democratic Party Chairman Paul Berendt pointed out that the opposite proved true in the Cantwell-Gorton race.

The winner will replace Democratic incumbent Gov. Gary Locke, who announced more than a year ago he would not seek a third term.

Democrats have won five straight elections and controlled the governor's office for 20 years, the longest reign ever for either party. The last Republican elected governor was John Spellman, in 1980.

Gregoire qualified for yesterday's ballot by trouncing King County Executive Ron Sims in September after a bruising Democratic primary. Rossi faced no significant opposition in the primary.

This year's race was by far the most expensive in state history.

The previous fund-raising record for the top two candidates was $6.5 million raised in 2000 by Locke and his Republican challenger.

As of yesterday, Gregoire and Rossi together had raised more than $12 million in direct donations. On top of that, special-interest groups — most of them from out of state — spent more than $6 million on the race.

Gregoire and Rossi both ran campaigns aimed at appealing to moderate "swing" voters.

Both candidates spent much of their time talking about improving the state's business climate and creating new jobs. And both said pumping up the state's economy, not raising taxes, is the answer to troubles in education, health care and transportation.

Hoping to capitalize on voter discontent with state government, both candidates promised to shake things up in Olympia.

Gregoire promised repeatedly to "blow past the bureaucracy" and Rossi said his top priority would be to rein in burdensome government regulations.

Both candidates talked in broad terms about improving everything from education to transportation, but didn't offer a lot of specifics. As yesterday's election drew closer and polls showed the race tightening, the two sides stepped up their attacks against each other.

Gregoire and her Democratic allies worked hard to paint Rossi as a right-wing extremist, pointing out his stand against abortion and his conservative voting record in the state Senate. They hammered Rossi for his proposal last year to eliminate Medicaid coverage for an estimated 40,000 children.

And the Democrats pounced when The Seattle Times revealed Rossi's close ties during the 1980s to a commercial real-estate executive who went to prison for defrauding investors.

Rossi, meanwhile, accused Gregoire of being part of an Olympia status quo that he blames for most of the state's problems — such as soaring health-care costs and high unemployment.

Rossi and his supporters also aired several television ads reminding voters about some of Gregoire's biggest gaffes as attorney general. In 2000, for instance, her office missed the deadline to appeal an $18 million jury award against the state.

Gregoire gained national recognition as a leader in the 1998 legal settlement between 46 states and the tobacco industry.

Rossi, who worked for two decades in commercial real estate, served seven years in the state Senate before stepping down last fall to run for governor.

He gained prominence in Olympia last year for the major role he played in fixing a record $2.7 billion budget shortfall.

If current trends continue, Washington's next governor will ride into office on an improving economy and falling unemployment rate.

Seattle Times Olympia bureau Ralph Thomas contributed to this report. Ralph Thomas: 360-943-9882 or rthomas@seattletimes.com

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

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