Take a look at the most contested races, which legislators ended up unopposed, and the biggest surprises
Washingtons 2026 Filing Week is over, and the landscape of this years midterm election cycle is now coming into focus. A total of 1,107 candidates filed for 602 offices across the state, ranging from Congress and the Legislature to county courthouses, ports, city councils, and judicial benches. The filing period produced a familiar pattern: a huge opening-day rush, a midweek slowdown, and then a final-day scramble as late-deciding candidates raced the clock to secure a spot on the August Top Two ballot.
The numbers reveal a political map that is becoming more polarized geographically. Democrats are fielding more candidates than Republicans in congressional and legislative races, while Republicans dramatically outnumber Democrats in county-level contests, reflecting the concentration of partisan local offices in smaller rural counties.
At the same time, dozens of legislative races have effectively been decided in one partys favor before voting even begins because the parties didnt recruit someone to run in that district, despite the Democratic Party having an every race, every place philosophy and Republicans vowing to take back Washington from one party rule.
This years filing week also produced a number of surprises. Several Supreme Court hopefuls waited until the eleventh hour to jump in and multiple open seats attracted candidates who had not previously registered campaigns with the Public Disclosure Commission. With the withdrawal deadline still ahead on Monday, the candidate field is not completely final yet, but we know a lot more than we did a week ago.
https://www.nwprogressive.org/weblog/2026/05/filing-week-recap-take-a-look-at-the-most-contested-races-which-legislators-ended-up-unopposed-and-the-biggest-surprises.html