Dino Rossi

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Dino Rossi
Member of the Washington Senate
from the 5th district
In office
July 2012 – November 30, 2012
Preceded by Cheryl Pflug
Succeeded by Mark Mullet
In office
1997–2003
Preceded by Kathleen Drew
Succeeded by Cheryl Pflug
Chairman of the Washington Senate Ways and Means Committee
In office
2003
Personal details
Born (1959-10-15) October 15, 1959 (age 64)
Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Nationality American
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Terry
Children 4 children (2 sons, 2 daughters)
Residence Sammamish, Washington
Alma mater Seattle University (B.A.)
Occupation Real estate salesman

Dino Rossi (born October 15, 1959) is a former member of the Washington State Senate.[1] He is an American commercial real estate executive,[2] two-time Republican candidate for Governor of Washington, and former Republican candidate for United States Senate. His first run for the Governor's mansion in the 2004 election became the closest gubernatorial race in U.S. history; Rossi was certified as Governor-elect before losing a hand recount to Democrat Christine Gregoire.[3] He ran for Governor of Washington again in 2008, losing to Gregoire 47% to 53%.

Rossi began his career in the commercial real estate industry and has continued to invest in and manage income properties. After the 2008 election, Rossi returned his full attention to real estate.[4] During the spring of 2010 there was speculation that Rossi might enter the 2010 Senate race to challenge incumbent Patty Murray. Rossi entered the race on May 26, 2010.[5] On August 17, 2010 Rossi defeated his Republican primary challengers, but lost to incumbent Senator Patty Murray (a Democrat) in the November 2 general election 47% to 52%.[6]

Early life, education and career

Rossi was the youngest of seven children brought up by his mother Eve, a beautician, and his father John Rossi, an Italian-American Seattle Public Schools teacher at Viewlands Elementary in North Seattle.[7] Rossi was raised in Mountlake Terrace and graduated from Woodway High School in Edmonds. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in Business Management from Seattle University in 1982.

After college, Rossi began in the commercial real estate business.[2] He became a commercial real estate salesman, managing and owning real estate.[8] Rossi was formerly an owner of the Everett Aquasox minor league baseball team.[9] He is co-founder of the Bellevue, Washington-based Eastside Commercial Bank.[10]

Rossi is married, with four children, and lives in Sammamish, Washington.[11]

Political career

State Senate tenure

In 1992, Rossi ran for a Washington State Senate seat in a district representing suburbs east of Seattle, Washington in the Cascade foothills. After winning a divisive Republican Party primary, he lost the general election. In 1996, Rossi ran again for the State Senate and was elected.

Rossi served in the Washington State Senate from 1997 until December 2003, when he resigned to spend full-time running for governor.[12] During his time as senator, he gained a reputation for being a political consensus builder with a proven ability to build bipartisan coalitions.[13] When the Senate Republicans gained the majority in 2002, Rossi became chair of the Senate Ways and Means Committee that writes the state’s two year operating budget. It was in this position that Rossi was widely credited for closing a $2.7 billion budget deficit without raising taxes.[14] He passed this budget with bipartisan support,[15] gaining praise from members of both parties, including the ranking Democrat on the budget committee. The budget chief for Democratic Governor Gary Locke said of Rossi in 2003, “The really good legislators move from one side to the other really effortlessly, and I think Dino did that.”[13]

Rossi sponsored a number of bills as a state senator prior to his role as chair of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, including the Two Strikes bill that puts child molesters away for life after a second conviction.[16] In 1998, he sponsored the Mary Johnsen Act,[17] named for a Sammamish resident who was killed by a drunk driver. The bill required ignition interlock devices for certain convicted drunk drivers in the state of Washington. Rossi received the national finalist award from Mothers Against Drunk Driving for his work. He also sponsored the Dane Rempfer bill[18] which boosted penalties for those who left the scene of a fatal accident, named after a 15-year-old boy from his district who was killed in a hit-and-run. It was his work on the 2003 budget that spurred others to recruit Rossi to run for governor.[19]

2004 gubernatorial campaign

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Rossi decided to run in November 2003,[20] but was already facing an uphill battle in terms of money raised, low name identification with voters and trends established by the two prior GOP candidates for governor. The sitting Washington State Attorney General and Rossi’s eventual opponent in the general election, Christine Gregoire, had already raised $1.15 million by December, only weeks after Rossi officially kicked off his campaign.[21] Furthermore, the previous two GOP candidates for governor had lost their campaign bids by 16% and 18.7% in 1996 and 2000.[22]

In the November 2 election, over 2.8 million votes were cast for Governor. After the initial vote count, Rossi led Democrat Christine Gregoire by 261 votes.[23] Washington State law required a recount because of the small margin. After the second count, Rossi again led, but by a smaller margin of 42 votes. After a third count, done by hand, Gregoire took a 129 vote lead (expanded to a 133 vote lead after Justice Bridges' decision threw out 4 votes for Rossi).[24]

King County's election department was sued by the Rossi campaign for its handling of ballots, including untracked use of a "ballot-on-demand" printing machine.[25] Even before the election date, the U.S. Department of Justice threatened to sue Washington State for failing to mail military ballots overseas, generally assumed to be Republican votes.[26]

Republican leaders in Washington claimed there were enough disputed votes to change the outcome of the election and sued. On May 25, 2005 the judge hearing the lawsuit ruled that the Party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible, or for whom they were cast, to enable the court to overturn the election.[27]

Rossi did not appeal to the state Supreme Court;[28] Gregoire was declared governor, by a margin of 133 votes.[24]

Between 2004 and 2008

After the election and the ensuing court battle, Rossi returned to his work in real estate and wrote a book, Dino Rossi: Lessons in Leadership, Business, Politics and Life.[29][30] Along with former Seattle Mariner baseball star Jay Buhner, he also purchased a minority share in the Seattle Mariners' single A minor league baseball team, the Everett Aquasox.[31] Rossi also established Forward Washington Foundation, a 501(c)(4) non-profit lobbying entity dedicated to promoting changes to Washington's small business climate.[32] In 2007, the state Democratic Party filed a complaint with the Washington Public Disclosure Committee (PDC) asserting that the Forward Washington Foundation was too similar to a campaign to be exempt from campaign finance laws.[33] Prior to her party’s formal complaint, Gregoire stated to donors that he was “campaigning aggressively".[34] The PDC dismissed in totality the allegations made by the Washington State Democrats, deeming each accusatory claim as “insufficient” and stating that the organization was indeed acting consistent with its mission statement, making it “a social welfare organization ... and not a political committee”.[35]

2008 gubernatorial campaign

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On October 25, 2007, Dino Rossi announced his intention to seek the office of Governor of Washington in 2008. Rossi's campaign was centered on many of the same issues he ran under in the 2004 election, namely controlling the spending of the state's legislature, tax cuts, and improving the business environment within the state.[36]

In 2004, Rossi was listed on the ballot as a Republican. In 2008, his affiliation was listed as "Prefers G.O.P. Party" as he had filed with the Washington Secretary of State.[37][38][39][40][41] Washington law allows candidates to identify their party affiliation or preference in any way they please, provided that it is not profane.[42][43]

Rossi has said pharmacists should not be required to dispense a drug that is against their conscience or religious beliefs when asked about the Plan B oral contraceptive.[44] Following a ruling by the State Supreme Court that an initiative that limited property tax increases to 1% a year was unconstitutional, Rossi urged Governor Gregoire to call a special session of the State's legislature to re-instate the restriction.[45] As of September 2008, the Rossi campaign was reported to have raised $9 million while the Gregoire campaign took in $10 million overall.[46] A poll in early October showed Rossi tied with Governor Gregoire in the race for Governor.[47] A later poll by the Elway Group showed Rossi trailing Gov. Gregoire by 12 percent.[48][49][50]

On October 7, a lawsuit was filed against the Building Industry Association of Washington, for allegedly coordinating fundraising activities with Rossi in violation of Washington's public finance laws. Rossi's campaign spokeswoman dismissed the suit as a desperate attempt by Gregoire's supporters to win an election through frivolous legal maneuvering, a claim that was denied by the lawyer that filed the suit.[51] Rossi was endorsed on October 18, 2008 by The Seattle Times.[52]

Dino Rossi was defeated by Governor Christine Gregoire in the 2008 election and formally conceded at noon on November 5, 2008.[53] Her margin of victory was 53.2% to 46.8%.[54]

Between 2008 and 2010

Following his defeat in the 2008 gubernatorial election, Rossi "unplugged from almost everything political" and became a principal at a commercial real estate firm called Coast Equity Partners in Everett, Washington. Rossi's role at the firm is to find investors for income producing properties in Washington and four other Western U.S. states.[55]

2010 U.S. Senate campaign

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In early 2010, Washington State Republicans began courting various conservatives to challenge incumbent Senator Patty Murray in a year that was seen by many as a vulnerable year for Democrats. On May 26, 2010, Dino Rossi officially announced his candidacy.[5] In the Republican primary, Rossi defeated Tea Party favorite Clint Didier 33.98% - 11.99%. Rossi went on to lose the general Election on November 4, after two days' worth of ballot counting indicated that he would not have enough votes to defeat Sen. Murray.

2012 Appointment to the State Senate

On July 11, 2012, Rossi was appointed to fill the term of Senator Cheryl Pflug.[56] Rossi left office in November 2012, when Mark Mullet was sworn in.[57]

Electoral history

September 1992 State Senator District #5 Primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kathleen Drew 8,598 36.21
Republican Dino J. Rossi 6,563 24.64
Republican Dick Welsh 3,215 13.54
Republican Bob Brady 2,788 11.74
Republican Gwenn Escher 2,581 10.87
November 1992 State Senator District #5 General election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kathleen Drew 26,042 52.10
Republican Dino J. Rossi 23,942 47.90
September 1996 State Senator District #5 Primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kathleen Drew 10,331 40.16
Republican Dino J. Rossi 8,291 32.33
Republican Dave Irons 7,100 27.60
November 1996 State Senator District #5 General election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dino Rossi 28,286 53.20
Democratic Kathleen Drew 24,882 46.80
September 2000 State Senator District #5 Primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dino Rossi 20,318 77.93
Democratic Azziem Hassan Underwood 5,754 22.07
November 2000 State Senator District #5 General
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dino Rossi 40,460 69.58
Democratic Azziem Hassan Underwood 17,686 30.42
2004 Washington state gubernatorial election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Christine Gregoire 1,373,361 48.8730
Republican Dino Rossi 1,373,232 48.8717
2008 Washington state gubernatorial election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Christine Gregoire 1,598,738 53.24
Republican Dino Rossi 1,404,124 46.76
2010 Washington U.S. Senate blanket primary[58]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Patty Murray (Incumbent) 433,211 46.04
Republican Dino Rossi 319,708 33.98
Republican Clint Didier 112,774 11.99
Republican Paul Akers 23,889 2.54
N/A Others 49,292 5.46
United States Senate election in Washington, 2010
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Patty Murray 1,314,930 52.36
Republican Dino Rossi 1,196,164 47.64
Total votes 2,511,094 100.00
Voter turnout 71.24%

References

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  56. Dino Rossi appointed to be state senator again
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  58. Elections, August 17, 2010 Primary, U.S. Senator (Partisan office, 6-year term), Washington Secretary of State
  59. http://vote.wa.gov/Elections/WEI/Results.aspx?RaceTypeCode=O&JurisdictionTypeID=1&ElectionID=37&ViewMode=Results

External links

Washington State Senate
Preceded by
Kathleen Drew
Washington Senate, 5th District
1997-2003
Succeeded by
Cheryl Pflug
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Washington
2004, 2008
Succeeded by
Rob McKenna
Preceded by Republican nominee for United States Senator from Washington
(Class III)

2010
Most recent