Elizabeth Scott (politician)
Elizabeth K. Scott (née Warfel,[2] born February 11, 1966) is an American politician and educator who served as member of the Washington House of Representatives, representing the 39th district from 2013 to 2017. A member of the Republican Party, she ran unsuccessfully for the state house in 2010 in the "heavily Democratic"[3] 21st district, but since moved to the 39th district and was first elected to office there in 2012. BackgroundA self-identified strong proponent of individual rights and liberties, she has been a featured speaker at Tea Party events in Everett, Monroe, Olympia, and Puyallup from Tax Day 2009 until the present, speaking to audiences as large as four thousand people.[citation needed] In 2009, Scott served on the Edmonds Citizens' Levy Review Committee, where she argued against a proposed multimillion-dollar tax increase. A self-described "Midwest farm girl," Scott is also a member of the Washington State Farm Bureau, the National Rifle Association, and the Snohomish County Chapter of the Citizens' Alliance for Property Rights.[4] 2010 CampaignOn July 4, Scott announced her candidacy for 21st Legislative District State Representative, position 2.[5] In the top-two primary Scott bested two fellow candidates, a Republican and an independent, to advance to the general election against incumbent democrat Marko Liias.[6] She was endorsed by state Republican leaders including then Attorney General Rob McKenna and U.S. Senate candidate Dino Rossi. In the general election, she reportedly won over 21,000 votes (45.6%), yet Liias still comfortably won by a margin of about 4,000 votes.[7] State LegislatorAfter the 2010 loss, Scott moved to Monroe, in the more rural 39th legislative district. She ran for the open representative, position 2 seat left by Kirk Pearson, who was in turn running for the open state senate. Scott won second place in a crowded top-two primary against three Republicans and two Democrats, narrowly edging out Republican Monroe mayor Robert G. Zimmerman to face first place Eleanor Walters in the general election.[8] Scott won the November election, 53% to Walters' 47%.[9] In her 2014 re-election bid Scott quadrupled her margin of victory from 6 percentage points to 24 (63% to 37%).[10] Congressional CampaignIn 2015, Elizabeth Scott announced her candidacy for Washington's First Congressional District, held by incumbent Suzan DelBene.[11] Scott campaigned for nearly 11 months before suspending her candidacy[12] in May, 2016, citing health concerns. Scott was diagnosed with whooping cough[13] earlier in 2016. AwardsSee also
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