In a slight improvement over his 2004 performance, incumbent Democratic Congressman
Brian Baird easily won a fifth term over Republican challenger Michael Messmore.
In his bid for a seventh term, Republican incumbent Congressman
Doc Hastings beat back a spirited challenge from Democratic nominee Richard Wright. Though Hastings eventually beat Wright by a fairly solid margin, it was not the kind of landslide that Hastings usually experienced in this strongly conservative district based in
Central Washington.
Washington's 4th congressional district election, 2006)
Like neighboring Congressman
Hastings, incumbent Republican Congresswoman
Cathy McMorris Rodgers faced a surprisingly strong challenge from Democratic nominee
Peter J. Goldmark in her conservative,
Eastern Washington district. Though Rodgers ultimately edged Goldmark out by a comfortable margin, the race got close enough for
CQ Politics to change its rating on the race to Republican Favored from Safe Republican.[3]
Washington's 5th congressional district election, 2006)
Long-serving Democratic incumbent
Norm Dicks, a high-ranking member on the
Appropriations Committee did not face a credible challenge to his bid for a sixteenth term from conservative activist
Doug Cloud in this liberal,
Kitsap Peninsula-based district.
In his bid for a ninth term, incumbent Democratic Congressman
Jim McDermott easily beat out Republican nominee Steve Beren and independent Linnea S. Noreen in this very liberal,
Seattle-based district.
In 2004, then-
King County Sheriff
Dave Reichert won his first campaign for the
United States House of Representatives by a five-point margin. 2006 proved to be just as tough of a year for Reichert. Facing former
Microsoft executive
Darcy Burner for the first time, Reichert faced a grueling battle for re-election. Polls taken in October showed the two candidates to be about even[4] and the two major newspapers in the area--the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the
Seattle Times--split their endorsements: The Post-Intelligencer endorsed Burner[5] while the Times supported Reichert.[6] Ultimately, though, a few weeks after election day, it became evident that Reichert had beaten out Burner and had won a second term.
Incumbent Democratic Congressman
Adam Smith easily beat out Republican candidate Steven Cofchin for a sixth term in this
Western Washington district based in the
Puget Sound.