2024 Washington Attorney General election
The 2024 Washington Attorney General election was held on November 5, 2024, to elect the next attorney general of Washington , concurrently with the 2024 U.S. presidential election , as well as elections to the U.S. Senate and various state and local elections, including for U.S. House and governor of Washington . Incumbent Democratic Attorney General Bob Ferguson was eligible to seek re-election to a fourth term but had chosen instead to run successfully for governor .[ 1] U.S. Attorney Nick Brown , a Democrat, won the election against Pasco Mayor Pete Serrano, a Republican.[ 2]
Background
This the first open attorney general race since 2012, when Bob Ferguson first ran for the office. The primary election was expected to split the Democratic vote as Democrats Nick Brown and Manka Dhingra were on the primary ballot. Both Brown and Dhingra campaigned on similar issues like protecting access to abortion in the state, upholding gun control laws and ensuring public safety.[ 3] [ 4] Once Brown advanced to the general election, he advocated for similar measures along with "policy improvements" the Attorney General position can utilize to counter various issues like illicit drugs.[ 5] Republican Pete Serrano campaigned on stopping human trafficking, making communities safer, and government accountability.[ 6] Serrano opposed gun control and had previously expressed personal opposition to abortion,[ 3] but said he would uphold Washington's current abortion laws if elected, describing abortion as a "settled issue".[ 5] However, Serrano indicated he would not enforce the Washington Shield Law enacted in 2023, which protects Washington residents from criminal and civil actions in other states that restrict abortion.[ 7]
Candidates
Washington is one of two states that holds a top-two primary , meaning that all candidates are listed on the same ballot regardless of party affiliation, and the top two move on to the general election.
Democratic Party
Advanced to general
Eliminated in primary
Republican Party
Advanced to general
Pete Serrano, mayor of Pasco (2022–present) and director of conservative legal nonprofit[ 10]
Primary election
Endorsements
Polling
Debate
Results
Blanket primary results by county 30–40%
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
General election
Predictions
Polling
Debates
2024 Washington Attorney General debates
No.
Date
Host
Moderator
Link
Democratic
Republican
Key: P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn
Nick Brown
Pete Serrano
1
Sep. 18, 2024
Association of Washington Business
Paul Reed
TVW
P
P
2
Sep. 19, 2024
Seattle CityClub Washington State Debate Coalition
YouTube
P
P
Results
By county
County results
County[ 28]
Nick Brown
Democratic
Pete Serrano
Republican
Write-in
Various
Margin
Total votes
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
Adams
1,280
24.93%
3,842
74.82%
13
0.25%
-2,562
-49.89%
5,135
Asotin
3,764
34.23%
7,218
65.64%
14
0.13%
-3,454
-31.41%
10,996
Benton
34,262
35.28%
62,767
64.64%
75
0.08%
-28,505
-29.36%
97,104
Chelan
16,706
41.45%
23,573
58.48%
28
0.07%
-6,867
-17.04%
40,307
Clallam
24,149
51.41%
22,769
48.47%
53
0.11%
1,380
2.94%
46,971
Clark
132,837
50.53%
129,719
49.34%
340
0.13%
3,118
1.19%
262,896
Columbia
590
24.85%
1,780
74.98%
4
0.17%
-1,190
-50.13%
2,374
Cowlitz
21,727
38.03%
35,347
61.87%
54
0.09%
-13,620
-23.84%
57,128
Douglas
6,853
33.59%
13,533
66.33%
17
0.08%
-6,680
-32.74%
20,403
Ferry
1,211
30.34%
2,778
69.61%
2
0.05%
-1,567
-39.26%
3,991
Franklin
11,009
35.58%
19,917
64.36%
18
0.06%
-8,908
-28.79%
30,944
Garfield
283
21.64%
1,025
78.36%
0
0.00%
-742
-56.73%
1,308
Grant
9,749
27.96%
25,095
71.97%
25
0.07%
-15,346
-44.01%
34,869
Grays Harbor
16,445
45.25%
19,866
54.66%
35
0.10%
-3,421
-9.41%
36,346
Island
27,675
54.60%
22,951
45.28%
58
0.11%
4,724
9.32%
50,684
Jefferson
16,884
69.99%
7,224
29.95%
14
0.06%
9,660
40.05%
24,122
King
776,835
71.71%
305,553
28.20%
977
0.09%
471,282
43.50%
1,083,365
Kitsap
85,807
56.75%
65,259
43.16%
147
0.10%
20,548
13.59%
151,213
Kittitas
9,826
38.74%
15,516
61.17%
22
0.09%
-5,690
-22.43%
25,364
Klickitat
5,529
42.42%
7,495
57.50%
10
0.08%
-1,966
-15.08%
13,034
Lewis
13,764
31.46%
29,963
68.48%
27
0.06%
-16,199
-37.02%
43,754
Lincoln
1,482
21.40%
5,437
78.51%
6
0.09%
-3,955
-57.11%
6,925
Mason
16,210
45.79%
19,139
54.06%
53
0.15%
-2,929
-8.27%
35,402
Okanogan
7,975
39.83%
12,034
60.09%
16
0.08%
-4,059
-20.27%
20,025
Pacific
6,553
47.77%
7,153
52.14%
13
0.09%
-600
-4.37%
13,719
Pend Oreille
2,321
27.98%
5,962
71.87%
12
0.14%
-3,641
-43.89%
8,295
Pierce
220,617
52.08%
202,628
47.83%
360
0.08%
17,989
4.25%
423,605
San Juan
9,028
72.75%
3,367
27.13%
14
0.11%
5,661
45.62%
12,409
Skagit
34,283
51.04%
32,838
48.89%
47
0.07%
1,445
2.15%
67,168
Skamania
2,963
42.17%
4,060
57.79%
3
0.04%
-1,097
-15.61%
7,026
Snohomish
220,566
55.49%
176,616
44.43%
327
0.08%
43,950
11.06%
397,509
Spokane
120,802
43.73%
155,092
56.15%
326
0.12%
-34,290
-12.41%
276,220
Stevens
6,971
25.31%
20,549
74.60%
26
0.09%
-13,578
-49.29%
27,546
Thurston
90,343
56.86%
68,388
43.05%
142
0.09%
21,955
13.82%
158,873
Wahkiakum
1,156
39.59%
1,762
60.34%
2
0.07%
-606
-20.75%
2,920
Walla Walla
12,089
42.13%
16,597
57.84%
11
0.04%
-4,508
-15.71%
28,697
Whatcom
79,277
59.65%
53,531
40.28%
96
0.07%
25,746
19.37%
132,904
Whitman
9,672
50.13%
9,603
49.77%
20
0.10%
69
0.36%
19,295
Yakima
34,077
39.52%
51,938
60.24%
209
0.24%
-17,861
-20.71%
86,224
Totals
2,093,570
55.58%
1,669,884
44.33%
3,616
0.10%
423,686
11.25%
3,767,070
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
By congressional district
Brown won six of ten congressional districts, with the remaining four going to Serrano, including two that elected Democrats.[ 29]
Notes
^ Key: A – all adults RV – registered voters LV – likely voters V – unclear
^ Key: A – all adults RV – registered voters LV – likely voters V – unclear
Partisan clients
References
^ "Ferguson wins WA governor's race" . The Seattle Times . November 5, 2024. Retrieved November 8, 2024 .
^ "Former U.S. attorney beats Pasco mayor to become next WA attorney general" . The Seattle Times . November 5, 2024. Retrieved November 8, 2024 .
^ a b Santos, Melissa (August 1, 2024). "How Washington AG candidates compare on policing, drug laws and more" . Axios . Retrieved September 5, 2024 .
^ Demkovich, Laurel (August 7, 2024). "Serrano, Brown poised to advance in Washington attorney general race • Washington State Standard" . Washington State Standard . Retrieved September 5, 2024 .
^ a b "Key takeaways from the WA attorney general debates" . The Seattle Times . September 20, 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024 .
^ "Issues – Pete Serrano for Attorney General" . Retrieved September 21, 2024 .
^ "Gun control, abortion take center stage in race for Washington's next attorney general | The Spokesman-Review" . www.spokesman.com . Retrieved October 26, 2024 .
^ Cornfield, Jerry (July 12, 2023). "A second Democrat enters race for state attorney general" . Washington State Standard.
^ Cornfield, Jerry (May 9, 2023). "The race begins for Washington attorney general" . Washington State Standard. Retrieved May 10, 2023 .
^ Cornfield, Jerry (January 6, 2024). "The Republican who wants to be Washington's next attorney general" . Washington State Standard.
^ Minnis, Glenn (July 20, 2023). "Gov. Inslee endorses Nick Brown for Washington state attorney general" . The Center Square . Retrieved July 21, 2023 .
^ "The Seattle Times editorial board recommends: Nick Brown for Washington attorney general | Editorial" . The Seattle Times . May 31, 2024. Retrieved June 14, 2024 .
^ "The Stranger's Endorsements for the August, 6, 2024 Primary Election" . July 31, 2024.
^ "EMILYs List Endorses Manka Dhingra for Washington State Attorney General" . EMILYs List . Archived from the original on December 7, 2023. Retrieved December 7, 2023 .
^ "Our 2024 Endorsements" . National Women's Political Caucus of Washington. Retrieved July 18, 2023 .
^ "Facebook" . www.facebook.com . Retrieved July 25, 2025 .
^ Villenueve, Andrew (April 21, 2024). "Here's who the Republican Party endorsed for statewide office at its 2024 convention in Spokane" . The Cascadia Advocate . Retrieved April 26, 2024 .
^ a b Public Policy Polling (D)
^ Public Policy Polling (D)
^ Public Policy Polling (D)
^ YouTube
^ Hobbs, Steve (August 22, 2024). "Canvass of the Returns of the Primary Held on August 6, 2024" (PDF) . Secretary of State of Washington . Archived (PDF) from the original on July 6, 2025. Retrieved July 15, 2025 .
^ Jacobson, Louis (January 31, 2024). "This Year's Key Attorney General and Secretary of State Races" . University of Virginia Center for Politics .
^ ActiVote
^ Strategies 360
^ Cascade PBS/Elway Research
^ Hobbs, Steve (December 4, 2024). "Canvass of the Returns of the General Election Held on November 5, 2024" (PDF) . Secretary of State of Washington . Archived (PDF) from the original on July 4, 2025. Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
^ Hobbs, Steve (November 5, 2024). "Attorney General - County Results" . Secretary of State of Washington . Archived from the original on March 21, 2025. Retrieved July 23, 2025 .
^ "2024Gen Results by Congressional District" (PDF) . sos.wa.gov . Archived (PDF) from the original on December 28, 2024.
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