What is Vote by Mail?
What is the 49th parallel?
What is 12 electoral votes?
What is judicial?
What is Whitman County?
Who is the Secretary of State?
What is a U.S. President?
Who is Sacagawea?
What is race?
What is the Revised Coded of Washington?
What are the Cascades?
What is land?
What is a U.S. citizen?
Who are Suffragists?
What is the Grand Coulee Dam?
What is an initiative?
What is petrified wood?
What is a ballot?
What is the square dance?
What is the Top 2 Primary?
Who are 18 year olds?
Who is Governor Gregoire?
What is the Columbia River?
What is gerrymandering?
What is the Voters’ Pamphlet?
To be eligible to register to vote, you must be a resident of the state, at least 18 years old, and this.
This process allows voters to propose legislation by petition.
As of the 2010 U.S. Census, Washington has this many electoral votes.
This grand structure 90 miles west of Spokane is 550 feet in elevation; it is taller than the Great Pyramid in Egypt and more the double the height of Niagara Falls.
This woman accompanied Lewis and Clark on their three year expedition from St. Louis to what is now Washington State.
This official Washington State gemstone doesn’t look like a gem at all.
This county, home to Washington State University, was named after a prominent missionary.
Voters mark this piece of paper to indicate their choices for candidates and measures.
In 1776, voters had to be white men age 21 or older, and own this.
Our state laws are often referred to as “RCWs”, which stands for this.
This mountain range features Mt. Rainier, the highest peak in Washington State.
The Civil Rights Act passed in 1964, ensured that all men and women age 21 and older had the right to vote, regardless of this.
This river constitutes the southern border of Washington State.
In Washington State, this elected official is third in line behind the Governor and Lt. Governor.
In Washington, the top two vote-getters in this August contest are the candidates who move on to the November general election.
Although not as well known as the apple, our state fruit, this dance (originally called the “quadrille” by pioneers) is still popular today; it is one of 17 official state symbols.
This Washington State official was the winner of the closest gubernatorial race in U.S. history, winning the 2004 election by just 133 votes out of 2.8 million cast.
The 26th Amendment, ratified in 1971 in response to the drafting of young men into the Vietnam War, gave these people the right to vote.
The state seal, featured on our flag, is the only seal that depicts one of these.
In 1910, Washington State granted women the right to vote and hold public office thanks to advocates known as these.
This forms the boundary between Washington and Canada.
In 2011, Washington became the second state in the nation to completely abolish poll sites, instead conducting this type of election.
This word, coined in 1812, refers to then Governor Eldridge Gerry of Massachusetts, who manipulated election boundaries to give his party unfair advantages by creating highly partisan districts.
This provides information about candidates and measures, and is mailed to every home in the state.
Like our federal government, Washington State’s government is divided into three branches; executive, legislative, and this.