Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Cook Partisan Voting Index: D+17
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: unemployment rate: 5.5%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median rent: $1,789
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median property value: $485,400
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Spanish-language households: 49,644
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Korean-language households: 9,439
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: foreign-born population: 11.5% (89,400 people)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Asian (Non-Hispanic) population share: 7.5% (58,600 people)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Hispanic population share: 13.6% (105,000 people)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: White (Non-Hispanic) population share: 62.1%
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median age: 36.8
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: bachelor's degree or higher: 32.1%
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: homeownership rate: 62.3%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: poverty rate: 6.5% (LegisLetter) / 9.45% (Data USA 2024)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median household income: $94,427
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: population: 777,317 (2024)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Washington Initiative 2117 — Repeal Cap-and-Trade Program (2024) (2024) — failed, margin 38% Yes — 62% No
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 (share 0.12)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 92 (share 0.14)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.16)
Added: 02 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: MultiCare Health System (Tacoma hospitals) (10000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: State of Washington (Olympia state government) (17000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Joint Base Lewis-McChord (U.S. Army / U.S. Air Force) (45000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] District summary: Washington's 10th Congressional District encompasses the southern Puget Sound region, including the state capital of Olympia, much of Tacoma, and suburban communities in Pierce and Thurston counties including Lacey, Lakewood, Puyallup, and University Place. Home to approximately 777,317 constituents, the district is majority-White (62.1%), with significant Hispanic (13.6%), Asian (7.5%), and multiracial populations. The median household income is $94,427 — more than double the $37,585 national median. The poverty rate is 6.5%, homeownership is 62.3%, and only 32.1% of adults hold a bachelor's degree — below the 33.7% national average. The median age is 36.8 (younger than the 38.5 national average), with 30% of residents in the 20-39 working-age bracket. 11.5% of residents (89,400 people) are foreign-born, and 17.5% of households speak a non-English language at home — predominantly Spanish (49,644 households), Korean (9,439), and Tagalog (9,278). The economy is anchored by Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM) — one of the largest military installations on the West Coast — state government (Olympia), healthcare, and the Port of Tacoma. The district has a Cook PVI of D+17 and is a safe Democratic seat. Strickland succeeded Rep. Denny Heck and has represented the district since 2021, winning the 2024 general election with approximately 59% of the vote.
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 8034 (National Security Supplemental (Israel, Ukraine, Taiwan — April 2024)) on 2024-04-20: Strickland voted yea on the full $95 billion foreign aid package including $26 billion in military aid to Israel and $9 billion in worldwide humanitarian assistance. Her vote for the bipartisan comprehensive package — after voting for the standalone partisan Israel bill — is consistent with her stated support for Israel's military defense. Her top donor AIPAC supported the package. The vote was bipartisan (311-112).
Date: 2024-04-20
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 22 (SAVE Act (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility, July 2024)) on 2024-07-10: Strickland voted nay on legislation requiring documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. The AFL-CIO opposed the bill. Her district is majority-minority (62.1% White, 13.6% Hispanic, significant Asian and multiracial populations) with 95.1% citizenship — meaning documentation requirements could disproportionately burden minority and immigrant-adjacent communities. The South Sound Times published a critical article claiming Strickland 'votes to make it easier for illegal aliens to vote.' The bill passed 220-208 along party lines.
Date: 2024-07-10
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 7147 (Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2026 (March 2026)) on 2026-03-27: Strickland voted nay on DHS funding and had sharply criticized the administration's immigration enforcement approach, stating it 'has failed to keep Americans safe' and 'broken that promise' by deploying federal forces in U.S. cities. Her district's 11.5% foreign-born population makes DHS/ICE funding a core constituent concern. She joined most House Democrats in opposing the GOP-drafted DHS appropriations.
Date: 2026-03-27
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.Con.Res. 35 (Iran War Powers Resolution (March 2026)) on 2026-03-05: Strickland voted yea on a bipartisan resolution to terminate unauthorized U.S. military operations in Iran. She released a forceful statement: 'Congress has the constitutional authority to declare war, and Trump's reckless action in Iran has dangerously escalated tensions and put American lives at risk.' She also questioned Under Secretary of Defense Colby on whether the Pentagon was adhering to the National Defense Strategy. The vote placed her in the Democratic mainstream (212 yea) and reflected her institutionalist orientation as an Armed Services Committee member who insists on congressional war powers authority.
Date: 2026-03-05
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 23 (Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act (ICC Sanctions, January 2025)) on 2025-01-09: Strickland voted nay on legislation to sanction the International Criminal Court for issuing arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant. The bill passed 243-140 largely along party lines. Her nay vote placed her in the Democratic mainstream on ICC sanctions while creating cross-pressure with her AIPAC donor relationship ($145,379). AIPAC strongly supported the sanctions bill. Strickland's nay vote demonstrates she was willing to oppose her top donor's position on this specific Israel-related vote — distinguishing her from the most unconditionally pro-Israel Democrats.
Date: 2025-01-09
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 7217 (Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act (Standalone GOP bill, February 2024)) on 2024-02-06: Strickland was one of only 46 House Democrats to break with the Biden administration and vote for the GOP standalone $17.6 billion Israel aid bill. Her top donor AIPAC ($145,379) strongly supported the bill. This vote, combined with her AIPAC-funded trip to Israel where she met with Netanyahu in March 2024, demonstrates her alignment with pro-Israel donor interests over progressive foreign policy preferences. Progressive activists protested at her office demanding she 'stop supporting genocide with her silence.'
Date: 2024-02-06
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) — House passage, May 2025; Senate amendment, July 2025) on 2025-07-03: Strickland called the OBBBA the 'big, ugly bill' and 'the cruelest piece of legislation' she had seen, citing $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid, SNAP, and safety-net programs disproportionately affecting Black and minority communities. Her WA-10 district has 6.5% poverty (9.45% by Data USA), 62.3% homeownership, and thousands of residents relying on Medicaid and SNAP — including the district's significant veteran population served by JBLM. The AFL-CIO opposed the bill. All 212 Democrats plus 2 Republicans voted nay. The vote was both party-aligned and constituent-aligned. She also led 35 colleagues in a letter to Senate leadership highlighting the bill's negative impact on veterans.
Date: 2025-07-03
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[disclosure] Strickland serves on the House Armed Services Committee — where Boeing ($11,100 in contributions) and the defense sector have significant interests — while simultaneously representing JBLM, advocating for military infrastructure investments, and taking strong pro-Israel foreign policy positions aligned with her top donor. Her committee assignment creates a structural overlap between defense-contractor donors, military-base constituency interests, and the pro-Israel foreign policy alignment funded by AIPAC.
Date: 2025-01-03
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[disclosure] Pro-Palestinian protesters held a vigil outside Strickland's district office on Tax Day 2024, demanding she 'explain her AIPAC-funded trip to Israel, stop support for use of our tax dollars to fund bombs for Israel,' and 'stop supporting genocide with her silence.' Over 50 protesters attended with signs and wrapped objects representing dead infants. Strickland's April 12, 2024 statement called for Hamas to surrender as 'the easiest path to end the violence,' a position protesters contended ignored Israel's military operations.
Date: 2024-04-15
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[disclosure] Strickland's top donor by far is AIPAC ($145,379 in 2023-2024), with Pro-Israel as her single largest industry ($150,980). She took an AIPAC-sponsored trip to Israel in March 2024, meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu while over 33,000 Palestinians had been killed. She was one of only 46 House Democrats to vote for the GOP standalone Israel aid bill (H.R. 7217) in February 2024, breaking with the Biden White House which threatened a veto.
Date: 2024-03-27
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[platform] Strickland positions herself as a progressive Democrat, earning a 92% AFL-CIO score (2025), a 100% CWA lifetime score, and voting consistently with labor on every key vote including opposing the OBBBA. She co-sponsored the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act and advocates for criminal justice reform, voting rights, and immigrant communities.
Date: 2025-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Strickland serves on the House Armed Services Committee and the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Her district includes Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM), one of the largest military installations on the West Coast, with forces tied to Indo-Pacific readiness.
Date: 2025-01-03
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Strickland is the first African American to represent Washington State at the federal level and one of the first three Korean American women elected to Congress (alongside Young Kim and Michelle Steel). She was born in Seoul, South Korea, to a Korean mother and a Black American father. She previously served as the 38th mayor of Tacoma (2010-2018) and President of the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce.
Date: 2021-01-03
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Quiver Quantitative estimates Strickland's net worth at $2.5M as of April 2026, the 234th highest in Congress. She has approximately $293,600 invested in publicly traded assets that are trackable in real time.
Date: 2026-04-14
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Strickland operates Tahoma PAC, her leadership PAC (FEC ID C00765727). Outside spending in 2024 included support from Planned Parenthood Alliance ($2,500), Together for Progress 2024 ($562), GiveGreen United Action ($54), and Sierra Club Independent Action ($10).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Other top contributors: Microsoft Corp ($23,094 — $13,094 individuals, $10,000 PAC), Amazon.com ($21,793 — $14,293 individuals, $7,500 PAC), Boeing Co ($11,100 — $1,100 individuals, $10,000 PAC), and Costco Wholesale ($10,650 — all individuals). Additional top industries: Retired ($147,900), Real Estate ($78,545), Lobbyists ($77,353), Securities & Investment ($72,629).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Top contributing industry: Pro-Israel at $150,980 ($138,480 individuals, $12,500 PACs). Top contributor: American Israel Public Affairs Cmte (AIPAC) at $145,379 ($135,379 individuals, $10,000 PAC) — making AIPAC by far Strickland's single largest donor and the Pro-Israel industry her largest donor sector. A Drop Site News report noted she received $145,000 from AIPAC.
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
2023-2024 cycle: Raised $2,048,913. Large individual contributions 52.34%, PAC contributions 44.03%, small individual contributions (<$200) only 3.63%. Zero candidate self-financing. Cash on hand: $580,587 at year-end 2024. 2026 cycle: $288.5K raised in Q1 2026 with $802.4K cash on hand.
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026