Your feedback ensures we stay focused on the facts that matter to you most—take our survey.

Steven Cook

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Steven Cook
Image of Steven Cook
Contact


Steven T. Cook was a 2014 Republican candidate for District 27-Position 2 of the Washington House of Representatives.[1]

Cook was previously a 2012 Republican candidate for District 27-Position 1 of the Washington House of Representatives and a 2010 Republican candidate for District 29-Position 1 of the Washington House of Representatives.

Elections

2014

See also: Washington House of Representatives elections, 2014

Elections for the Washington House of Representatives took place in 2014. A blanket primary election took place on August 5, 2014. The general election was held on November 4, 2014. The signature filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was May 17, 2014. Incumbent Jake Fey (D) and Steven Cook (R) defeated Micah Anderson (Framer Party) in the primary. Fey defeated Cook in the general election.[1][2][3]

Washington House of Representatives, District 27-Position 2 General Election, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngJake Fey Incumbent 67.5% 22,992
     Republican Steven Cook 32.5% 11,091
Total Votes 34,083
Washington House of Representatives, District 27-Position 2 Top Two Primary, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngJake Fey Incumbent 68.3% 12,223
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngSteven Cook 27.7% 4,965
     Framer Party Micah Anderson 4% 714
Total Votes 17,902

2012

See also: Washington House of Representatives elections, 2012

Cook ran in the 2012 election for Washington House of Representatives, District 27-Position 1. Cook ran unopposed in the August 7 blanket primary election and was defeated by incumbent Laurie Jinkins (D) in the general election, which took place on November 6, 2012.[4][5]

Washington House of Representatives, District 27-Position 1, General Election, 2012
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngLaurie Jinkins Incumbent 71.4% 39,290
     Republican Steven Cook 28.6% 15,770
Total Votes 55,060

2010

See also: Washington State House of Representatives elections, 2010

Steven Cook ran for the Washington House of Representatives District 29-Position 1. He defeated Jonathan Johnson and Bruce Parks in the August 17, 2010, primary. He was defeated by Democrat Connie Ladenburg in the November 2, 2010, general election.[6]

Washington House of Representatives, District 29-Position 1 General Election (2010)
Candidates Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Connie Ladenburg (D) 15,934
Steven Cook (R) 10,651
Washington House of Representatives, District 29-Position 1 Primary (2010)
Candidates Votes Percent
Green check mark transparent.png Connie Ladenburg (D) 5,966 45.49%
Green check mark transparent.png Steven T. Cook (R) 3,567 27.20%
Jonathan Johnson (D) 1,989 15.17%
Bruce Parks (R) 1,593 12.15%

2008

Washington House of Representatives, District 29-Position 1 (2008)
Candidates Votes Percent
Green check mark transparent.png Steve Conway (D) 24,672 70.01%
Steven T. Cook (R) 10,568 29.99%

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for "Steven + Cook + Washington + House"

All stories may not be relevant to this legislator due to the nature of the search engine.

See also

External links

Footnotes


Leadership
Speaker of the House:Laurie Jinkins
Majority Leader:Joe Fitzgibbon
Minority Leader:Drew Stokesbary
Representatives
District 1-Position 1
District 1-Position 2
District 2-Position 1
District 2-Position 2
District 3-Position 1
District 3-Position 2
District 4-Position 1
District 4-Position 2
Rob Chase (R)
District 5-Position 1
Zach Hall (D)
District 5-Position 2
District 6-Position 1
Mike Volz (R)
District 6-Position 2
District 7-Position 1
District 7-Position 2
District 8-Position 1
District 8-Position 2
District 9-Position 1
Mary Dye (R)
District 9-Position 2
District 10-Position 1
District 10-Position 2
Dave Paul (D)
District 11-Position 1
District 11-Position 2
District 12-Position 1
District 12-Position 2
District 13-Position 1
Tom Dent (R)
District 13-Position 2
District 14-Position 1
District 14-Position 2
District 15-Position 1
District 15-Position 2
District 16-Position 1
District 16-Position 2
District 17-Position 1
District 17-Position 2
District 18-Position 1
District 18-Position 2
John Ley (R)
District 19-Position 1
Jim Walsh (R)
District 19-Position 2
District 20-Position 1
District 20-Position 2
Ed Orcutt (R)
District 21-Position 1
District 21-Position 2
District 22-Position 1
District 22-Position 2
District 23-Position 1
District 23-Position 2
District 24-Position 1
District 24-Position 2
District 25-Position 1
District 25-Position 2
District 26-Position 1
District 26-Position 2
District 27-Position 1
District 27-Position 2
Jake Fey (D)
District 28-Position 1
District 28-Position 2
District 29-Position 1
District 29-Position 2
District 30-Position 1
District 30-Position 2
District 31-Position 1
District 31-Position 2
District 32-Position 1
Cindy Ryu (D)
District 32-Position 2
District 33-Position 1
District 33-Position 2
District 34-Position 1
District 34-Position 2
District 35-Position 1
District 35-Position 2
District 36-Position 1
District 36-Position 2
Liz Berry (D)
District 37-Position 1
District 37-Position 2
District 38-Position 1
District 38-Position 2
District 39-Position 1
Sam Low (R)
District 39-Position 2
District 40-Position 1
District 40-Position 2
District 41-Position 1
District 41-Position 2
District 42-Position 1
District 42-Position 2
District 43-Position 1
District 43-Position 2
District 44-Position 1
District 44-Position 2
District 45-Position 1
District 45-Position 2
District 46-Position 1
District 46-Position 2
District 47-Position 1
District 47-Position 2
District 48-Position 1
District 48-Position 2
Amy Walen (D)
District 49-Position 1
District 49-Position 2
Democratic Party (59)
Republican Party (39)