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Chris Mulick has worked for the Herald since 1998 and has served as the statehouse correspondent covering state government and politics since 2000. He works year-round out of the Herald's Olympia bureau on the state Capitol campus.

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Wednesday, May. 07, 2008

UPDATE: Rep. Hankins ends lengthy career (w/ videos)

Rep. Hankins' final speech

Rep. Shirley Hankins, shown here making what would be her final floor speech in March, announced this morning she won't seek re-election this fall after 24 years in the Legislature.


VIDEO: Hankins' opening statement
VIDEO: Hankins on AREVA, tax base, her accomplishments
VIDEO: Hankins on her final session, WSU Tri-Cities
VIDEO: Hankins on endorsement, ethics investigation
VIDEO: Hankins predicts her successor will struggle
VIDEO: Hankins on pending projects, a lower quality of life

I just got a text message from Herald reporter Michelle Dupler indicating that longtime state Rep. Shirley Hankins has just announced she won’t seek a 13th term this fall. Hankins is holding a rare press conference in Richland that was scheduled for 11 a.m.

And so ends the legislative career of one of the Legislature’s longest serving members. Only retiring Rep. Helen Sommers, D-Seattle, and Sen. Bob McCaslin, R-Spokane Valley, have served more time in Olympia.

Hankins, 76, first ran for the Legislature in 1978 but lost to Ray Isaacson in the Republican primary.

Running for an open seat two years later, Hankins narrowly escaped a three-way Republican primary and cruised to victory in the general election.

After the death of Republican Sen. Max Benitz in 1990 Hankins was appointed to replace him. But not two months later she was defeated by Democrat Jim Jesernig for the seat in the upper chamber.

She attempted a comeback in 1992, losing to Democratic Rep. Lane Bray, but she easily won in a battle for an open House seat in 1994 and hasn’t been seriously challenged since.

In Olympia Hankins has been known as a feisty moderate and she’s waged many battles within her own caucus. In 2003 she left the House Republican Caucus altogether but returned a year later.

She’s gained the respect of House Democrats over the years, providing her with some measure of influence. When Republicans refused to re-appoint her to a bipartisan transportation panel in 2003 House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle, did.

Hankins’ final term in the House has been somewhat tumultuous with a Tri-City Herald report chronicling her efforts to use her office to promote her daughters’ tire baling business. The Legislative Ethics Board, after a studying the issue for most of 2007, assessed a record fine against her in December.

Hankins has never publicly answered questions about it.

Potential challengers began lining up last fall. Republicans Rick Jansons, Brad Klippert and Steve Simmons have announced plans to run for the seat and so has Democrat Carol Moser.

UPDATE: During her press conference Hankins took one final shot at legislative Republicans.

“The Republicans don’t have a plan” she said. “There is not a plan to proceed and get this state on track.”

She said the decision in her ethics case had nothing to do with her retirement.


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