Michael DePaula
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Michael DePaula (Libertarian Party) ran for election for Governor of Washington. He lost in the primary on August 6, 2024.
DePaula completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. Click here to read the survey answers.
Biography
Michael DePaula was born in Loma Linda, California. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Southern California in 2000. His career experience includes working as an IT specialist.[1]
DePaula has been affiliated with the following organizations:[1]
- Global Underwater Explorers
- Firearms Policy Coalition
- Corinthian Yacht Club
- International Horn Society
Elections
2024
See also: Washington gubernatorial election, 2024
General election
General election for Governor of Washington
Bob Ferguson defeated Dave Reichert in the general election for Governor of Washington on November 5, 2024.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Bob Ferguson (D) | 56.4 | 1,460,746 | |
Dave Reichert (R) | 43.6 | 1,129,854 |
Total votes: 2,590,600 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
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Nonpartisan primary election
Nonpartisan primary for Governor of Washington
The following candidates ran in the primary for Governor of Washington on August 6, 2024.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | Bob Ferguson (D) | 44.9 | 884,268 | |
✔ | Dave Reichert (R) | 27.5 | 541,533 | |
Semi Bird (R) | 10.8 | 212,692 | ||
Mark Mullet (D) | 6.0 | 119,048 | ||
Leon Lawson (Trump Republican Party) | 1.8 | 35,971 | ||
Jim Daniel (R) | 1.5 | 29,907 | ||
Cassondra Hanson (D) | 1.2 | 24,512 | ||
EL'ona Kearney (D) | 1.2 | 24,374 | ||
Jennifer Hoover (R) | 0.8 | 15,692 | ||
Andre Stackhouse (G) | 0.6 | 11,962 | ||
Don Rivers (D) | 0.5 | 9,453 | ||
Martin Wheeler (R) | 0.4 | 7,676 | ||
Chaytan Inman (D) | 0.3 | 6,427 | ||
Ricky Anthony (D) | 0.3 | 6,226 | ||
Jeff Curry (Independent) | 0.3 | 6,068 | ||
Fred Grant (D) | 0.3 | 5,503 | ||
Brian Bogen (No party preference) | 0.2 | 4,530 | ||
A.L. Brown (R) | 0.2 | 4,232 | ||
Michael DePaula (L) | 0.2 | 3,957 | ||
Rosetta Marshall-Williams (Independence Party) | 0.2 | 2,960 | ||
Jim Clark (No party preference) | 0.1 | 2,355 | ||
Edward Cale (D) | 0.1 | 1,975 | ||
Alex Tsimerman (Standup-America Party) | 0.1 | 1,721 | ||
Bill Hirt (R) | 0.1 | 1,720 | ||
Frank Dare (Independent) | 0.1 | 1,115 | ||
Alan Makayev (Nonsense Busters Party) | 0.1 | 1,106 | ||
William Combs (Independent) | 0.1 | 1,042 | ||
Brad Mjelde (No party preference) | 0.1 | 991 | ||
Ambra Mason (Constitution Party) (Write-in) | 0.0 | 0 | ||
Bobbie Samons (No party preference) (Write-in) | 0.0 | 0 | ||
Other/Write-in votes | 0.1 | 1,347 |
Total votes: 1,970,363 | ||||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
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Withdrawn or disqualified candidates
- Geoff Nelson (Constitution Party)
- Tony Tasmaly (R)
- Robert Arthur Ferguson (D)
- Kriss Schuler (R)
- Eric Nelson (No party preference)
- Robert Benjamin Ferguson (D)
- Reggie Grant (D)
- Laurel Khan (R)
- Daniel Miller (R)
- Hilary Franz (D)
- Raul Garcia (R)
- Tim Ford (R)
Campaign finance
Endorsements
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Ballotpedia did not identify endorsements for DePaula in this election.
Campaign themes
2024
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Michael DePaula completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by DePaula's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
Collapse all
|Michael graduated from the University of Southern California in 2000 with a degree in music performance on the French horn. While working as a freelance musician and English teacher in both Hawaii and Nagoya (Japan), Michael taught himself computer science and transitioned to IT work in 2005 where he was employed as an independent contractor with a branch of the Department of Defense in Okinawa (Japan). In 2013, he moved to Tokyo to take a position with Facebook (Meta), later transferring with the company to Seattle where he currently leads the Enterprise Engineering Field Operations team for the Pacific Northwest. He enjoys photography, hiking, coffee, writing, and sailing. Michael lives aboard his ketch-rigged sailboat with his wife and three sons in Seattle.
- Reduction in Washington's debt burden to position the state favorably for the loomng recession.
- Fortifying citizen self-defense, community readiness, and emergency preparations for potential municipal failures as the national debt crisis widens.
- Privatization of key industries to reduce the state budget per item #1 ensuring service continuity.
I became a student of economics and finance some years ago and still spend literal hours of personal time each day keeping up with the daily changes in not only the nation's banking and finance sectors but their international counterparts' as well. As a Libertarian, ensuring citizens' access to sound money that honors their privacy in daily transactions is paramount as the Federal Reserve looks to take the opposite tack and introduce centralized tools like FedNow and a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) "solutions" to fix their balance sheet woes brought on by decades of loose fiscal policy.
Additionally, one cannot really claim to be a Libertarian without being concerned over the states' slide into ever-increasing authoritarian schemes. The Covid-19 pandemic has brought with it not only economic weakness, but an accompanying wave of free speech concerns and a general erosion of what used to be considered core constitutional rights--free assembly, medical autonomy, and their associated rights of commerce and movement.
The core of my administration will center around acting as a check on legislative overstep whether it comes from a Democratic or Republican-led legislative body, ensuring citizens' rights are not only NOT whittled away, but that they are strengthened as the country enters a period of crisis.
I have a variety of role models, one for each goal I find myself pursuing. Politically speaking, I developed a profound respect for Justin Amash, the US Representative from Michigan's 3rd district who served from 2011-2021. His long-form podcast, The Justin Amash Podcast, is phenomenal.
"Anatomy of The State" by Murray N. Rothbard
Transparency, honesty, and a sense of obligation to not follow the crowd.
I believe being a Generalist--someone who has experience across a wide variety of skills, professions, and interests--has served me well in my adult life. I obsess over details with each "rabbit hole" I jump into, but the Albert Einstein quote resonates with me nonetheless: "The more I learn, the more I realize how much I don't know." This leads to a desire to "collect" a handful of experts who claim to know and studying their opinions for a richer life experience.
And while I think those working in government can be served well by having a background in law or political science, I think the common tactic of going with the career politician who traditionally have had these backgrounds has actually served us poorly in the long run. We could use more everyday men and woman with passion running for office and less "professional politicians".
Beyond these, I think dogged determinism, empathy, justice, and humility all have a part to play in a good leader.
1. To defend the state constitution,
2. To veto/sign bills into law, as appropriate,
3. To make political appointments as required by the state constitution,
4. To grant pardons, as appropriate,
5. To monitor the actions of state officers,
6. To act as commander-in-chief to the state military
I hold no aspirations for a life of politics and believe the best politicians view their time as public servants to be one of brevity and high impact. For my part, I would like people to look back at my time in office and point to how I led us through the recession and made us financially better off, not only as a state, but individually than we started, all while restoring our individual liberties.
I recall the day the Challenger space shuttle exploded. I was home sick from school and had the TV on when the news aired the footage of the liftoff and eventual demise of the flight. Being interested in space (as most kids of the 80s were), I had one of those signed replica images of the Challenger crew on my nightstand and the loss stuck with me for years.
Having long been interested in Japan from a young age, I took an interview with a Japanese publisher (Chuoh Publishing) based in Nagoya to teach English at one of their local schools during my senior year at USC and got offered the job. It set my mind at ease knowing I could explore Japan while earning a paycheck and building my network in the local music scene. I ended up being offered the principal horn position for a local volunteer orchestra--the Nagoya Sinfonia--while still at Chuoh Publishing.
"Basic Economics: A Common Sense Guide to the Economy" by Thomas Sowell
Paul Atreides from Dune.
"The River" by Rich Mullins
I have always been a perfectionist and struggled for years with the act of delegation which I often perceived as affecting the ideal outcomes I'd envisioned for a project or goal.
Americans of the past few decades tend to think of politicians as not only celebrities, but quasi-rulers even if, deep down, they know they're not (or certainly not supposed to be). Part of the letdown in modern politics stems, I think, from a lack of appreciation as to their specific function and the limits of the office itself. To be sure, the trend toward obfuscation, closed-door hearings and meetings, etc. can lead constituents to assign bad motives to those they elect when they don't succeed at passing whatever pet legislation they elected them to pass.
As it pertains to being governor (and where I think I stand out from the other candidates), Washington desperately needs an executive who acts as a check against the very one-way direction our legislature has taken us. Politically, the nation has started to believe in "all or nothing" government, where we believe we can only succeed when our party controls two or more of the branches, but this is not only untrue, it's dangerous. Any good advisor will tell you it's of paramount importance to get second opinions, to weigh alternative viewpoints when making monumental decisions, and to proceed cautiously. At this particular stage, Washington needs someone who can say "no" to what has become the excess in Olympia; someone who is not beholden to either the Democratic or the Republican parties; someone who believes that the people, clawing back and retaining their property and civil rights takes precedence over the next new spending program as the economy worsens.
The governor's veto power.
Per the law, the Governor recommends a budget to the Legislature consistent with executive policy priorities. Appropriation bills, like other legislation, are subject to gubernatorial veto authority and may be rejected in part or in their entirety within a defined number of days after legislative passage. After a budget is enacted, the Governor’s general administrative duties include monitoring agency expenditures and helping to implement legislative policy directives.
With every bill that comes to my desk, I will ask two questions: 1) Does this violate or muddy the express powers delegated to the legislature by the state constitution? And if "no", 2) Does this restore power to the citizens to make decisions for themselves as makes sense in their lives and for their situations or does it empower the state to choose on their behalf?
A consequence of single-party governments across legislative and executive branches is often law based on popular desires at the expense of at least half of the state whose party is not in power. This creates a pendulum effect whose ultimate victims are the people themselves forever entrenched in "voting harder" the next election. Contrasted with this is the Libertarian philosophy of minimal government where the legislative and executive branches core responsibilities are to maintain the civil and property rights of the people and pass legislation that does not touch on either or, at the very least, strengthens them.
Insofar as a Libertarian governor works with a legislature of a different party, s/he must act as a defense of the people and their rights even if that means a stalemate, since abrogation of the stalemate would mean a loss to the people. In time, the hope is that the legislature would learn to restrain their attempts at impoverishing their constituents lest they retire office with no achievements to boast over.
I grew up in both Caliornia and Maine and recall vividly the first time I visited Washington. It reminded me much of Maine but everything was just bigger and at a grander scale. The ocean, mountains, hills, and lakes...growing up hiking and camping made me appreciate all Washington has to offer. These days Portland, Maine might be most analogous to Spokane or Seattle, but Washington on the whole really shines when it comes to favorable tax laws and the sheer variety of industries and diversity of people here. I really hope we can improve upon these and not lose ground over the coming decade with all the challenges we face.
Washington has seen a large number of interstate migration, notably from those leaving California heading north, but at the same time, we are seeing too many of our friends and family leave due to the increasingly unbearable cost of living and criminal justice decisions that have taken root up and down the West Coast. Couple that with loss of rights when it comes to personal defense and protection of property and I anticipate we'll see more businesses forced to close, taking with them so many of the jobs that made Washington attractive for so many in the first place. Once this cycle continues, infrastructure collapse and the state's budget will turn into very real and tangible problems very quickly.
"RIP, boiling water. You will be mist."
Three clear scenarios stand out: 1) to restore constitutional rights that were abridged by the legislature, 2) to facilitate rescue of any citizen in times of state crisis (earthquake, flood, or fire), and 3) to counteract a overreach of the federal government or one of her agencies.
Libertarian Party of Washington (pending interviews in early 2024)
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Campaign finance summary
Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.
See also
2024 Elections
External links
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