McKenna, Inslee meet in 1st debate in Spokane

McKenna, Inslee meet in 1st debate in Spokane »Play Video
Democratic candidate for governor, former Rep. Jay Inslee, left, D-Wash., shakes hands at the start of a debate with Republican candidate, Attorney General Rob McKenna at the Bing Crosby Theater in Spokane, Wash., Tuesday, June 12, 2012. (AP Photo/The Spokesman-Review, Colin Mulvany)
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - Rob McKenna and Jay Inslee sparred over health insurance and education Tuesday in the first debate of the 2012 race for governor in Washington, with neither candidate coming out a clear winner.

>>>Click here to watch the full debate

Inslee, a Democrat, highlighted his calls for getting more Washingtonians into the workplace in his opening statements. McKenna, the Republican, said Democrats who have held the governor's mansion since 1984 are "out of ideas."

"They just keep insisting we need higher taxes," McKenna said.

The debate was in the Bing Crosby Theater in downtown Spokane before a packed pro-business audience that skewed toward the GOP.

An early flash point was over the new federal health care law, the constitutionality of which the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on this month. McKenna, who joined other GOP attorneys general across the country in opposition to the law President Barack Obama signed, said the legislation was partisan and flawed. He said if it's struck down states could pursue other options, like allowing insurance companies to sell across state lines to increase competition.

Inslee, who as a congressman supported the legislation, said key reforms like allowing older children to stay on their parents' plans and providing coverage to people with pre-existing conditions would be lost if the law is tossed out.

"If you are a breast cancer survivor, you ought to be able to get health care in our state," Inslee said.

Both men said they would not raise taxes to increase the money spent on education - something Gov. Chris Gregoire has said is needed.

The debate was sponsored by the Association of Washington Business. Recent polling shows that McKenna and Inslee are locked in a close race. They are seeking to replace Gregoire, a Democrat who is not seeking a third term.

Both candidates said the state needed to spend more on higher education to reduce tuition costs to students. McKenna noted that higher education dropped from 16 percent of the state budget in the 1990s to 8 percent now.

McKenna blamed Democrats at the state capital for many of the cuts.

"The folks running Olympia for the last 28 years decimated higher education funding," McKenna said.

Inslee highlighted his support of various tax breaks to help certain small businesses grow. McKenna said tax breaks, if used, should be more evenly distributed through the economy.

"How many of you favor a plan that gives your competitors or an entire industry an advantage?" McKenna asked the audience.

McKenna said environmental protections should be "harmonized" between the state and federal governments, so that the state does not have higher standards in some cases. But Inslee said in Washington that would weaken current protections for clean air and protected shorelines.

"The congressman has never met a regulation he couldn't like or which couldn't be stricter," McKenna said.

The candidates agreed that proposed coal export ports in the state should face proper environmental review.

Each candidate was allowed to ask one question of his opponent.

Inslee used his question to ask McKenna about being deposed by members of his own party as a budget writer for the King County Council when he did not produce a balanced budget. McKenna asked Inslee if he would vote again for bills in Congress that helped produce the housing crisis. Both candidates had ready explanations.

In terms of raising billions of dollars for transportation needs, McKenna said he would have a measure to put before voters by 2014 at the latest. Inslee said he would wait until "we regain the trust of Washingtonians" before seeking to put the issue before voters.

The candidates disagreed over a requirement of a two-thirds vote to raise taxes. McKenna is fighting in court to save such a requirement in the state.

"The people who run Olympia are too ready to raise taxes too often," McKenna said.

Inslee believes two-thirds requirements violate the principle of one man, one vote by giving too much power to tax opponents.