Campaign season kicked off in Camas this week, with a town hall hosted by Vancouver businessman and attorney David McDevitt, one of three Democratic candidates hoping to unseat incumbent Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler in the 3rd Congressional District of Washington.
The Tuesday evening event, held at Camas Public Library, represented a milestone for McDevitt, who tried to best Herrera Beutler in 2016, but came in third in the top-two primary.
“This is my 50th town hall,” McDevitt said after the nearly 90-minute community talk ended Tuesday and patrons filed out of the just-closing library. “I’m not counting events where people ask me to speak. I mean town halls we’ve organized.”
If his first campaign in 2016 was about getting his name out to the voters in the wide-flung 3rd Congressional District, which spans Southwest Washington and reaches into eight counties, including Clark, Cowlitz and Skamania counties, McDevitt’s second attempt to represent the nearly 655,000 people in Washington’s 3rd Congressional District is about actually heading out to the district’s far corners and meeting face-to-face with the public.
“Putting people first. That’s what I’m focused on,” McDevitt told the small crowd of about half a dozen who had come to the library Tuesday night to hear him talk about his plans to turn around health care via Medicare-for-all, push for sane gun reform, bring family-wage jobs to the region and get a seat at the table when it comes to transportation needs on both sides of the Columbia River.