Washougal Mayor David Stuebe, a Republican candidate for Washington state’s Legislative District 17, Position 2 seat, is defending his recent Facebook post urging voters to drop their ballots at an unofficial box located inside a faith-based homeschool resource center in Vancouver, a location Stuebe described as a “conservative-leaning” site.
On Monday, Stuebe said his Facebook post was an effort to “be a part of the solution, not the problem.”
“As everyone is probably aware, there was a ballot drop box in Fisher’s Landing that was set on fire in the early morning hours Monday,” Stuebe stated in the Oct. 31 Facebook post. “There is a lot of concern about continuing to use these boxes, yet taking one’s ballot to the elections office might be too far. There is another option. Firmly Planted Homeschool Resource Center has a ballot box that is safely inside their building. You can drop your ballot there and they will transport them to the elections office each day.”
Two days prior to Stuebe’s post, Clark County Auditor Greg Kimsey warned on his Facebook page that the box inside Firmly Planted “is not an official ballot drop box and is not affiliated with the Clark County Elections Office” and told The Columbian, The Post-Record’s sister paper, that, while he isn’t questioning the good intentions of people at Firmly Planted who are collecting the ballots, he would advise voters that “even people with good intentions don’t follow through sometimes” and said county elections officials “strongly encourage voters to not give their ballots to anyone they don’t know and trust.”
Stuebe’s Facebook post, which came at the height of several highly contested federal, state and local elections, rubbed some voters the wrong way.