Jim Kastama Explained

Jim Kastama
Office:Member of the Puyallup City Council,
District 1
Term Start:January 1, 2018
Predecessor:John Hopkins
State Senate1:Washington
District1:25th
Term Start1:January 8, 2001
Term End1:January 14, 2013
Predecessor1:Calvin Goings
Successor1:Bruce Dammeier
State House2:Washington
District2:25th
Term Start2:January 13, 1997
Term End2:January 8, 2001
Preceded2:Grant Owen Pelesky
Succeeded2:Dave Morrell
Birth Name:James Matthew Kastama
Birth Date:5 October 1959
Birth Place:Bellingham, Washington, U.S.
Spouse:Barbara
Children:5
Party:Democratic
Alma Mater:University of California at Berkeley (BA)
Residence:Puyallup, Washington

James Matthew Kastama (born October 5, 1959) was a Senator in the Washington State Senate. A Democrat, Kastama represented the 25th legislative district. He chaired the Senate Economic Development, Trade and Innovation Committee, and participated on the Higher Education & Workforce Development and Transportation Committees. Represented the 25th Legislative District since 1996 until 2012 Kastama was first elected to the Senate in 2000 after two terms in the House of Representatives.[1]

Upon graduation from Puyallup High School in 1978,[2] he matriculated to Claremont Men's College and holds a Bachelor of Arts from the University of California at Berkeley.[1]

Currently, Kastama is a part-time faculty member at the community college and university level where he teaches classes in Organizational Assessment, Strategic Planning, and Managing in a Political and Legislative Environment. He is also an examiner for the Washington State Quality Awards.[1]

Kastama is best known in state politics for utilizing a rarely used procedural motion called "the 9th Order" to join two Democrats in temporally shifting Senate control to the Republicans to pass a budget by a margin of one vote. The maneuver earned Kastama tremendous animus from within his own party.[3] His refusal to shift control back to the Democrats forced negotiations that eventually resulted in a bipartisan budget with 44-2 votes.

In the 2012 election cycle Kastama was a Democratic candidate for Washington Secretary of State but was defeated in the state's August 2012 primary.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Senator Jim Kastama, Biography
  2. Web site: Jim Kastama: Biography. May 17, 2012.
  3. Web site: Crossing the Rubicon - Kastama Tells His Story. 25 April 2012.