Western Washington, and the whole state has such a long radical/IWW history, President Truman's postmaster general repeatedly referred to "the 47 states and the Soviet of Washington." Don't know about Eastern Washington, but during the years of the Back-to-the-Land Movement, there were many rural communes outside the smaller towns of Eastern Washington, and by all accounts they suffered far fewer vigilante attacks (typically organized by Christian Fundamentalists) than did the similar communes in rural Western Washington.
I wonder if -- like so many bourgeois self-proclaimed liberals (and I'm NOT saying that's what you are) -- you're allowing an anti-gun bias to blind you to the fact that while 70 percent of the state's voters are firearms owners who support the right to keep and bear arms, in 2000 54 percent of this electorate went for Left or liberal candidates (Gore 50 percent; other Left candidates including Greens, Socialist Workers Party etc., 4 percent), while in 2004 the results were similar (52 percent went for Kerry/Edwards, with about 2 percent voting for other Left parties).
Gregoire nearly lost the '04 election solely because the Democratic Party leadership -- in direct contrast to the Democratic grassroots -- is fanatically, even hysterically anti-gun, and the anti-gunners, a tiny but bottomlessly venomous minority within the party itself, have ridden their coattails from the lunatic fringe to the Democratic mainstream. Sen. Cantwell may lose for much the same reason: not only has she offended the many Democrats who are firearms owners -- the state has the highest per-capita number of concealed weapons permit holders in the U.S. -- she has also antagonized increasingly independent, increasingly militant organized labor. Thus a true labor/progressive has entered the primary race against her:
http://votemark.org/And -- having lived here almost continuously since 1970 -- I would hardly call Seattle "progressive" at all. It is documentably the most xenophobic city in America, so much so its malevolent, vindictive hatred of "outlanders" -- that is, anyone not born in Washington state -- is legendary. So huge is this malice it has determined the region's public transport policy for all time: behind the fact the area has the most rapidly deteriorating traffic conditions in the U.S. is the Seattle ruling clique's steadfast opposition to effective (rapid) public transport -- that is, high-speed, electrically powered rail transport -- simply because (as I have heard it stated more than once) "we don't wanna be like Jew York": a position all the more hypocritical because of Seattle's claims to political correctness and environmental enlightenment.
Fortunately there are alternatives:
Tacoma is much friendlier to outlanders and is also far more labor-minded and demonstrably progressive in most other ways too. Tacoma legislators led the fight for regional rapid transit, and Tacoma's portion of the long-overdue regional transit system's rail network was up and running ahead of schedule while Seattle's -- now nine years behind schedule -- was still being sabotaged by xenophobia-motivated behind-the-scenes political treachery. (The system was approved in 1996, this after a 20-year struggle against opposition centered in Seattle. Most of the federal matching-fund programs had long since expired, precisely the stratagem Seattleites hoped would defeat high speed rail transit forever and thereby preserve their "Emerald City" from "Manhattanization" and "Californication.")
Bellingham and Olympia each harbor small but disproportionately influential communities of progressives in the same way Tacoma does.
Moreover, there is probably a greater percentage per capita of practitioners of alternative spirituality in Washington -- Zen, Wicca, American Aboriginal spirituality etc. -- in than any other state: only 22 percent regularly attend conventional services.
Back when I had enough hair to mark me as a bohemian, I felt a helluva lot safer in Washington state, including in deep country, than in Upstate New York -- or even Brooklyn. So did my female companions; Washington was either the first or second state in the U.S. to legalize abortion (the other was New York) -- this at least a year before Roe v. Wade.
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Edit: typo, plus revision of last paragraph including addition of last sentence.