Simon Sefzik

Simon Sefzik

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Former state senator for Legislative District 42 (Whatcom County) I have been involved in local politics since I was 12, knocking doors all over Whatcom County.

From the backyards of Bellingham to the front yards of Ferndale, I have been welcomed in by Democrats and Republicans that have told me young people need to be involved in politics. After all, it will be my generation that must carry on the mantle of freedom. I remember going to the Northwest Washington Fair, where I would sit and talk for hours with the volunteers in both the Democrat and Republi

08/05/2024

Personal news: As some of you know, I’ve been interested in the legal profession since high school, even before. Some of the things that attracted me to the law are what drew me to the State Senate. Now, I know politicians and lawyers are not exactly the two most loved professions, and not for unfair reasons.

Later this week, I’ll be driving a very full car all the way to Charlottesville, where I will begin my studies as a law student at the University of Virginia. I’m confident I’ll receive an excellent education from a great law school, but I can’t help but feel nervous and sad. Whatcom County is home, and my heart is not ready to leave. When I’m sitting in the law library studying, I’ll miss the view of Mt. Baker in the morning and the San Juans at sunset. More than that, I’ll miss the people. Though we didn’t win the State Senate race, I still leave the experience with a gratitude I struggle to fully describe. I think of the young people who got involved for the first time, the young-at-heart who felt hope for the future, and too many other stories to tell. Even if we don’t share the same political views or vote the same way, it was the honor of a lifetime to listen and learn from you.

When I got appointed to the State Senate, the Lt. Governor shared advice he received as a young legislator. He said: “Simon, you have a very important job, and you are not a very important person.” Good advice. Please make sure I don’t forget it during school, and afterwards.

I will be back for a weekend in October and of course over winter break. I’d love to host an event and catch up and hear how everyone is doing. I’ll post more details here as we get closer to that time. This is not goodbye!

G.K. Chesterton once wrote: “The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.” I love what is behind me, and that is why I want to fight for it.

Thank you for everything,
Simon

07/06/2024

Incredibly impressive and historic work by the people of Washington! Make sure you ask your local officials whether they support this initiative to protect energy choice.

546,000!!! 🔥🔥🔥🤯🤯🤯

Photos from Simon Sefzik's post 07/05/2024

4th of July at the White House, 4 years ago today. I remember staying late to help clean up and then walking back to the apartment with my roommate. All the public transportation was closed (and we are too cheap to Uber) so we had quite a walk through DC at like 2am. Pictures are blurry but oh well.

Happy 4th!

05/25/2024

“At the grave of a hero we end, not with sorrow at the inevitable loss, but with the contagion of his courage; and with a kind of desperate joy we go back to the fight” - Oliver Wendell Holmes

I enjoyed placing flags on the graves of those who served our country at a cemetery in Lynden today. Thank you to those who paid the ultimate sacrifice so that we may breath free.

02/25/2024

The six People's Initiatives to the Legislature are a really big deal. ALL of them deserve to be heard. Former SRC Sen. Simon Sefzik explains the historical context and why the Initiatives deserve more attention.

Cascadia Weekly: https://ow.ly/YLXa50QHvmY

02/20/2024

President’s Day 2024

On my first day at the White House, I received copy of a speech by Tony Snow, former speechwriter for H.W. Bush and, later, George Bush’s Press Secretary. I kept it at my desk every and have found myself returning to its wisdom over the years. More than advice for work, it’s great life advice. I’ve included it below:

“Change of the Guard”

We Washington insiders never tire of Inaugural pomp and pageantry, particularly at times when power changes hands and a new president takes up residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
It never fails: New aides and acolytes flock to town, abuzz with high hopes and vague ambitions. They scamper to balls and celebrations, race gleefully to the museums and monuments, drink in the sights and feel of the picturesque little town on the Potomac. It’s heady stuff, waking up one day and realizing: “Hey, I’m going to work at the White House. The White House. The home of the president of the United States. The mansion of James Madison, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. The gravitational center of the Free World. The place of dreams and imagination.”

Those of us who have been through the experience look at the newcomers with parental tenderness. The neophytes, with their excitement and jitters, look like children walking into a brand new school for the first time. They are dressed immaculately. They walk briskly and happily. They luxuriate in everything: the colors, the smells, the hushed-carpet quiet of the West Wing foyer; the echo of heels slapping the slate floors of the Old Executive Office Building.

And yet as one watches the spectacle, one knows that some day these same men and women will stop skipping into the buildings. Their smiles will flatten and dim. But at the end of it all, they’ll wind up wiser and better.

My contribution to the Class of 2001 is some simple, time-tested advice.

1. Don’t get a big head. If you lose your humility, someone will return it with compound interest.
The boneyard of American politics is filled with people who labored under the false impression that their participation in a White House made them unique and special. But as some statesman once observed: The graveyards of the world are filled with indispensable men. Realize that service is an honor, the president is your boss (not the other way around), and you are just a visitor to the history factory.

2. In Washington, you can’t take friendship personally.
This is a corollary to the first rule. People will kiss up to you in ways you cannot imagine. Realize that their professions of ardor have nothing to do with you and everything to do with your job title. The moment you leave, they will court your successor.
Marlin Fitzwater remarked somewhat dolefully after the 1992 loss of the first President Bush that his phone suddenly had stopped ringing. The reporters had moved on. In 1991, while I was a minor grandee in that same White House, I received more than 400 Christmas and holiday cards at the office. The following year, following Mr. Bush’s defeat, I received 25.

3. In Washington, the urgent overwhelms the important.
I got this one from Ed Feulner of the Heritage Foundation. The nation’s capital serves as a magnifying glass for gossip. It takes a juicy morsel of rumor and concentrates it, as a magnifying glass does a ray of sun, into something instantaneously lethal. Don’t get sucked into fretting over every little thing unless you want to get incinerated. As Mark Twain famously observed: “Noise proves nothing. Often a hen who has merely laid an egg cackles as if she had laid an asteroid.”

4. Make friends in low places.
Get to know the people who have worked forever at the White House: the cleaners, mail-room employees, the cafeteria cashiers. They know the place better than you ever will. They also belong to one of the most efficient news organizations on Earth. Often, they know what’s going on long before you do and before your superiors have even a faint clue.

5. Stop once a day and pinch yourself.
The White House, with all its pressures, intrigues, triumphs, betrayals, joys and disappointments, is the most special place you ever will work. Look out the gates at the people who slow their gait as they pass, trying to get a glimpse of someone - anyone. They know what you’re likely to forget. You’re blessed.

Work hard. Be honest. Understand the honor of your calling. Leave no room for regrets for someday, in the not-so-distant future, you will be back where you started: On the sidewalk with the other folks, gawking at that grand, glorious, mysterious place where Lincoln walks at night, and our highest hopes and dreams reside.”

Sefzik: Why aren't we hearing more about record number of statewide initiatives? | Cascadia Daily News 02/07/2024

Thanks to Cascadia Daily News for publishing my piece on the 6 initiatives facing legislators in Olympia. I’m disappointed our local electeds have uniformly voted against even holding hearings for these initiatives.

Click the link to see why ⬇️

Sefzik: Why aren't we hearing more about record number of statewide initiatives? | Cascadia Daily News Washington's 'direct democracy' deserves more respect

01/06/2024

Good Luck to our local FHS Grads playing for the National Championship!
Jake, Landon & Geiran- 2 of these young men are Vista Alumni!💜💛

One of ‘boys in the boat’ was a Whatcom son 12/27/2023

One of ‘boys in the boat’ was a Whatcom son Movie directed by George Clooney tells the 1936 UW crew Olympic gold story

Simon Sefzik (Future 42) - Highlights - The Jason Rantz Show 10/20/2023

I joined Jason Rantz’s show this afternoon to discuss Initiative 1 in Bellingham (minimum wage increase). I’m not optimistic that this proposal will improve affordability. In fact, I think it will harm the very people it’s intended to help.

Listen here 👇

Simon Sefzik (Future 42) - Highlights - The Jason Rantz Show Former state senator Simon Sefzik (Future 42) breaks down the latest minimum wage hike idea out of Bellingham.

Mobile uploads 10/10/2023

This is great!

Photos from Simon Sefzik's post 09/11/2023

A year later, I was at this event this morning. So wonderful to see two international allies partnering together to remember the sacrifices and heroes of 9/11.

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