Former Washington Secretary of State Ralph Munro dies at 81

Two former Washington Secretaries of State — Ralph Munro, left, and Kim Wyman, right — visit in her office after a press conference on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2015, in Olympia. (Ted S. Warren/AP)
This article originally appeared in the Washington State Standard.
Ralph Munro, Washington’s longest-serving secretary of state and a moderate Republican who achieved unusually broad popularity across the political spectrum, died early Thursday at his convalescent home in Lacey. He was 81 and had struggled with multiple health issues for the past several years.
Current Secretary of State Steve Hobbs announced his predecessor’s passing, saying Munro “embodied the drive and attitude of a true statesman.”
Munro was remembered for many things as word of his death spread quickly around Olympia and the wider Pacific Northwest. During his life, Munro championed diverse causes, from orca protection, voting expansion and disability rights to immigration, international trade, polio eradication and historic preservation.
“Ralph was known for moderation, civility and bipartisanship. He certainly exuded that in his role as secretary of state,” recalled friend and longtime collaborator Sam Reed, who succeeded Munro in office.
In elective office, Munro was one of the last Republicans able to consistently win statewide as Washington trended bluer and bluer. He squeaked into office as secretary of state in 1980 at age 37 and was reelected four more times until he chose to retire at the end of 2000.
During his tenure, Munro strongly advocated for expanding vote-by-mail. Washington also established “motor voter” registration on his watch, which encourages residents to register to vote when they apply for or renew a driver’s license. He also ushered in Washington’s first address-confidentiality program to protect victims of domestic violence and stalking. That program allowed victims to receive mail through the secretary of state’s office in order to keep their actual addresses secret.
Munro faced minimal competition for re-election in his later campaigns. His political ads on the radio memorably entailed 30 seconds of bagpipe music with a brief tagline stating, “This interlude brought to you by” the Munro campaign.
Munro raised one son, George, with his first wife, Karen. He divorced, remarried and divorced again late in life. He has three grandchildren. Munro also is survived by a daughter in Minnesota, Christi Stoll, with whom he reconnected in recent years.
The Washington State Standard published a longer version of this article on March 20, 2025.