Election day is May 19, 2026, and our path to victory is paved by volunteer power.

Nafisa’s goal is to make Washington County more affordable, to help every person, family, and small business thrive. 

Meet Nafisa Fai

Nafisa is a Washington County Commissioner and former Vice Chair of the Commission. A longtime community and public health leader, she cares about creating fairness, opportunity, and real solutions for everyday people.

Born in Somalia, Nafisa has been a proud Oregonian for nearly 30 years.  She worked for the American Red Cross for nearly a decade, accomplishing her childhood dream.  Nafisa loves working on good public policy that helps our communities — especially in the areas of  public health, homelessness, housing, transportation, and economic fairness and opportunity. As Washington County Commissioner, she championed investments in our county to address climate change, support mental health services, and make government more responsible. 

We’re bringing together people from every corner of Washington County to build a future that works for all of us.

And we can’t do it without you.

Join us to grow support across our county. By volunteering at a phone bank, text bank, or canvass, you’ll connect with our neighbors, share what’s at stake, and help spark real change on the issues that matter for working families and small businesses.

Please join us no matter your experience level. Every canvass starts with a brief training, and new volunteers are paired with a partner.

The Platform

Nafisa’s Vision for Washington County

We need leadership that prioritizes everyday people, small businesses, and real solutions. Let’s build a county where everyone can thrive.

Here's how we get there:

  • For families, businesses, and neighborhoods to thrive, we need affordable housing across our county for all our neighbors, no matter their income level. When people have stable housing, everything else becomes possible: health, safety, recovery, employment, and dignity. Nafisa will lead with common sense: to prevent and address homelessness, we need to invest in short-term and long-term housing solutions.

    Nafisa will take on the housing crisis at its roots — with bold, creative actions to build more affordable homes and create paths to owning a home. That means transforming public land into community-driven housing, fast-tracking permitting for affordable development, and investing in down payment support for first-time homebuyers.

    In our Washington County, housing is a springboard to opportunity.

  • Our streets should bring us together, not leave us stuck or unsafe. Nafisa will lead a countywide transformation to ensure that everyone in Washington County has a healthy, clean, and affordable way to get where we need to go.

    That means investing in safer roads and sidewalks, fixing bottlenecks, expanding bus routes, and making it easier to get around whether you walk, roll, bike, ride, or drive. It also means making sure our transportation system works for everyone, not just those who own a car. 

    In our Washington County, transportation connects all of us.

  • We believe in community safety that protects everyone. That means building community trust, and embracing solutions that work, save tax dollars, and are humane.

    Our law enforcement professionals are an important part of first responders, but too often they’re sent to situations better handled by experts in mental health, addiction, or trauma. That’s why Nafisa is calling for our county to invest in community safety teams composed of trained mental health professionals, medics, and peer responders. These teams step in, de-escalate, and connect people to the care they need. These proven models reduce harm, keep people out of the criminal system, and make our neighborhoods safer — and help our law enforcement professionals have the time to focus on serious criminal investigations.

    In our Washington County, community safety works for all of us.

  • From extreme heat to toxic wildfire smoke, our communities are already facing the consequences of climate change. And too often, it's our most vulnerable neighbors — low-income families, elders, disabled people, and Black, brown, and communities of color — who bear the brunt.

    Washington County must lead on climate solutions. That’s why Nafisa will:

    • Establish a countywide Climate Action Task Force to drive bold, community-rooted solutions. 

    • Invest in clean energy solutions, modernize outdated infrastructure, and expand our tree canopy and green space to combat urban heat and air pollution. 

    • Put Washington County communities first in climate adaptation planning, from disaster preparedness to cooling centers to green jobs.

    This is about more than protection, it’s about transformation. With Nafisa’s bold leadership that treats the climate crisis like the emergency it is, a safer, healthier, more sustainable Washington county is possible.

    In our Washington County, protecting our environment is protecting our future.

  • Washington County isn't just part of Oregon's economy — it drives it. The resilience of hardworking families, innovation, and small businesses here fuel our state's future. We need a county budget that reflects our values, supports our communities, and invests boldly in building a Washington County that works for all of us.

    Nafisa believes that a budget isn't just numbers on a page — it's a statement of Washington County’s values of fairness, opportunity, and growth that reaches everyone, especially those who’ve been left out. For the last 4 years, our county has faced a budget shortfall, with the latest gap reaching $20.5 million. A shortfall means that the county’s income is less than our expenses. To address these challenges, Nafisa will:

    • Protect Essential Services: Protect funding for essential services, including housing, transit, and health care, while working on long-term solutions to support services amidst budget challenges.

    • Close the budget gap: We must explore innovative solutions to increase revenue without overburdening taxpayers, including updating service fees and considering local option levies for critical services like public safety and libraries.

    • Invest in Washington County’s Future: Focus on equity-centered programs that stimulate economic growth from the ground up, especially: supporting small businesses; creating good paying, green jobs; and expanding workforce training programs.

    In our Washington County, our economy works for all of us — especially working families and small businesses.

Endorsements

Maxine Dexter

Congresswoman

Mari Watanabe

State Representative

Nadia Hasan

Beaverton City Councilor

Press

Washington County officials push back against federal immigration agenda

A group of elected officials in one of Oregon’s most racially diverse counties pushed back Monday against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. "ICE has no place in our neighborhoods,” said Cornelius City Councilor Angeles Godinez, one of several Washington County officials who sought to call out anti-immigrant rhetoric they say has caused a climate of fear. “When fear enters our community, trust leaves,” she said. “Without trust, our schools, our cities and even our local economies suffer.”

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Changemakers: From Somali refugee to elected official, meet Washington County Commissioner Nafisa Fai

Here on KGW, in honor of Black History Month, we're saluting local people who are breaking barriers and inspiring their community.We call them "Changemakers." We've featured leaders in the nonprofit world and in business. And today, we're focusing on "Changemakers" in politics. That certainly describes Nafisa Fai.

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Protest Today: Washington County Democrats Speak Out on Sanctuary and Immigration

The Washington County Democrats Rapid Response Action Group will be holding a protest today at the Washington County Courthouse. Next Tuesday, the Washington County Commissioners plan to introduce a Resolution that clarifies how Washington County will comply with all laws and rules of the Trump Administration.

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