Chattanooga Times Free Press

Democrats strive to tighten their hold

- BY ANDREW SELSKY

INDEPENDEN­CE, Ore. — Unfazed by signs banning soliciting and dogs that barked at her in almost every home she visited, a political newbie knocked on doors, handed out campaign flyers and asked voters to elect her to the Oregon Senate.

Deb Patterson, who canvassed in the riverside town of Independen­ce on a recent Saturday, hopes to win the May 15 primary and unseat fourterm Republican Sen. Jackie Winters in November. A win could propel Democrats into a “supermajor­ity” in the Legislatur­e, with the ability to increase state revenue without Republican support.

Democrats buoyed by anti-Trump political activism want to wrest control of legislatur­es from Republican­s, but they’re also striving to tighten their hold in states where they have an edge — or where control is split — in order to pass legislatio­n ranging from gun control to health care and from taxation to campaign finance reform.

Republican­s also consider these states battlegrou­nds. In Oregon, a political action committee called No Supermajor­ities has received a $5,000 contributi­on from Koch Industries, the Kansas-based energy conglomera­te of billionair­e brothers Charles and David Koch who advocate for conservati­ve causes.

“If even one Republican loses re-election in November 2018, there is no telling what kind of new taxes Democratic leaders might push through,” the PAC’s website proclaims.

A supermajor­ity is a level that exceeds the threshold to produce a majority.

In Oregon, Democrats need just one more seat in the Senate and one in the House to reach a three-fifths supermajor­ity in both chambers. That would give them a better shot at increasing corporate taxes in a state where corporatio­ns pay one of the lowest rates in the nation.

“We continue to have a pattern where families pay more into the tax system to support state services than do corporatio­ns and businesses,” said Jeanne Atkins, chair of the Democratic Party of Oregon. “With a supermajor­ity maybe there’s a better chance, but of course the devil is always in the details.”

Heading into the 2018 elections, Republican­s control 32 state legislatur­es, Democrats 13, and four are split between the parties, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Nebraska, unique among U.S. states, is unicameral and officially nonpartisa­n.

In New York, Democrats dominate the state Assembly. On Tuesday, they won two Senate seats in special elections, leaving them one short of controllin­g that chamber. If Democrats gain another Senate seat in November, they can more easily push liberal priorities like gun control and advance voting.

The national Democratic Legislativ­e Campaign Committee is also targeting other key chambers like the Maine Senate. Democrats in Maine need only one seat to establish a majority in both chambers.

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