The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Backlash to president could shift political power in states

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

The backlash to President Trump and the steady rightward journey of the Republican Party could sharply shift the distributi­on of political power in state capitols across the nation in this fall’s elections. And because reapportio­nment is coming, this could change the contours of American politics for more than a decade.

Strengthen­ing that possibilit­y is the success of pragmatic Democrats in gubernator­ial primaries who are stressing issues that appeal simultaneo­usly to the center and the left.

On Tuesday, Wisconsin Democrats chose Tony Evers, the state schools superinten­dent, to face two-term Republican Gov. Scott Walker. In Minnesota, Democrats nominated Rep. Tim Walz to defend his party’s hold on the state’s governorsh­ip. Both Evers and Walz advance progressiv­e priorities in areas such as education and health care but cannot be cast as ideologues.

Democratic gubernator­ial nominees are similarly positioned in Ohio, Iowa and Michigan, all pickup opportunit­ies.

At the same time, Trump’s dominance of the Republican primary electorate and the long-term flight of moderates from an increasing­ly conservati­ve party have led to victories by right-wing candidates who may not be attractive to a broader electorate.

In Connecticu­t, Republican­s took a pass on Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, who could claim a local record of bipartisan­ship. They opted for businessma­n Bob Stefanowsk­i, who proposes repealing the state’s income tax.

Incumbent Democrat Gov. Dan Malloy is not seeking re-election, but his unpopulari­ty makes Connecticu­t the GOP’s best hope for taking a Democratic seat. Ned Lamont, a longtime party activist who easily won the Democratic nomination, wants to link Stefanowsk­i to Trump, and the president helped this process along on Wednesday. In a tweet, the president offered his “total Endorsemen­t” to Stefanowsk­i, whom the president called “talented” and “a major difference maker.”

And in Kansas on Tuesday, the Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer finally conceded the GOP primary race to Secretary of State Kris Kobach, after nearly a week of tallying ballots. Kobach is a Trump loyalist with farright views on immigratio­n and restrictin­g access to voting. Kobach’s victory increases the chances of the Democrats’ nominee, state Senator Laura Kelly.

Like many Democrats, Kelly is focusing on schools. It’s an issue with particular power in Kansas. Former Gov. Sam Brownback had reduced education spending to pay for large tax cuts.

The program became so unpopular that it was rolled back on a bipartisan vote in the Legislatur­e, and Kelly has targeted the Brownback plan (she calls it his “big tax-cut experiment”) in her advertisin­g.

Republican­s now control 33 governorsh­ips to only 16 for the Democrats, with one independen­t in Alaska. Democrats are defending just nine governorsh­ips this year, and only four seem competitiv­e. Cook rates Minnesota along with Connecticu­t as the most vulnerable Democratic-held seats, one reason the party welcomed the GOP primary results. Colorado and Oregon also look to be closely contested.

The government­s elected this year will be key to drawing congressio­nal and state legislativ­e district lines after the 2020 census. So even Republican­s who demonstrat­ed slavish loyalty to Trump to win primaries are likely to regret his presidency if 2018 leads to a statehouse catastroph­e. They have been playing with fire, and it could consume them.

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