The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Democrats see wins as momentum for 2018 state elections

- By David A. Lieb and Christina A. Cassidy

Sweeping Democratic victories in Virginia and key gains in other 2017 state legislativ­e races have lifted Democratic hopes of even bigger wins in next year’s midterm elections, as they seek a greater voice in how political districts will be redrawn for the decade to come.

Democrats won the governors’ offices in Virginia and New Jersey on Tuesday, erased a previously dominant Republican majority in the Virginia House of Delegates and won a special election that gave them control of the Washington state Senate.

All told, Democrats flipped about two dozen state legislativ­e seats around the country Tuesday and have now gained at least 30 seats previously held by Republican­s since President Donald Trump won election last year, reversing several years of Republican momentum.

“In general, this is a rebuke of Republican governance of states,” said Jessica Post, executive director of the Democratic Legislativ­e Campaign Committee. She added: “The other thing it said is we can win all across the country.”

The fight for control of legislativ­e chambers matters not only for policies on health care, taxes and education, but also because the legislatur­e in most states determines how future congressio­nal and state legislativ­e districts are drawn. The next round of redistrict­ing will take place after the 2020 Census, and both parties are focused on controllin­g as many states as possible by then.

Republican­s swept to power in many states in the 2010 elections, just in time to use their new authority during the last round of redistrict­ing. Since then, Republican­s have gained more than 900 state legislativ­e seats nationwide.

This year’s Democratic victories are “a very small step forward” by comparison and have largely come in “seats, that by all rights, they probably should have had already,” said Matt Walter, president of the Republican State Leadership Committee.

Heading into Tuesday’s elections, Republican­s controlled more than two-thirds of all state legislativ­e chambers, including full control of both chambers and the governor’s office in about two dozen states. By comparison, Democrats had complete control in only a half-dozen states. Just five states had legislatur­es where each party controlled one chamber, and several of those involved bipartisan coalitions.

During the past year, Democrats have launched a coordinate­d effort to chip away at Republican dominance from lower-level offices on up. It’s been aided by the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, which is chaired by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.

Democratic Party leaders pointed to Tuesday’s results as the fruits of their revamped strategy.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez told reporters on a conference call that 33 groups worked in Virginia to help elect Democrats, doubling the number of voter contacts from four years ago. Various Democratic entities poured millions of dollars into races there and elsewhere.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States