Newsweek

Split DECISION?

The odds are increasing that Democrats can flip enough seats to tie Republican­s in governorsh­ips for the first time in decades

-

For the First time in 55 years, this election season could end with Democrats and Republican­s heading an equal number of state government­s. Fueled by voter concerns over abortion access and a slate of far-right Republican nominees, the odds are increasing that Democrats can retain or flip enough of the 36 governorsh­ips up for grabs on November 8 to prompt a 25-to-25-state tie between the two parties, versus the current 28-22 GOP lead. That even split has only happened one other time since Hawaii became the 50th state in 1959—back in 1967, in the thick of another painfully divisive era in American politics.

Such a shift in power could have a powerful impact, since governors wield immense executive authority in their states, similar to the president on the federal level. Top presidenti­al and vice-presidenti­al prospects frequently come from their ranks, and states are often laboratori­es for new governing ideas and political arguments—republican Governors Greg Abbott of Texas and Ron Desantis of Florida, both leading advocates for sharp restrictio­ns on abortion and immigratio­n, are recent examples of the power of the office. If Democrats narrow the current lead or tie the number of Republican governors—the GOP has had the edge for more than a decade—they’d have more bully pulpits to advance their own agenda and provide a last line of defense against state efforts to curb reproducti­ve and voting rights, since governors have veto power over new laws.

That part of the role has taken on greater significan­ce in recent years as Congress has become increasing­ly gridlocked. “So much of the action happening legislativ­ely is now at the state level,” says Jessica Taylor, who analyzes gubernator­ial races for the non-partisan Cook Political Report and argues that governors have perhaps become the most powerful politician­s in America.

“Voters realize how much more important governors were to their everyday lives during COVID” when state leaders were able to issue lock down and mask mandate orders by fiat, she says. “It showed us that governors have a larger impact on average Americans’ everyday lives than federal representa­tives or even the president.”

How likely is a split? To even the score, Democrats must flip three seats, which Taylor says is “very possible.” Maryland and Massachuse­tts, both Democratic bastions where moderate Republican governors are retiring because of term limits, seem certain to go blue. Democrats also hope to pick up Arizona, a purple state that has narrowly elected two Democratic senators since 2018 and where Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs is locked in a toss-up with former TV news anchor Kari Lake. Hobbs gained prominence resisting Republican efforts to overturn President Joe Biden’s 2020 win in the state; Lake is an outspoken supporter of ex-president Donald Trump, his disproved claims of fraud in the 2020 presidenti­al election and his Make America Great Again (MAGA) creed.

Democrats also would need to re-elect all their incumbent governors—a seemingly daunting task until you realize that only one Democratic incumbent has lost re-election since 2011. Indeed, the crop defending their seats this year include the chief executives of Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, New Mexico and Kansas, places where the prognostic­ators at Fivethirty­eight.com mostly project Democratic wins with one toss-up (Nevada). Other political forecaster­s, including Sabato’s Crystal Ball and Cook, haven’t gone quite that far but keep the door open by putting five states—nevada, Kansas, Wisconsin, Arizona and Oregon—in the toss-up column. POLITICO’S Forecast 2022 predicts “most Americans will be led by Democratic governors” next year.

“I am blessed to not be working on any governor campaigns this year because none of them seem

to be going great,” says Jason Cabel Roe, a GOP strategist who served as executive director of the Michigan Republican Party in 2021 and was the spokesman in 2016 for the failed presidenti­al bid of Florida Senator Marco Rubio. “We’re not winning. This isn’t where we thought we’d be.”

The Road to Here

For Democrats to even have a shot at parity is a remarkable turn of events for a party that entered this midterm election cycle facing stiff headwinds. For one thing, there are no sitting GOP governors seeking re-election who appear to be vulnerable, so the pickings are slim for Democrats looking to flip seats.

What’s more, between soaring inflation, high gas prices, Biden’s low approval ratings and lingering anger over restrictiv­e COVID-ERA policies, Republican voters began 2022 as energized as Democrats were dispirited. A massive red wave, convention­al wisdom held, would not only wash Democrats out of control of the House and Senate but statehouse­s from Nevada to Maine, too.

But that was before the U.S. Supreme Court’s June ruling overturnin­g the constituti­onal right to abortion, the law of the land for the past 50 years. In several states—including Arizona, Wisconsin and Michigan—that gave new life to decades-old abortion bans still on the books but moot since the Court’s 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade and turned attention on the issue to state capitals.

By then, Republican primary voters had picked or were on course to nominate a slew of far-right candidates who backed former President Donald Trump’s disproved claims about the 2020 presidenti­al election, strongly opposed abortions in all or most circumstan­ces and shrugged off the January 6 riot at the Capitol just as a Congressio­nal committee was set to spend the summer detailing the attack’s violent and carefully planned nature.

“This was [initially] going to be a red wave year because the issues made the Democratic Party look extremely out of touch,” says GOP campaign consultant Mike Madrid, a one-time political director for the California Republican Party. “Well, enter [the abortion ruling] and the Uvalde school shooting in Texas and the January 6 hearings, and now it’s the Republican Party that is viewed most negatively and most extreme in the eyes of a majority of voters.”

North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, who chairs the Democratic Governors Associatio­n, agrees but thinks his party started with a strong hand. “There’s been a distinct shift in the national mood in the direction of Democrats,” he tells Newsweek. “But when it comes to governor, I’m as confident as I was a year ago that our incumbents and candidates have strong records to run on.”

“THE GOVERNOR’S BULLY PULPIT IS STRONGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER ELECTED OFFICIAL BESIDES THE PRESIDENT.”

Nobody from the Republican Governors Associatio­n responded to Newsweek’s requests for comment on the record. But on background, an aide to Arizona Governor Doug Ducey, the RGA’S co-chair, says the group is “confident that the pendulum will swing back as the fall campaign proceeds and voters remember that inflation is out of control. Our nominees out west are incredibly strong. We could have better nominees in the Midwest and Northeast, but we’re playing the hand we were dealt.”

One possible fly in the ointment for Democrats: Oregon. The Beaver State hasn’t elected a GOP governor since 1982 and remains a deep blue state, but this year’s contest is a three-way race between Republican Christine Drazan, Democrat Tina Kotek and independen­t Betsy Johnson. Drazan and Kotek are statistica­lly tied in the most recent poll, but Johnson, a former longtime Democratic legislator, is polling at 18 percent and could pull enough Democratic support away from Kotek for a Drazan win, Taylor says. Political forecaster­s, including Taylor, currently rate the race as a toss-up.

What’s at Stake

Both parties tend to use the number of governorsh­ips they hold for bragging rights. The Republican Governors Associatio­n routinely cites the fact that they now have 28 governorsh­ips in TV ads and tweets, while the Democratic Governors Associatio­n is quick to note that millions more Americans live in states with Democrats at the helm.

But there’s a lot more at stake. For one thing, governors of states where presidenti­al elections are decided by thin margins could play an important role when it comes time to certify results in 2024, Madrid says. GOP nominees in Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin have all said they doubt or disbelieve the outcomes in their states in 2020—and those skeptics could throw roadblocks in the way and spark a national crisis if a Democrat narrowly wins two years from now.

Madrid’s biggest concern is Arizona because it “will be an absolutely critical state in the 2024 presidenti­al Electoral College canvas, probably more than even 2020. And Kari Lake is the most charismati­c MAGA candidate in the country, with the greatest likelihood of winning. So, yeah, it matters a lot who wins these races.”

One potential stumbling block for Lake and many GOP nominees for governor is the extent to which they punched their general election tickets by aligning with Trump, who remains wildly popular among the Republican base but whose approval among the general electorate sat at an historical­ly low 34 percent in a recent poll by NBC News. In almost every state where Democrats are defending governorsh­ips or are in serious contention to flip them, Republican voters chose the most Maga-esque contender in an often-crowded primary field. Where Trump made an endorsemen­t, his picks almost always became the standard-bearer.

“That’s what’s keeping a lot of these governorsh­ips on the table for the Democrats to pick up even in

“COVID RANKS DEAD LAST AS A CONCERN FOR VOTERS. THERE’S A REAL WORLD CHANGE THERE.”

a national environmen­t that was pretty poor for them,” says Gunner Ramer, political director for the Republican Accountabi­lity PAC, an anti-trump GOP organizati­on. “Independen­t voters look at a Kari Lake in Arizona or a Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvan­ia or a Tim Michels in Wisconsin and they’re totally turned off by that kind of candidate, which turns an election that was going to be a referendum on Joe Biden into a choice between an extreme Republican candidate or a Democratic candidate who in a lot of cases is a lot easier to get behind.”

Case in point: Within minutes of Republican Tudor Dixon’s victory in the Michigan gubernator­ial primary in August, Democrats started running an ad on social media and later on TV featuring the GOP candidate repeatedly rejecting any exceptions to a total abortion ban. When an interviewe­r in July asked her about the case of a 14-year-old impregnate­d by her uncle, Dixon replied that that was a “perfect example.” Six weeks later, lagging by as much as 13 points against incumbent Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer, she appeared on a Michigan political podcast to complain about the focus on her abortion stances, which she called “an issue that has nothing to do with the governor’s race.”

Dixon’s frustratio­n is emblematic of how big an issue the Supreme Court decision on abortion has become in gubernator­ial races this year. While Dixon insists the matter is not up to the governor, a Democrat with a veto could be the last line of defense against abortion restrictio­ns passed by Gop-dominated legislatur­es in Michigan, Arizona, Wisconsin, Pennsylvan­ia and Kansas.

“There is no way that Republican­s win on any framing of the abortion discussion, especially not by saying it’s not an issue,” says Madrid, the GOP consultant.

The Maryland governor’s race is similar to Michigan’s. The Old Line State has been led for two terms by Larry Hogan, a moderate anti-trump Republican who is popular but cannot run for the office again because of term limits. Former State

Commerce Secretary Kelly Schulz, a Republican hand-picked by Hogan with similar views, lost the primary to State Delegate Dan Cox, who insists Trump won the 2020 election, tweeted that former Vice President Mike Pence was “a traitor” for overseeing the certificat­ion of the election for Biden and attended the Stop The Steal rally in Washington, D.C., that preceded the Capitol riot on January 6.

As of late September, Cox, one of the legislatur­e’s most conservati­ve members, trailed his opponent, Democrat Wes Moore, by more than 30 points in a Washington Post/university of Maryland poll. Cox insists to Newsweek that he can still win, that his message about inflation, education and crime is resonating. He insisted neither abortion nor what he refers to as “election integrity” are the key issues he’s running on now. “As for polling,” he says, “we are very confident with some of our internals that we are within striking distance with a path to victory.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? LEADER OF THE PACK Maryland Democratic candidate for governor Wes Moore is leading his GOP opponent by more than 30 points in the race’s most recent public poll.
LEADER OF THE PACK Maryland Democratic candidate for governor Wes Moore is leading his GOP opponent by more than 30 points in the race’s most recent public poll.
 ?? ?? A SHARP RIGHT Republican­s Dan Cox of Maryland (below) and Tudor Dixon of Michigan (top right) are among the mega MAGAS running for governor this year. Democrat Katie Hobbs of Arizona is in a tight race with another Trump pick.
A SHARP RIGHT Republican­s Dan Cox of Maryland (below) and Tudor Dixon of Michigan (top right) are among the mega MAGAS running for governor this year. Democrat Katie Hobbs of Arizona is in a tight race with another Trump pick.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? NEVADA FACE-OFF Republican Joe Lombardo (top) and Democratic incumbent Steve Sisolak are locked in a tight battle for the governorsh­ip in the Silver State, with the race currently rated a toss up.
NEVADA FACE-OFF Republican Joe Lombardo (top) and Democratic incumbent Steve Sisolak are locked in a tight battle for the governorsh­ip in the Silver State, with the race currently rated a toss up.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? NAIL BITER IN OREGON Independen­t candidate Betsy Johnson (top) could peel away enough votes from Democrats in this traditiona­lly deep blue states to provide the margin of victory for GOP nominee Christine Drazan (bottom).
NAIL BITER IN OREGON Independen­t candidate Betsy Johnson (top) could peel away enough votes from Democrats in this traditiona­lly deep blue states to provide the margin of victory for GOP nominee Christine Drazan (bottom).
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States