Democrats fail to pick up single chamber from Republicans.
By Josh Goodman Stateline
Texas Insider Report: AUSTIN Texas Republicans won smashing victories in state legislatures last week capturing an outright majority of the nations legislative seats & the largest majority for the party since 1928. Theyll be in charge as policymakers redraw Legislative & Congressional District lines next year.
Democrats entered the night with 800 more legislative seats than the Republicans. With 46 states holding elections for 6115 of the nations 7382 seats Democrats had a lot of turf to defend.
As of noon Eastern Time on the day after Tuesdays election Republicans had taken about 18 legislative chambers from Democrats with more statehouses hanging in the balance.
So Republicans will have the upper hand when it comes to shaping state policy in the coming years. Theyll also be in charge in most states as policymakers redraw legislative and congressional district lines next year.
In historical terms the most dramatic wins for the Republicans were in the South. As recently as 20 years ago long after the region had begun voting Republican in presidential elections Democrats held every Southern legislative chamber.
After last night Republicans will control a majority of the regions legislative chambers for the first time since Reconstruction.
The GOP took both the
North Carolina Senate and North Carolina House from the Democrats winning the Senate for the first time since 1870.
The party won both houses of the
Alabama Legislature from the Democrats which will also give the Republicans control there for the first time since Reconstruction.
In Oklahoma Republicans retained their control of the Legislature which coupled with their win in the governors race will give the GOP complete control of state government for the first time ever.
In Tennessee the story was similar: Republicans won the governorship and solidified their control of the Legislature putting them fully in charge of

the state for the first time since Reconstruction.
Despite the history in the South the GOPs Midwest wins may end up being most consequential.
Republicans will control both houses of the legislature in:
- Michigan
- Pennsylvania
- Ohio
- Wisconsin and
- Indiana.
In all five states Democrats entered the election with control of the lower house. In Wisconsin theyd had the Senate too. All those states also will have Republican governors come January giving the party sizable opportunities to implement policy.
Unlike in the South the Republican wins in the Midwest reversed very recent history.
Nationally Democrats gained legislative seats in 2004 2006 and 2008. In 2006 and 2008 the party had won 14 legislative chambers from Republicans and pulled into ties in two others that previously had been Republican-held. In the Midwest and elsewhere most of those chambers have fallen back into Republican hands.
No reversal was as dramatic as the one in
New Hampshire. Democrats shocking wins there in 2006 looked at the time like the culmination of a generations-long realignment away from the Republicans in the Northeast.
Republicans also picked up the:
- Montana House
- both houses of the Minnesota Legislature and
- both houses of the Maine Legislature.
Maine joined Wisconsin in going from complete Democratic control of state government including the legislature and the governorship to complete Republican control.
Besides the Republican gains another major theme emerging from the elections is unified control of legislatures. Tim Storey senior fellow with the
National Conference of State Legislatures projects that as few as four to six statehouses will have one party in control of one chamber and the other chamber in the hands of the opposing party.
One of the new legislatures early tasks will be redistricting the once-a-decade redrawing of legislative and congressional lines. Due to the Republicans gains theyll be in a position in many states to tilt the political playing field in their favor for a decade to come.
Some of the Democratic losses were to be expected.
In midterm elections the presidents party almost always loses legislative seats. It has happened in all but two midterm elections since 1902. Democrats did hold onto a few of the chambers that won from the Republicans in recent elections including the
Delaware House the
Iowa Senate and the
Nevada Senate.
Still this was no typical midterm rebalancing. From 1956 to 2002 Democrats controlled a majority of the nations legislative seats. Democrats quickly regained their majorities whenever they lost them.
But now Republicans will have their most clear-cut advantage since before the Great Depression.
Democrats ran 50 fewer candidates for state legislative seats this year than they did in 2008. Republicans ran 822 more candidates.
They stepped up and challenged every conceivable race that they could Storey says and its paying off.