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Conventional wisdom has it that Election Day 2004 was
a wipeout for Democrats. And when you’re talking
about the top of the ticket — president, Senate
and House — it’s hard to disagree.
But further down the ballot, the results were more mixed.
Before Out There goes on hiatus — the column will
mostly disappear until the 2006 election season heats
up — we’ll recap results in gubernatorial
races, ballot initiatives, state legislative contests,
state attorney general races and state supreme court
elections.
Governors
A few months ago, Out There spotlighted the history
of stunning volatility in recent governors’ races.
Prior to Election Day, 62 percent of the previous 42
gubernatorial races had resulted in an ouster of the
incumbent party — a rate more than triple the
rate of state Senate takeovers and 10 to 20 times the
rate of Congressional-seat turnover. Most experts attributed
this to voter discontent over budget shortfalls that
peaked in 2001 and 2002.
This year, the state budget picture improved, and the
gubernatorial ouster rate consequently fell a bit. But
it hardly reverted to zero.
In the 11 governor’s races this year, five incumbents
were re-elected, and Utah Republicans retained the seat
of outgoing Gov. Olene Walker. One race remains too
close to call — the contest in Washington state
between Christine Gregoire (D) and Dino Rossi (R) for
a seat that has been in Democratic hands for 20 years.
But in the remaining four states, the sitting governor,
or the retiring governor’s party, was ousted.
In Indiana, Republican Mitch Daniels ousted Democratic
Gov. Joe Kernan, while in New Hampshire, Democrat John
Lynch defeated Republican Gov. Craig Benson. In Missouri,
Secretary of State Matt Blunt (R) defeated state Auditor
Claire McCaskill (D), who had become the nominee by
defeating sitting Gov. Bob Holden in the Democratic
primary. And in Montana, farmer Brian Schweitzer (D)
beat Secretary of State Bob Brown (R) in the race to
fill the seat being vacated by GOP Gov. Judy Martz.
If Gregoire ends up winning, the Democratic-Republican
split in the governorships will be exactly what it was
before: 28 Republicans, 22 Democrats. If Rossi wins,
the Republicans will net one seat.
Either way, the results — not counting the undecided
Washington state race — bring the one-cycle ouster
rate for governors to 30 out of 52 races, or 58 percent.
That’s down slightly from what it was before Election
Night, but it’s still a strikingly high number.
Heading into 2006, the question to ask is whether the
dozens of governors who rode into office on the anti-incumbency
wave of 2002 are about to be punished themselves, or
whether voters will appreciate their generally steady
hands over the past four years. Most notably, will fish-out-of-water
governors such as the Democrats serving in Kansas, Oklahoma
and Wyoming and the Republicans holding office in Connecticut,
Hawaii and Maryland get a green light for another term
from voters?
Ballot Initiatives
As everybody now knows, one of the biggest stories of
Election Night was the sweeping victory by 11 measures
to ban same-sex marriage. The same-sex marriage ban
in Ohio may have played a role in shaping turnout in
the crucial battleground state, even if the other 10
measures had only a limited impact on the presidential
race. But other conservative measures found success
at the ballot box — as did liberal measures in
many places.
Voters in Arizona passed an initiative designed to squeeze
illegal immigration, while California voters sided with
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) and rejected a proposed
loosening of the state’s “three-strikes”
sentencing law. California voters also approved a landmark
measure that requires DNA samples to be taken from convicts
and crime suspects.
Florida voters easily passed a measure that requires
parental notice for minors seeking an abortion. Oregon
voters approved a far-reaching “takings”
measure that requires government compensation for limiting
private development rights. And animal-welfare advocates
failed to pass measures in Alaska and Maine that would
have banned bear-baiting.
Despite these losses, liberals still had a strong Election
Night. In Nevada and Florida, voters overwhelmingly
passed measures to raise the state minimum wage, while
voters in California passed a measure to fund stem-cell
research.
Montana voters rejected a measure that would have overturned
a previously passed initiative banning the use of cyanide
in open-pit mining. And voters in Washington state backed
a measure that bars the Energy Department from sending
any additional nuclear waste to the Hanford nuclear
site until the highly contaminated facility is cleaned
up.
In Colorado, voters approved a landmark measure that
requires utilities to produce 10 percent of their electricity
using renewable fuels. Three states — Colorado,
Oklahoma and Montana — approved hikes in cigarette
taxes, while voters in Maine rejected a cap on property
taxes. And California voters overwhelmingly approved
a measure that requires more openness in government.
Electoral-reform initiatives, the subject of a previous
Out There column, had a mixed day. Washington state
voters approved a Louisiana-style “top-two”
primary format, but California voters sided with the
major parties — and against Schwarzenegger —
by rejecting a similar plan.
Alaska voters approved a measure to require a special
election for Senate vacancies, even as they re-elected
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R), the woman whose controversial
elevation prompted the initiative in the first place.
And the single most-watched initiative in the nation
— a measure that would have split Colorado’s
Electoral College vote — fizzled.
State Legislatures
The biggest triumphs for the Democratic Party on Election
Day occurred in the state legislatures.
Both parties proved that they were able to pick up legislative
chambers on favorable turf — Republicans in Georgia,
Indiana, Oklahoma and Tennessee, and Democrats in Oregon,
Vermont and Washington. But only Democrats showed that
they could pick up chambers in alien territory.
Colorado Democrats shocked observers by picking up both
chambers of the Legislature. The Democrats also seized
at least one chamber in Montana (and possibly forced
a tie in the other, depending on a recount). The party
took over one chamber in North Carolina and forced a
tie in Iowa — and also held on to endangered majorities
in several red states, including a chamber each in Nevada,
North Carolina, Oklahoma and Tennessee. Democrats also
made unexpected gains in the Minnesota House, putting
the party within a seat of tying the Republican-held
chamber.
Observers credited increased Democratic turnout and
strong efforts to leverage the party’s advantages,
such as a favorable redistricting map in Montana, for
the gains.
Measured by legislative seats, Democrats netted more
than 70 in this election — enough to turn a slight
deficit in seats nationwide into a slight advantage.
Nationally, the Republicans still hold a slight lead
in state Houses and an equal number of state Senates
as the Democrats. But on an awful Election Day, the
Democrats will take what they can get.
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