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Analysis: Republicans Consolidate Most Power in State Gov. in Over 100 Years

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When the Great War began in 1914, one political party controlled all state legislatures in the U.S., save Montana. Nearly 100 years to the day of the war’s end, one political party controls all state legislatures, save Minnesota. And one party holds more state government trifectas and triplexes than states with divided governments.

The 2018 midterms “consolidated partisan control of states more so than any election in over a century,” Tim Storey and Wendy Underhill at the National Conference of State Legislators wrote.

After Nov. 6, one political party now controls all state legislatures, excluding Minnesota. Democrats control 18; Republicans control 31.

More Republicans hold trifectas than Democrats and state government triplexes, reversing a trend that was first tracked by Ballotpedia in 2010.

Historically, roughly 25 states have held trifectas at any given time, where one political party holds the governorship, a majority in the state Senate, and a majority in the state House. The other half is divided, where executive and legislative majorities are split among political parties.

Ballotpedia, a digital encyclopedia of American politics and elections and a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, notes that in 2010, there were 25 divided governments and 25 trifectas, with the majority (16) held by Democrats. After the 2018 midterm elections, there are now 13 divided governments and 37 trifectas, with the majority (23) held by Republicans.

The implications are numerous, Sarah Rosier, Ballotpedia’s news editor, told Watchdog.org.

“Partisan control consolidated at the state level makes it easy to get policies implemented,” Rosier said.

The GOP-majority remains significant since it only held nine trifectas in 2010 compared to 23 in 2018. The trifecta results also follow the 2014 midterms results, Ballotpedia notes, “when Republicans held 24 trifectas to 13 for Democrats.”

Were you surprised by the midterm election results?

In 2018, Republicans lost three trifectas and Democrats gained six. States that were previously a divided government and became a Democratic trifecta are Colorado, Illinois, Maine, New Mexico, New York and Nevada.

Kansas, Michigan, Wisconsin and New Hampshire were previously Republican trifectas and are now divided governments.

Compared to the 2010 midterms, only eight states held divided legislatures, and Democrats lost 24 chambers.

“On average, 12 chambers change party hands in every two-year election cycle back to 1900,” NCSL adds.

In 2010, 12 state governorships flipped from Democratic to Republican. The GOP held onto 11 of them in 2014, losing Pennsylvania.

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By 2018, five of the 11 governorships Republicans held in 2010 flipped back to Democrats: Kansas, Maine, Michigan, New Mexico, and Wisconsin. The remaining six states elected Republican governors for the third straight time: Florida, Iowa, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Wyoming.

Currently, 34 out of 50 state governments are triplexes, when one political party holds the offices of governor, attorney general, and secretary of state. All three executive offices exist in 47 states with the exception of Alaska, Hawaii and Utah, which do not have secretaries of state.

Republicans hold a majority in state government triplexes, 19, compared to 17 held by Democrats. Going into the election, the split was 22 to 12, with Republicans holding the advantage.

In 2018, Democrats gained five triplexes and Republicans lost three, with two now undetermined depending on the outcome of Florida and Georgia elections. Democrats gained triplexes in Colorado, Illinois, Maine, New Mexico and Wisconsin. Republicans lost Kansas, Nevada and North Dakota.

In states where the governor appoints the attorney general or secretary of state, Ballotpedia defines the triplex according to the party held by the governor.

“In states where these officers are not all from the same party, differing political views often bring them into direct conflict with one another,” Ballotpedia adds. Conversely, all three executives being from the same party lessens the likelihood of conflict.

The party of the president had lost seats in 27 of the 29 midterms since 1902, NCSL notes, with two exceptions. In 1934, during the Great Depression, President Franklin Roosevelt’s Democrats won by large numbers, and in 2002, after President Bush declared war after 9/11, Republicans made gains.

What does this mean for taxpayers?

“According to the most recent study which analyzes 2016 financial reports, Democratic trifectas are over 12 times more indebted than Republican trifectas, while divided governments are almost 8 times as indebted as Republican trifectas,” Truth in Accounting’s Karen P. Danford told Watchdog.org. “The breakdown was as follows: average taxpayer burden for Republican trifectas equaled -$1,814; the average for Democrat trifectas equaled -$22,214; and the average for divided government equaled -$14,350. The average for all the states combined was a taxpayer burden of -$9,845.”

Danford adds, “Democratic trifectas tend to have more debt and Republican ones have less,” according to research TIA produced calculating each state’s taxpayer burden. “Divided governments seem to fall right in the middle between the two.”

A version of this article appeared on the Watchdog.org website.

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The Center Square was launched in May 2019 to fulfill the need for high-quality statehouse and statewide news across the United States. The focus of our work is state- and local-level government and economic reporting. A taxpayer sensibility distinguishes our work from other coverage of state and local issues. As a result of this approach, our readers are better informed about the focus of state and local government and its cost to the citizens whose tax dollars fund governmental decisions.
The Center Square was launched in May 2019 to fulfill the need for high-quality statehouse and statewide news across the United States.

The focus of our work is state- and local-level government and economic reporting. A taxpayer sensibility distinguishes our work from other coverage of state and local issues. As a result of this approach, our readers are better informed about the focus of state and local government and its cost to the citizens whose tax dollars fund governmental decisions.

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