General Ray
New member
Beyond the GOP's demographic resurgence, the most devastating part of Tuesday's results for Democrats may be the impact they will have on redistricting. Not only did Republicans win the governorships in large states such as Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, but they also took complete control of the state legislatures in each of those Rust Belt behemoths.
That means that in states that currently have 60 House seats, the GOP will be able to lock in its gains after reapportionment. All told, Republicans picked up at least 16 state legislative chambers Tuesday.
The Republican Party picked up at least 10 governorships from Democrats on Tuesday and could win more than that by the time the final votes have been tallied in all 37 gubernatorial races. The GOP's strong showing could have profound implications for redistricting efforts and for the 2012 presidential campaign.
Every Republican governor running for re-election won on Tuesday, and two incumbent Democrats lost their races: Iowa Governor Chet Culver and Ohio Governor Ted Strickland.
Strickland's loss to former Republican Congressman John Kasich was particularly painful for the White House, as members of the administration - including President Obama - campaigned frequently on his behalf. Strickland was thought to have run a strong campaign but could not overcome the prevailing winds that swept Republicans into power across the Midwest and left Obama with a higher hurdle to climb in mounting his re-election bid in the critical swing state.
Republican gubernatorial candidates also won governorships currently held by Democrats in Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Michigan, Kansas, Nevada, Oklahoma and New Mexico. Redistricting is the reason why Obama showed up in Ohio 12 times for the losers
but in the end the people said no thanks Obama, we have had enough of no hope and no change.
But I gotta say here, the best seat that the right won was the one that the chosen one left back in Illinois, you know, the one that the Governor and Dem's tried to sell to the highest bidder, classic and in the end the right wins, hows that for hope and change Mr. Obama
That means that in states that currently have 60 House seats, the GOP will be able to lock in its gains after reapportionment. All told, Republicans picked up at least 16 state legislative chambers Tuesday.
The Republican Party picked up at least 10 governorships from Democrats on Tuesday and could win more than that by the time the final votes have been tallied in all 37 gubernatorial races. The GOP's strong showing could have profound implications for redistricting efforts and for the 2012 presidential campaign.
Every Republican governor running for re-election won on Tuesday, and two incumbent Democrats lost their races: Iowa Governor Chet Culver and Ohio Governor Ted Strickland.
Strickland's loss to former Republican Congressman John Kasich was particularly painful for the White House, as members of the administration - including President Obama - campaigned frequently on his behalf. Strickland was thought to have run a strong campaign but could not overcome the prevailing winds that swept Republicans into power across the Midwest and left Obama with a higher hurdle to climb in mounting his re-election bid in the critical swing state.
Republican gubernatorial candidates also won governorships currently held by Democrats in Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Michigan, Kansas, Nevada, Oklahoma and New Mexico. Redistricting is the reason why Obama showed up in Ohio 12 times for the losers
But I gotta say here, the best seat that the right won was the one that the chosen one left back in Illinois, you know, the one that the Governor and Dem's tried to sell to the highest bidder, classic and in the end the right wins, hows that for hope and change Mr. Obama
