We are currently in declaration season for the upcoming elections in 2020. Elections are going to decide state legislatures, several governoships, the entire House, and 1/3 of the Senate. It is impossible to exaggerate the importance of this election. Here are my thoughts:
President
Senate
I prefer candidate who are currently in office, which means they have the opportunity to propose legislation right now addressing the issues of today, and then with that information someone who is able to pass legislation regardless of the political climate will be my preferred pick, such as Senator Barack Obama in 2008 which helped propel him to rival Senator Hillary Clinton in the primary almost out of nowhere. Someone with a powerful speaking voice who can speak eloquently and clearly will be preferred to someone who has a weak stage presence. Someone who has not lost before is preferred to someone who has lost elections in the past.
Iowa
- I think Rob Sand has a really good shot if he chooses to run from what I can see. He is well spoken, calm, and will do a good job as Senator. he won in a very close election, and if he continues to do good work as the State Auditor I think he would have a good shot at winning the Senate seat. From what I can see from the PBS station it looks like he is making good progress at prosecuting corruption this will play well in the Midwest. He has a very calm presence on stage.
- Abby Finkenauer is an advocate for better broadband for rural Iowa, and has been fighting to improve access to health care in rural America. She has good stage presence with a powerful effective speaking voice. and would do a good job as a Senator.
- Rob Hogg has a published book on climate change, and with a law degree could be a formidable challenger.
North Carolina
- Erica Smith has 4 years experience as a State Senator in North Carolina, with a focus on education, expanding opportunities to rural areas, and improving access to jobs. She could win.
Arizona
Georgia
South Carolina
- Jaime Harrison would be a great candidate, but his website is bland and he has no elected experience. He however does have experience leading the Democratic Party, so that can help him.
- Mayor Stephen Benjamin of Columbia has a decade of elected experience, has experience with the NAACP. He was selected to speak at the DNC Convention in 2016 with an excellent speaking voice. he could be a formidable challenger to Lindsay Graham.
Maine
Sara Gideon, the Speaker of the House, is running and she can win.
Colorado
Former Governor John Hickenlooper is running, and will hopefully win.
References
House
Governors
In New Hampshire, the mayor of Manchester and majority leader of the Senate are both viable candidates who could win. This will deliver a Democratic Trifecta.
State Legislatures
Arizona
Republicans have a 2 seat majority in the House, the closest margin by percent in the country. All 60 Representative are up for election every two years. The three closest districts were in 20, 6, and 23. 20 is just northeast of Glendale and Peoria, 6 goes from Flagstaff to Phoenix, and 23 is in Northeast Greater Phoenix.
Michigan
Michigan has a 6 seat Republican majority out of 110 seats in the House. Districts 104,38,110, and 61 are the closest margins which will give Democrats control of the House following next year’s legislative election. 104 is at Grand Traverse, 38 is in the Detroit suburbs, 110 is the northwestern most district, and 61 is South Kalamazoo. Democrats need 4 pickups to have a majority.
Minnesota
Virginia
Every other state in the Union which has a Republican majority has over a 10% lead, so unless if this cycle has a particularly large landslide year, I do not expect any big changes.
This leaves us with not very many places for progress which will fully flip a chamber, but some important places to make a difference building towards the future.
Trifectas post-2020
I expect most states will be the same.
Democrats will maintain trifectas in Hawaii, Washington, Oregon, California, Nevada, Colorado, Wyoming, Illinois, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Maine.
Republicans will keep their trifectas in Alaska, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.
Current divided governments will continue in Montana, Kansas, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maryland, and Louisiana.
Democrats could pick up trifectas in Virginia, Minnesota, Vermont, and New Hampshire.
Republicans could potentially lose their trifecta in Arizona.
Republicans will likely gain a trifecta in Louisiana.
The total trifecta party score post 2020 will likely be:
- Democrats: 18
- Republicans: 23
- Divided government:9
This is a really important step in the right direction.
Ballot Initiatives
Elections
- Alaska is going to have a Ranked-Choice voting initiative
- Arizona is going to have an automatic voter registration initiative
- Arizona has a campaign contribution transparency initiative
- California is going to have a Ranked-Choice Voting Initiative
- Florida has two initiatives for a top-two open primary, one for federal office, and one for state office
- Massachusetts is going to have a Ranked-Choice Voting Initiative
- Missouri is going to have a Ranked Choice Voting Initiative
- Missouri is also going to have a Proportional Representation Initiative
There are a lot of exciting elections related initiatives, with 5 ranked voting initiatives, so I expect we are going to make a lot of progress.
References
- https://ballotpedia.org/State_government_trifectas
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_state_legislatures%27_partisan_trend
- https://github.com/PrincetonUniversity/historic_state_legislative_election_results