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The Red Tsunami Beats the Blue Wave in State Legislatures

Newt Gingrich  19 hrs agoA funny thing happened to the blue wave supposedly on the way—it disappeared.

© Steve Pope/Getty U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA) celebrates with supporters at a watch party on November 3, 2020 in Des Moines, Iowa.

Former president Barack Obama and former attorney general Eric Holder spent years raising money to win the fight for state legislators so Democrats could gerrymander the U.S. House for the next decade. Lisa Nelson, the head of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) estimates that Democrats outspent Republicans by at least three to one in state legislative races.

The left-wing propaganda media spent months talking about the coming blue wave, and the crushing of the GOP in an anti-Trump tide.

The big internet companies censored conservatives and Republicans with greater and greater frequency as the election came closer.

Yet, when the elections for state legislators were over, the Republicans had created a populist, grassroots tsunami which defeated the Democrats and set the stage for a decade of creativity at the state level.

Republicans now have a majority in both houses of 31 state legislatures and hold the state senate in Minnesota. Minnesota is the only state with split control of the legislature and is a good example of the frustration Democrats are feeling after their blue wave evaporated. The state's Democratic Farmer Labor party spent $18 million trying to win the state senate and came up empty.

The Democrats have legislative control in only 18 states.

Furthermore, Republicans control the legislatures and governorships in 23 states, with roughly 136 million citizens. By contrast the Democrats only control the legislature and governorships in 15 states with 120 million people (more than 39 million of them in California). Republicans control the legislature in seven states with Democratic governors, while Democrats only control the legislature in three states with Republican governors.

Some of the local contests were vividly one-sided in favor of the red tsunami.

Edith Jorge-Tuñón, the political director of the Republican State Leadership Committee, told me Iowa and Texas are two great case studies of the failure of the Democrats to create a blue wave.

Iowa was enormously competitive at every level this year. The Democrats' effort to defeat Sen. Joni Ernst was massive (and failed). In U.S. House races, the Republicans gained one decisively and kept the seat they already had. The Democrats dropped from three seats to one. In the last district, as I write, Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks is ahead by six votes in the closest election for the House since 1984.

The Democrats spent millions in Iowa, but Republicans were able to flip six state legislative seats, half of which were in the Des Moines area, the largest city in the state (it covers six surrounding counties). All three of the districts gained in the Des Moines area were suburban.

In Texas—the second most populous state in the country and a state Democrats convince themselves every two years they are about to win (remember Beto O'Rourke and his massively expensive Senate campaign against Ted Cruz)—Democrats were sure they'd have a shot at the suburban seats in major cities such as Dallas, Houston and San Antonio. When the campaign was over, Democrats faced an epic failure. They spent millions to net zero seats. Republicans held the line in all but one district, including nine where Beto won in 2018. Furthermore, Republicans picked up one seat from the Democrats. So, after all their effort, the Democrats had to regard this campaign as an enormous waste of money.

The red tsunami was created because the American people rejected the radicalism of the Democrats, and a new generation of Republican candidates brought new energy, ideas and supporters to the GOP.

In Georgia, Republicans elected their first Latino state senator (Jason Anavitarte).

In Kansas, Republicans elected the youngest woman to the Kansas state senate (Kristen O'Shea).

In Ohio, Republicans elected their first Indian-American state senator (Niraj Antani).

In Arizona, Republican women candidates had a 60 percent success rate and made up about 36 percent of the total Republican winners.

Every Republican can take some confidence in these tumultuous times that at the grassroots and in the states there is a Republican tsunami building which is going to overwhelm the imagined blue wave and create dynamic opportunities in 2021 and 2022.

EM         -> { Trump for 2020 }

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
                    
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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