Your monthly support provides voters the knowledge they need to make confident decisions at the polls. Donate today.

Daily Brew: January 22, 2019

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search

January 22, 2019

Get your daily cup of news




%%subject%%

Today's Brew highlights vote share records in last year’s gubernatorial races + a new entrant to the presidential race  
The Daily Brew

Welcome to the Tuesday, January 22 Brew. Here’s what’s in store for you as you start your day:

  1. Four state party records broken in 2018's gubernatorial elections
  2. 2019’s election season is in full swing as three states hold special primary elections this week
  3. Sen. Kamala Harris announces 2020 presidential run

Four state party records broken in 2018's gubernatorial elections

Let’s take a quick break from the exciting 2019/2020 election cycle and look back at some statewide records set in November 2018. Four winning gubernatorial candidates—two Democrats and two Republicans—received a record-high share of the vote for a gubernatorial candidate of their party in state history. Another three gubernatorial winners—all Republicans—came within five percentage points of breaking such a record.

The candidate who surpassed his party’s state record by the greatest margin was Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) of Arkansas. Hutchinson's 65.3 percent of the vote not only exceeded by 9.9 percentage points his victory for his first term in 2014 but broke the record for Arkansas’ Republicans set by Mike Huckabee (R) in 1998. Huckabee received 59.8 percent of the vote that year.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige (D) won re-election with 62.7 percent of the vote, surpassing his 2014 performance by 13.2 percentage points. The previous record for vote share by a Democratic governor in Hawaii was the 59.8 percent received by John Waihee (D) in 1990.

In California, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) was elected with 61.9 percent of the vote. The previous record, set by Newsom's predecessor Jerry Brown (D) in 2014, was 60.0 percent.

Wyoming state Treasurer Mark Gordon rounds out the list of record-breakers; his 67.4 percent of the vote bested a Wyoming Republican record set by his predecessor Matt Mead (R) by a margin of 1.2 percentage points. Mead received 65.7 percent of the vote in the state’s gubernatorial election in 2010.

Three other winners—all first-term Republicans seeking re-election—came within five percentage points of breaking state party records. Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) received 55.4 percent of the vote but fell 1.9 percentage points short of the record set in 1950 by Theodore McKeldin (R). In Alabama, Kay Ivey (R) came within 4.1 percentage points of the record her predecessor Robert Bentley (R) set in 2014. Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) ran 5.0 percentage points behind the record set in 1998 by Jane Dee Hull (R).

Out of all 36 gubernatorial winners in 2018, the three who received the greatest share of the vote were Mark Gordon (R-Wyo.) with 67.1 percent, Charlie Baker (R-Mass.) with 66.6 percent, and Asa Hutchinson (R-Ark.) with 65.3 percent. The three who won with the lowest percentage of the vote were Laura Kelly (D-Kan.) with 48 percent and Steve Sisolak (D-Nev.) and Ned Lamont (D-Conn.) with 49.4 percent each.

2019’s election season is in full swing as three states hold special primary elections this week

Three states will hold primaries for state senate special elections this week. Minnesota and South Carolina are holding those primaries today, while Tennessee is holding a special state senate primary on Thursday.

In Minnesota, two Democrats are facing each other in the special Democratic primary for the District 11 seat. The previous incumbent, Tony Lourey, was a Democrat who was appointed by newly-elected Governor Tim Walz (D) to serve as the state’s human resources commissioner. Before Lourey's resignation, Republicans held a 34-33 majority in the state Senate. The outcome of the 2019 special election will determine whether Republicans maintain that one-seat majority or gain a three-seat majority. The special general election in this district will take place on February 5. The Republican control of the State Senate prevents Democrats from having a trifecta in Minnesota. It also leaves Minnesota as the only state in the country with a divided state legislature, where one party controls each chamber.

In South Carolina, the District 6 seat in the state Senate was previously held by William Timmons (R). Timmons announced his resignation on November 9, 2018, after winning election to Congress to represent South Carolina’s 4th Congressional District. He was first elected to District 6 in 2014; the previous officeholder was also a Republican. Four candidates filed to run in this special election - three Republicans and one Democrat. The three Republicans are running in today’s primary. If none of the three receives a majority of the votes, a primary runoff between the top two finishers will be held on February 5. The special general election in this district will take place on March 26. The current partisan composition of the South Carolina State Senate is 26 Republicans and 19 Democrats.

On Thursday, Tennessee will hold a special Republican primary election in State Senate District 32. The seat was vacated by Mark Norris (R) after he was confirmed on October 11, 2018, to serve as a United States District Court judge. Norris was first elected to the seat in 2000 and was unopposed in his most recent election in 2016. Five people filed for the vacant seat - four Republican candidates and one Democrat. The general election will be held March 12.

Both South Carolina and Tennessee currently have Republican state government trifectas.

Sen. Kamala Harris announces 2020 presidential run

Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) became the seventh Democratic elected official to enter the 2020 presidential race, announcing her run Monday on Good Morning America. She was first elected to the Senate in 2016 after previously serving as California’s attorney general.

Harris joins former Obama Cabinet member Julián Castro, former Rep. John Delaney (Md.), Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (Hawaii), Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), and state Sen. Richard Ojeda (W.Va.) in running for the Democratic nomination. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) also formed an exploratory committee last month.

Ballotpedia’s latest tracking count details 49 politicians and public figures that have been discussed as potential candidates for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

More than 470 people have filed with the FEC as candidates for the 2020 presidential race, including 143 Democrats, 64 Republicans, 18 Libertarians, and 10 members of the Green Party.



See also