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The Most Important Down-Ballot Races to Watch

Posted on Tuesday, October 8, 2024
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by Shane Harris
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While all eyes are understandably trained on the contests for the White House, Senate, and House of Representatives, a number of other down-ballot races are nonetheless worth paying attention to on election night. As we’ve seen in recent years, state-level politics can sometimes have ramifications that trickle up to the national level. Here are a few races to keep your eye on.

Michigan Legislature

Democrats flipped both the state Senate and the state House of Representatives in Michigan in 2022, giving them a governing trifecta for the first time in nearly 40 years. Since then, the state’s liberal lawmakers have been on a far-left tear, passing laws to enact a Green New Deal-style mandate requiring that 100 percent of the state’s power come from “clean” energy sources by 2040, restrict gun ownership, repeal right-to-work laws, allow extreme late-term abortion, allow men in women’s locker rooms and restrooms, and remove important election security protections.

In short, in a state that has been politically purple for years, Governor Gretchen Whitmer and her legislative majorities have governed like far-left liberals in California or New York.

Now the question is how Michigan voters will react. Democrats hold a two-seat edge in both chambers, 20-18 in the Senate and 56-54 in the House. Either way, both races look like they will come down to just a few seats and could be a bellwether for how voters throughout the other key rust belt states might react to the past four years of liberal rule under Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.

Pennsylvania Legislature

After more than a decade of Republican control of both chambers of the Pennsylvania State Legislature, Democrats finally won control of the state House of Representatives in 2022. This year, the contests for the House and state Senate are expected to be some of the most competitive anywhere in the country.

Republicans currently have a 28-22 advantage in the state Senate, while Democrats hold a 102-100 edge in the state House.

Both parties are targeting competitive districts in areas like the Lehigh Valley, Scranton, and Wilkes-Barre, where several open seats present opportunities for flips. The new district lines, established through recent redistricting, have created a more favorable map for Democrats in some suburban areas, but Republicans are focusing on rural and traditionally conservative districts where their base remains strong.

Republicans have also built a quiet fundraising advantage, with GOP candidates spending $4.5 million on paid advertisements to $1.4 million for Democrats. In these lower-profile races where neither candidate is typically well-known to voters, getting ads up on TV and investing in getting a candidate’s policy platform out to voters is especially important.

While conventional wisdom holds that presidential nominees help down-ballot candidates in their party, the reverse can sometimes also be true. If conservative voters are motivated to turn out to win back control of the state House and hold the state Senate, it could also help Donald Trump.

North Carolina Governor

With only 11 gubernatorial contests this year nationwide, North Carolina looks to be Republicans’ only chance for a pickup. Incumbent Republican Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson is facing off against incumbent Democrat Attorney General Josh Stein to replace Democrat Roy Cooper, who is term limited.

Robinson’s campaign was recently rocked by a series of shocking allegations, which he has categorically denied. But polling averages now show Stein pulling ahead, and Robinson will have his work cut out for him to make up some ground by Election Day.

With solid Republican majorities in both chambers of the North Carolina state legislature, winning the governorship is a critical opportunity for the GOP to remove a major roadblock to conservative legislation. Cooper has notably vetoed bills to bolster election integrity and prevent men from accessing women’s restrooms and locker rooms.

New Hampshire Governor

Democrats’ best chance to flip a governor’s mansion is in New Hampshire, where former Republican U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte is squaring off against Democrat Joyce Craig, the former Mayor of Manchester. The incumbent governor, Republican Chris Sununu, who has at times irked conservatives by folding to pressure from the left on key issues, is not seeking re-election.

The latest Real Clear Politics average gives Ayotte a slim one-point lead, but polling has been relatively scarce in the race. Harris holds a solid lead over Trump in the state, but Granite Staters have a history of split-ticket voting, going for Clinton and Biden over Trump while also electing Sununu both years.

Republicans currently have a 14-10 edge in the state Senate and a 199-194 edge in the state House of Representatives and have won control of both chambers in five of the last seven cycles. As is the case in North Carolina, the outcome of the gubernatorial election could well decide whether Republicans have unified control of government or are stuck working around a Democrat governor.

Ohio Supreme Court

A total of 82 state Supreme Court seats are up for grabs this November, and three of the most important are in the Buckeye State.

Currently, Republicans hold a 4-3 majority on the court, but that could change if Democrats manage to flip seats. If all three GOP candidates are elected, Republicans would hold all but one seat on the bench, for a 6-1 majority. On the flip side, if all three Democrats win their elections, the Democrats would hold a 4-3 majority. The Ohio Supreme Court has been under Republican control since 1986.

The retirement of Republican Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor, who recently sided with Democrats in redistricting cases, has added to the stakes. Democrat Jennifer Brunner and Republican Sharon Kennedy are vying to replace her, and the outcome could shift the ideological balance of the court.

The Ohio Supreme Court will likely soon hear a number of high-profile cases on critical issues, including abortion, redistricting, and school choice that are currently making their way through lower courts. With Ohio’s new law requiring party labels on the ballot for judicial races, Republicans may have a slight edge, given the state’s overall political leanings, but as recent elections like those in Wisconsin have shown, Republicans can’t take anything for granted.

Texas Supreme Court

Six of Texas’s nine state supreme court seats are up for re-election this year. Although the court has historically been dominated by Republicans, and the GOP currently holds all nine seats, Texas Democrats are nonetheless spending big to pull off an upset as liberals continue to believe the Lone Star State is trending in their direction.

The races are expected to be contentious, with issues like voting rights, business regulations, and challenges to Republican-backed legislation likely to be critical topics. Texas has seen rising attention to judicial races in recent years, as the court’s influence in shaping statewide policies has grown. As both parties invest heavily in these elections, the outcomes could have far-reaching implications for Texas law and governance.

These likely won’t be the only down-ballot races to have outsized impact at the state and national levels in the years ahead. But as both parties focus on winning power in Washington, they shouldn’t forget that our country’s federalist system gives great importance to local races as well.

Shane Harris is a writer and political consultant from Southwest Ohio. You can follow him on X @shaneharris513.

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uncleferd
uncleferd
29 days ago

Those “Democrat” incumbents surely do put serious effort into expanding their influence by way of schemes that include rewarding illegal immigrants with taxpayer dollars… in return for their illegal votes.
On this coming election day, let’s all see if we can’t muster enough of our own representation, by mail-in ballots and in-person votes, to press firmly on the handle that would flush and cleans the “bowls” of our nation’s and state’s capitals of those among us who would undermine our representation, citizenship, free speech, and all associated rights that we all have worked through our lifetimes to support. I hope that none of us give in to the new, “freebie movement” being led by Ms. Harris and assorted, brainwashed cronies.

Thinking
Thinking
29 days ago

That Texas would vote for a democrat with the state being overrun by millions of invaders is incomprehensible to me. The democrat party is not democratic. They don’t care that they have sold out America to the elites in Davos and the new world order. Wake up Texas and any other state with democrat governors, senators and representatives. Vote Republican if you want to survive. There is more to the disasters in Maui, East Palestine and North Carolina. Why is no help available. Secretary Mayorkas says there is no money for N.C. All FEMA does is kicking private rescue organizations out for the most inane reasons. But land buyers are all over the state buying up land. Could it be for the Lithium and Quartz that is found in that state? And Mr Emhoff has a vested interest in the Lithium mines via Blackrock? Everything is connected. Our fearless leader says Americans have to help out the storm zone victims. “We are the United States of America for God’s sake”, he keeps saying. No tax increase but calls on Americans to give some more because our tax money has gone to the Ukraine and the people of Lebanon. There is no more for these poor people who have lost everything. We all are giving what we can but this is not sustainable. No new taxes but in my city and state there are a dozen tax referendums on the ballot. And all of them affect those making minimum wage and up. The elites can afford these tax increases not us folks at the bottom of the pay scale. So go ahead you swing state people vote in the democrats and see how well they do for you the coming 4 years. What money you have left Harris and Walz will take it away. VOTE TRUMP/VANCE you will get your voice back.

Westhus092
Westhus092
29 days ago

Don’t vote for the Communists in any election, at any level and for any role. I know that the GOP can be a disappointment at times with the RINOS in the party, but when it comes down to ‘R’ vs. ‘D’ on any ballot, selecting the ‘D’ only means more misery and tyranny for the rest of us.

Philip Seth Hammersley
Philip Seth Hammersley
29 days ago

Wherever you are–vote Straight Republican unless (a rarity) you can find a pro-life, pro-Constitution Democrat!

Marie
Marie
29 days ago

Republican must expose the Democrat’s tax proposals when the Trump tax cuts expire, because the MSM never reports this. Very important for voters to know.

John Droz
John Droz
25 days ago

TY for the good list. One major omission: the contest in NC for the Superintendent of the School system. GOP candidate Michele Morrow is a housewife and nurse, who is a courageous Conservative. She is clearly outside the education system — which is why they are attacking her viciously. She has a 75%± chance of winning. If she does, it will be the most significant development in the US K-12 education space in 50± years.

Christopher Barnes
Christopher Barnes
27 days ago

Im from Michigan and i pray Michiganders will wake up and stop Gretchen and her cronies like Jocelyn benson and dana nessel from destroying our state anymore than they already have. We have to take both houses so they cant pass anymore radical leftwing ideoligies. They are responsible for the failing autu indystry.

James Popielarz
James Popielarz
28 days ago

Being from Michigan, I hope my fellow voters will vote smart. Michigan is a great state to live in, we don’t need California Values (or lack there of) or it’s form of governance (or lack there of). Down with the one-party rule.

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