Voters keeping status quo in most races for governor
The nation’s governor’s offices are mostly status quo in a year when efforts to battle the coronavirus pandemic have put the leaders in the spotlight while state legislatures are poised to determine redistricting, abortion, health care and other super-charged topics.
Both are on the ballot this year in races that have been overshadowed nationally by the presidential race but have drawn intense interest and massive spending in their states. From early election results Tuesday, no states switched partisan control of the governor’s office, though the race in Montana, which was expected to be the closest in the country, had not been called
Across the country, 35 are picking state lawmakers this year.
Democrats are hoping to gain control of more state legislative chambers after Republicans scored huge wins in 2010. That put them in charge of drawing congressional and state legislative maps after that year’s Census, a process that kept them in control in most of those states throughout the decade.