Today is Friday, 15th November 2024

RSLC: GOP CEMENTS RECORD SETTING STATE LEGISLATIVE MAJORITIES

As Results Continue to Finalize, They Indicate Strong Showing Where The Republican State Leadership Committee Was Involved

ALEXANDRIA, VA – As outstanding results continue to come in from across the country, they continue to show that Republicans made history this week by surpassing Democrats’ gains in the post-Watergate 1974 election and more than doubling their 2006 gains.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, “Republicans gained at least 680 seats on Tuesday” outperforming the 628-seat Democratic gains in 1974, the 472-seat Republican gains of 1994 and more than double the 322-seat Democratic gains of 2006.  In addition, the NCSL reports “Republicans now hold about 3,890, or 53 percent, of the total state legislative seats in America, the most seats in the GOP column since 1928.”

“As we analyze these results and the state legislative gains, it becomes very apparent that Democrats cannot expect to recover anytime soon from this wave that swept them from office.  This is not simply another cycle where some seats went back and forth and will soon move back the other way.  This election doubled the Democrats’ 2006 performance and the next round of redistricting is likely to further cement these results,” observed RSLC Chairman Ed Gillespie.

More than a year ago the RSLC begin planning for the 2010 election cycle, designing a strategy to maximize impact on Congressional redistricting. That plan called for focusing resources on states projected to gain or lose Congressional seats based on the most recent Census data. The RSLC devoted resources to these states and won complete victories in the Michigan House, Ohio House, Pennsylvania House and the Wisconsin House and Senate.  The New York Senate is still to be determined, but appears likely to be a Republican pick-up as well.

Specifically the RSLC:

  1. Spent $1.4 million targeting four New York State Senate seats, winning two and potentially controlling the New York State Senate (GOP currently ahead in enough seats to gain control, but recounts are expected).
  2. Spent nearly $1 million in Pennsylvania House races, targeting and winning three of the toughest races in the state (House Districts 39, 54, 130).
  3. Spent nearly $1 million in Ohio House races, targeting six seats, five of which were won by Republicans. Additionally, five of these six legislative districts were carried by President Obama in 2008.
  4. Spent $1 million in Michigan working with the Michigan House Republican Campaign Committee and Michigan Republican Party to pick up 20 seats in Michigan.
  5. Spent $750,000 in Texas as part of an effort that resulted in 22 House pick-ups.
  6. Spent $1.5 million in Wisconsin to take control of the Senate and Assembly, including spending $500,000 to target Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker.  The RSLC was the only group to target Decker who was defeated soundly by Republican Pam Galloway.
  7. Committed resources to Colorado (over $550,000), North Carolina (over $1.2 million), and Alabama ($1.5 million).

The RSLC also invested more than $3 million across a number of other states including Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Tennessee, Kentucky, Maine, New Hampshire, Washington, Nevada, New Jersey and Oregon.  In

total, the RSLC raised more than $30 million for the 2009-2010 cycle, spending $18 million after Labor Day alone.

About the RSLC

The RSLC is the largest caucus of Republican state leaders and the only national organization whose mission is to elect down ballot, state-level Republican office-holders.  Since 2002, the RSLC has been working to elect candidates for the office of attorney general, lieutenant governor, secretary of state and state legislator.  The RSLC has more than 100,000 donors in all 50 states.

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Down-ballot GOP Success Could Protect Majority for Years

From MSNBC:

Republican gains in the House and Senate were the fodder for huge headlines on Wednesday morning, but it is the party’s gains in down-ballot local races that may have created the most lasting protection for the GOP’s new majority in the House of Representatives.

Once every decade, state legislators begin the process of redrawing congressional districts to reflect changes in population, a process that can serve to insulate representatives from future difficult re-elections.

According to the nonpartisan National Conference of State Legislatures, Republicans will now hold about 53 percent of the total state legislative seats across the country. Republicans gained at least 680 seats, the largest gain by either party since 1966, said NCSL.

Read the Rest…

NE: AG Bruning taking First Steps to Run for U.S. Senate

From KETV.com:

Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning said he’s taking the first steps to run for the U.S. Senate seat now held by Sen. Ben Nelson in 2012.

Bruning’s announcement comes a day after Gov. Dave Heineman announced that he would not make a Senate bid.

Nelson has not said if he will run for re-election.

Read the Rest…

NE: AG Bruning to Run for Senate?

From KHASTV.com:

There is speculation that Friday Attorney General Jon Bruning will announce his run for Senate in 2012. This came after Thursday Governor Dave Heineman said he won’t run.

Bruning has scheduled a press conference for 10:00 Friday.

He’s expected to announce whether or not he’ll run for Democratic Senator Ben Nelson’s seat.

Governor Heineman said Thursday he loves being governor and believes he can make a greater impact on the state in that job.

Read the Rest…

Measuring the Size of 2010’s Republican Sweep

From US News and World Report:

The GOP scored some important national wins on Tuesday–victories that will help shape the future of the party.

Whether the Democrats were fired because of their philosophy or because of their failure to address the issues of joblessness, the economy, and spending, as several of my bloleagues here on Thomas Jefferson Street suggest, is really beside the point. The GOP is back from the brink.

“Election Day proved to be an even bigger ‘wave’ election than anyone anticipated,” said Ed Gillespie, the former Republican National Committee Chairman who now leads the Republican State Leadership Committee. “Voters went to the polls and swept Democrats from office. As we enter a time with huge policy and political implications, new Republican officeholders will be given an opportunity to demonstrate commonsense conservative leadership and implement solutions that promise real results and positive change for voters.”

Read the Rest…

Republicans Win Most Legislative Seats in Generations

From Stateline:

Republicans won smashing victories in state legislatures yesterday, capturing an outright majority of the nation’s legislative seats and the largest majority for the party since 1928.

As of noon Eastern Time, Republicans had taken about 18 legislative chambers from Democrats, with more statehouses hanging in the balance. Democrats hadn’t picked up a single chamber from Republicans. So Republicans will have the upper hand when it comes to shaping state policy in the coming years. They’ll also be in charge in most states as policymakers redraw legislative and congressional district lines next year.

In historical terms, the most dramatic wins for the Republicans were in the South. As recently as 20 years ago, long after the region had begun voting Republican in presidential elections, Democrats held every Southern legislative chamber. After last night, Republicans will control a majority of the region’s legislative chambers for the first time since Reconstruction. (Also see Stateline’s coverage of the governors’ races and key ballot measures.)

Read the Rest…

RSLC Chairman Ed Gillespie – Hero of the 2010 Elections

From the Washington Post:

Ed Gillespie is one of the heroes of the 2010 election cycle. He built American Crossroads and American Crossroads-GPS, which raised more than $60 million to help fuel Tuesday’s GOP takeover of the House, and aggressively supported Tea Party-backed Republicans in tight Senate races ($7.3 million to support Ken Buck in Colorado, $3.9 million to support Marco Rubio in Florida, $3.1 million to support Rand Paul in Kentucky, $5 million to support Sharron Angle in Nevada, and $1.3 million to support Pat Toomey in Pennsylvania). And the Republican State Leadership Committee Gillespie established was integral to the GOP’s historic 682-seat gain in state legislatures across the country that secured Republican control of 19 chambers and counting.

So it was unfortunate to see Sarah Palin (whom I greatly admire) criticize Ed this morning as “out of touch” because he said in a Fox News interview on Election Day that a new GOP House would “try to repeal those parts of the health-care reform bill, the Obamacare, that have caused premiums to go up and have shifted people out of their insurance they like into a public plan.” On his website, David Frum stoked the fire, declaring that “Gillespie has been warning against trying to repeal the Democratic health reform outright” and said this was a sign that after having “refrained from direct confrontation with Tea Party radicalism” Gillespie “may be getting ready to rumble.”

All of this is dead wrong.

Read the Rest…

Newt Gingrich – Can you Hear us Now?

From Human Events:

Republican State House Gains Reach Record Levels

Congress wasn’t the only thing Republicans gained in last night’s election.

The Republican State Leadership Committee reports that the GOP also took control of nineteen state legislatures with the election of over 500 new Republicans to state houses across the country – the largest GOP gain in state house seats in history.

The GOP will control the Minnesota Senate for the first time in the state’s history and the Republican Party will hold majorities in the Alabama and North Carolina legislatures for the first time since the 1800s.

Republican gains were particularly strong in the south where the GOP now controls 18 of the 28 legislative chambers and a majority of all southern legislative seats for the first time since Reconstruction.


Read the Rest…

Devastation: GOP Picks up 680 Legislature Seats

From National Journal:

That control is a particularly bad sign for Democrats as they go into the redistricting process. If the GOP is effective in gerrymandering districts in many of these states, it could eventually lead to the GOP actually expanding its majority in 2012.

Republicans now hold the redistricting “trifecta” — both chambers of the state legislature and the governorship — in 15 states. They also control the Nebraska governorship and the unicameral legislature, taking the number up to 16. And in North Carolina — probably the state most gerrymandered to benefit Democrats — Republicans hold both chambers of the state legislature and the Democratic governor does not have veto power over redistricting proposals.

The Republican State Leadership Committee took the lead in the state legislature contests. Chris Jankowski, a spokesman for the committee, said they were very specific in where they used resources this year.

“These are not races that usually see the level of sophistication that we used,” he said.

Read the Rest…

Rush Limbaugh talks RSLC

The RSLC was mentioned by the King of Talk Radio yesterday. Check out the mention and read the transcript.

Now, any time you have a storm go through, you’re gonna have things that don’t make any sense. Tornadoes tear up one house, go by another house and leave it totally undamaged and nobody can explain it. Nobody can explain Harry Reid, although I’m gonna try. I can tell you what happened with Boxer. I can tell you what happened with Meg Whitman. We’re talking California, we’re talking unions. There are a number of things, but there is absolutely no reason to be pessimistic about anything. People said, “Well, 1994, Rush, that was really big.” Why was ’94 big? It was unexpected. It was a surprise. Last night this was expected. I warned everybody, don’t fall for this trick that they’re gonna try to dispirit you and say your win wasn’t that big. Look at what happened to state legislators. Ladies and gentlemen, according to the Republican State Leadership Committee, 19 legislative bodies have switched from Democrat to Republican control, which means they did better than they had hoped for in their wildest dreams. They hoped to pick up 17. They are gonna be redrawing congressional districts.

Read the Transcript…


 

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