Majority of states have Democratic governor
By paranoia
@paranoia (7)
Malaysia
November 8, 2006 10:37am CST
Six governorships switched from Republican to Democratic in Tuesday's election, giving Democrats control of a majority of top state posts for the first time in 12 years.
Democrats now control 28 governorships and the Republicans control 20. Rhode Island and Minnesota have yet to be called.
In Massachusetts, former Clinton Justice Department official Deval Patrick became the state's first African-American governor and only the second elected nationally since Reconstruction.
# State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer will succeed retiring GOP Gov. George Pataki in New York.
# Rep. Ted Strickland won in Ohio, defeating Secretary of State Ken Blackwell.
# Baltimore Mayor Martin O'Malley defeated Maryland's Republican incumbent Gov. Robert Ehrlich.
# In Arkansas, GOP Gov. Mike Huckabee is term-limited; Democrat Mike Beebe will be the next state leader, winning over Republican Asa Hutchinson, a former congressman and undersecretary in the Department of Homeland Security.
# Denver District Attorney Bill Ritter replaced Colorado GOP Gov. Bill Owens, who is term limited.
Democrats held onto governorships in Arizona, Illinois, Kansas, Michigan, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wyoming. (A complete rundown of the governors' races)
Republicans retained governor's offices in Alabama, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Nebraska, South Carolina and Texas. (Watch South Carolina governor's election day goof -- 2:09)
While most of the Republican incumbents running Tuesday were expected to win re-election, a wave of retirements left the GOP with the task of defending nine open seats, where most of their losses were expected.
Democrats only had to defend one open seat, in Iowa, where Democratic Secretary of State Chet Culver beat Republican U.S. Rep. Jim Nussle.
Unlike controlling the House or Senate, having a majority of governorships has little practical effect, because governors operate independently of each other. However, a switch gives Democrats bragging rights and access to state political organizations that could be helpful in the 2008 presidential election.
The silver-lining came for Republicans when, despite the Golden State's Democratic leanings, actor-turned-politician Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger won re-election against Democratic challenger, state Treasurer Phil Angelides.
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@peacemaker (11)
• Malaysia
8 Nov 06
What Voters Had to Say
The Daily News talked with voters across Alaska on Tuesday, mostly about the governor's race. As usual, they offered observations across the board about candidates they voted for and those they voted against.
@peacemaker (11)
• Malaysia
8 Nov 06
Reports of long lines, voting machine malfunctions and court disputes over ballot procedures surfaced as U.S. voters chose all 435 members of the House of Representatives, senators in 33 states and 36 governors.
@peacemaker (11)
• Malaysia
8 Nov 06
Problems with electronic voting systems and scanners that record paper ballots cropped up in Ohio, Denver, Indiana, Pennsylvania and Utah, election observers said. Voting-rights groups considered whether to file suits to extend voting hours in the precincts experiencing the most trouble
Election Protection, a coalition of voting-rights groups, said it had received 12,300 calls from voters as of 3 p.m. today. Many of the callers expressed confusion about where their polling places were and what identification was required.
@peacemaker (11)
• Malaysia
8 Nov 06
Saying oil companies aren't doing enough to develop gasoline alternatives, Proposition 87 brought together an unlikely alliance of Hollywood activists and Silicon Valley tech luminaries. The measure would raise $4 billion by taxing oil extracted in California to boost research into alternative fuels and sales of alternative-energy vehicles.