Some results are still trickling in. And some state legislative races are not yet final—subject to final tally, recount, and judicial review. But such races are the exception. Most results are in. You can find results reported here:
BEFORE NOVEMBER 2024 ELECTION:
<https://documents.ncsl.org/wwwncsl/About-State-Legislatures/Legis_Control_2024_10-18-24_Adam%20Kuckuk.pdf> (dated 18-Oct-2024);
AFTER NOVEMBER 2024 ELECTION:
<https://documents.ncsl.org/wwwncsl/Elections/LegisControl_2024_Post%20Election_Prelim.pdf> (dated 8-Nov-2024);
Before
the 2024 election: the partisan split among governors was 27R/23D. There were
11 governor’s races, and no changes in partisan control. Thus the split
remained 27R/23D.
The partisan
composition of the state legislative houses saw some change. The analysis here looks
to the 49 states with bicameral chambers, and excludes Nebraska’s unicameral
non-partisan chamber. At play are 98 chambers (49 * 2) and some 7,386 state legislative seats.
Prior
to the election, in terms of legislative seats, the composition was:
4020 Rs 3250 Ds 116 other (other parties, independents, and vacancies)
After
the November 5, 2024 election, the composition appears to be:
4081 Rs 3237 Ds 68
other (other parties, independents, and vacancies)
That’s a small shift, 61 seats, to the Rs—from the D column and from the other column. The Rs gained 14 state senate seats and 47 state house seats. The Rs continue to have about 55% of all state legislative seats nationally. Most state legislative chambers saw 5 or fewer seats change from R to D or D to R. Notable exceptions beyond 5 seats include:
- Maine House—Rs gain 7 seats, and shift from D control to divided control (75D, 74R, 2 other);
- Montana House—Ds gain 9 seats, but Rs continue to control;
- New Hampshire House—Rs gain 16 seats, and Rs continue to control;
- Vermont Senate—Rs gain 6 seats, but Ds continue to control;
- Vermont House—Rs gain 22 seats, but Ds continue to control;
- Wisconsin Senate—Ds gain 6 seats, but Rs continue to control (with a 1-seat majority); and,
- Wisconsin House—Ds gain 11 seats, but Rs continue to control.
All the most significant R gains were in legislative chambers in New England—i.e., Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont.
In
terms of chambers, prior to the election, the composition was:
57 majority-R
chambers 41 majority-D chambers
0 tie-or-no-majority chambers
After
the November 5, 2024 election, the composition appears to be:
57 majority-R
chambers 38 majority-D chambers
3 tie-or-no-majority chambers
What
chambers changed?
- Alaska House* shift from R-control to divided control (20R, 15D, 5 other);
- Maine House shift from D control to divided control (75D, 74R, 2 other);
- Michigan House shift from D-control to R-control; and,
- Minnesota House** shift from from D-control to D-R tie (67-to-67).
See
generally
Wendy Underhill, ‘Election Outcomes: Status Quo in the States Despite GOP
Gains in DC,’ National Conference of State Legislatures (Nov. 8,
2024), <https://www.ncsl.org/state-legislatures-news/details/election-outcomes-status-quo-in-the-states-despite-gop-gains-in-dc>;
Seth Barrett Tillman, ‘What Happened in the States?: State Legislatures and Governorships (UPDATED),’ New Reform Club (Nov. 10, 2024, 3:21 AM) (updated Nov. 11, 2024), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2024/11/what-happened-in-states-state.html>;
*Alaska results are not yet final—including initial counts and subsequent counts under ranked choice voting, recounts, judicial review, etc. Furthermore, ranked choice voting extends the process and time period to count votes.
**It could be argued that the Minnesota Senate flipped from divided control (33D-to-33R, with 1 vacancy) to D (official DFL party) control (34D-to-33R). The National Conference of State Legislatures does not classify this as a change of control, perhaps because, prior to the November 2024 election, the Ds (DFLs) had already organized the chamber, and also because, prior to the November 2024 election, the Ds (DFLs) had already chosen a D (DFL) president, pro tempore, and majority leader.
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