Dems will run majority of nation's states
Key gubernatorial victories may help in 2008 races
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Democrats reclaimed governors’ offices Tuesday from the Northeast to the Rockies and even in the South, giving them a majority for the first time in 12 years and an edge in places critical to the 2008 White House race.
A string of victories in Massachusetts, Ohio, New York, Arkansas, Colorado and Maryland means Democrats will control the governorship in 28 states, reversing the GOP’s six-seat advantage. They also held onto vulnerable seats that had been targeted by Republicans in Iowa, Michigan, Oregon and Wisconsin.
Massachusetts Democrat Deval Patrick will be the first black governor of his state — and just the second elected black governor of any state. In Ohio, Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland easily defeated Republican Ken Blackwell. New York, as expected, chose Democrat Eliot Spitzer, the attorney general who crusaded for Wall Street and corporate reform.
Massachusetts and Ohio hadn’t elected a Democrat since 1986. New York last elected one in 1990.
In Colorado — which voted Republican for president in the last three elections — Democrat Bill Ritter defeated GOP Rep. Bob Beauprez for the seat left open by term-limited GOP Gov. Bill Owens. Arkansas chose a Democrat — attorney general Mike Beebe over Republican Asa Hutchinson — for the first time since 1992.
And Democrats turned out GOP Gov. Robert Ehrlich of Maryland, the lone party switch that wasn’t in an open seat. Martin O’Malley, the Baltimore mayor, was the winner there.
Democrats were jubilant.
'What's in it for us'
“From here on out, we need a politics that binds us together, a politics that’s forward-thinking, a politics that asks not, ’What’s in it for me?’ but always ’What’s in it for us,”’ Spitzer said.
The geographical reach of the victories will be critical for the next White House race and for redistricting of congressional seats, which is typically controlled by the governor and the legislature, said New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who won re-election — and is also exploring a presidential run.
“It makes us more a national party. In the past, the Democratic party was strong in the Northeast and California, and that was about it,” he said. “Now we’re a more centrist, national party who can show victories across the country.”
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