Going into this week, Democratic candidates had already out-performed Hillary Clinton “in 27 out of 35 congressional and state-legislative special elections” held so far this year. Yesterday, as Politico noted, the Dems’ hot streak continued.
In a special Florida Senate election where President Donald Trump was a drag, a Republican state House member who was once a contestant on “The Apprentice” lost to Democrat Annette Taddeo, bolstering the minority party’s hopes that it can win close elections after an embarrassing November loss statewide.
Though Taddeo’s victory over state Rep. Jose Felix Diaz in the Miami-area swing district won’t change control of the state Senate — where the GOP holds 24 of 40 seats — it gives the once-dispirited party a badly needed lift heading into the 2018 elections.
If Taddeo’s name sounds familiar, it may have something to do with the fact that she was one of the victims of Russia’s attack last year on the DCCC.
Also last night, a Democratic state House candidate in New Hampshire narrowly won a race in a district where Republicans enjoy a two-to-one registration advantage. It’s also a district where Donald Trump won easily last year.
According to a tally from the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, which focuses on Democratic state legislative races, the party has now flipped eight seats this year from “red” to “blue” – three in Oklahoma, three in New Hampshire, and one each in New York and Florida – on top of a series of other victories.
To be sure, the Republican advantage in state legislatures is still considerable, but so far in the Trump era, it’s shrinking.









