West Virginia’s Gov. Jim Justice jumps over to the GOP

Los Angeles Times

The moment was filled with political pomp and pageantry: Thousands of cheering supporters packed into an arena, a sea of signs and a big announcement.

“The Democrats walked away from me,” West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, standing beside President Donald Trump, said Thursday night. “I can’t help you any more being a Democrat.”

So, Justice said, he would join the Republican Party — a statement that brought a wide smile to Trump’s face.

The move by Justice, who Friday changed his political affiliation, continued a trend in recent years during which Republicans have dominated governor’s offices and state legislatures across the country. During the Obama administration, Democrats spent millions of dollars to bolster field operations and technology. But so far, that hasn’t translated into significant victories at the state level.

With Justice’s flip, Republicans now hold 34 governorships, matching the party’s high in 1922. Moreover, Republicans control both the state legislatures and the governor’s mansions in 26 states, compared with total Democratic control in six states, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. In the other 18 states, power is divided.

“Having control at the state level is vitally important,” said Nathan Gonzales, editor of Inside Elections, a nonpartisan group that handicaps congressional and governors’ races nationwide. “Governors and state legislatures have a strong hand in things like redistricting, which have consequences.”

While parties usually lose ground when in control of the White House, the Democrats under President Barack Obama lost governorships and state-level races beyond the setbacks of his predecessors. Democrats lost 12 governorships while Obama was in office, compared with nine each for Presidents George W. Bush and Clinton, based on an analysis by the Atlantic. Obama significantly exceeded his predecessors in losing state legislative seats, as Democrats handed over a total of 918 nationwide between 2009 and 2016, the legislatures’ conference said.

In a push to make inroads at the state level, former Attorney General Gen. Eric Holder, with the support of Obama, helped launch the National Democratic Redistricting Committee in January. The group, which consists of members of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, aims to help the party win state-level races and, in turn, have an impact on redistricting battles in 2020.

“Presidential elections are obviously important, but we lost sight of the fact that if you want to have a representative in Congress, you’ve got to make sure that you have state legislatures that are drawing districts that will yield a representative in Congress,” Holder said in a January speech to the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning advocacy group based in Washington.

Rick Tyler, a longtime Republican political strategist who has worked on several state-level campaigns, said that for Trump — whose approval numbers are hover near 37 percent and whose support among Republicans is undergoing a slow decline — it will be difficult to help his party maintain its advantages in state legislatures and governor’s offices.

In 2018, for example, Republicans will have to defend 27 of 38 governorships, with several of those races in states that have politically diverse electorates.

“It’s always difficult for the incumbent party that has the presidency to keep seats in state capitols and governor’s mansions,” Tyler said Friday. “It’s especially difficult when you have a president who often bashes his own party.”

In recent days, Trump has criticized Senate Republicans for not passing a measure to repeal the Affordable Care Act — a pillar of Trump’s presidential campaign last year. He’s also castigated members of his party for passing a bill that places additional sanctions on Russia, although he signed it.

“When you need to rally the troops, that doesn’t help,” Tyler said. “That creates divisions in the party that won’t help next year.”

On Thursday night, however, Trump praised Justice’s flip and shied away from targeting members of his party.

“Having Big Jim as a Republican is such an honor,” Trump said.

Ronna McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, said Justice’s switch was “another blow” to the Democrats.

“Gov. Justice’s announcement is just the latest rejection of a party that is leaderless from top to bottom and unable to find a positive, unifying message,” she said in a statement.

In West Virginia, Justice, a grain farmer worth nearly $1.6 billion, had been a lifelong Republican. But in 2015, Justice jumped into the race for governor race as a Democrat. He defeated two primary challengers, and then went on to win the general election by 7 percentage points over Republican Bill Cole, a state senator. (He plans to run for re-election — as a Republican — in 2020.)

Last year, the Democratic Governors Association contributed $1.5 million to Justice’s campaign. This week, the group was far from pleased.

“Jim Justice deceived the voters of West Virginia when he ran as a Democrat eight months ago,” Executive Director Elisabeth Pearson said. “West Virginians have learned that they simply can’t trust Jim Justice.”

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