[EL] House votes vs seats in AZ & CA
Douglas Johnson
djohnson at ndcresearch.com
Wed Nov 21 11:52:55 PST 2012
This article notes that in AZ, according to the latest votes counts,
Democratic House candidates received 44.6 % of votes and won 55.56% of
seats.
In California - the other state where an independently-selected and
independently-acting commission controls redistricting - according to the
vote counts on Nov. 20 Democratic House candidates won 60.2% of votes and
71.7% of seats.
All House races in California have been called by AP, though 1.2 million
ballots remain to be counted.
Both states saw a number of close elections. At one point, seven of the nine
not-yet-decided elections in the country (as counted by The Hill newspaper)
were in AZ and CA.
- Doug
Douglas Johnson, Fellow
Rose Institute of State and Local Government
at Claremont McKenna College
douglas.johnson at cmc.edu
310-200-2058
From: law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu
[mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu] On Behalf Of Rick
Hasen
Sent: Wednesday, November 21, 2012 9:13 AM
To: law-election at UCI.edu
Subject: [EL] ELB News and Commentary 11/21/12
<http://electionlawblog.org/?p=44633> "Guest Column: Arizona's nonpartisan
redistricting creates fairer election outcomes"
Posted on <http://electionlawblog.org/?p=44633> November 21, 2012 8:49 am
by Rick Hasen <http://electionlawblog.org/?author=3>
Elliott Weiss has written this oped
<http://azstarnet.com/news/opinion/guest-column-arizona-s-nonpartisan-redist
ricting-creates-fairer-election-outcomes/article_60ff9cc0-d4cf-55e1-99f0-b9b
aa151ebed.html> for the Arizona Daily Star.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://webshare.law.ucla.edu/Listservs/law-election/attachments/20121121/55c21bde/attachment.html>
View list directory