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Wave elections (1918-2016)/Gubernatorial waves

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Wave elections (1918-2016)

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Main page

Wave analyses
What is a wave? •Evaluating 2018 •
House waves •Senate waves •Gubernatorial waves •
State legislative waves

Additional analyses
Multiple waves •Presidential waves •Election types •Overall waves vs. modern waves •Effectiveness of the out-of-power party •U.S. House waves since 1918

See also
Limitations •Data •Further analysis

Full report •PDF version

Waves in the media
Media coverage •Media definitions

2018 elections
U.S. Senate •U.S. House •Governorships •State legislatures

Other Ballotpedia reports
Who Runs the States
Competitiveness in State Legislatures

June 19, 2018
By:Rob Oldham and Jacob Smith

For 2018 to qualify historically as a wave election, Republicans must lose seven gubernatorial seats in 2018.

The president's party lost seven or more gubernatorial seats in 11 of the 50 elections since 1918, ranging from seven seats lost under PresidentsRonald Reagan (1986) andBarack Obama (2010) to 12 seats lost under PresidentRichard Nixon in 1970.

Eight of the 11 wave elections happened in a president's first midterm election.

The median number of gubernatorial seats lost by the president’s party is two. The average number of seats lost is almost three.

The varying number of gubernatorial elections held each year from 1918 to 2016 complicated this analysis. To read more about this limitation,click here.

The chart below shows the number of seats the president's party lost in the 11 wave elections. To see the full set of elections from 1918 to 2016,click here.

Gubernatorial wave elections
YearPresidentPartyElection typeGubernatorial seats changeElections analyzed[1]
1970NixonRFirst midterm-1235
1922HardingRFirst midterm-1133
1932HooverRPresidential-1035
1920WilsonDPresidential-1036
1994ClintonDFirst midterm-1036
1930HooverRFirst midterm-933
1938RooseveltDSecond midterm-933
1966JohnsonDFirst midterm[2]-935
1954EisenhowerRFirst midterm-833
1982ReaganRFirst midterm-736
2010ObamaDFirst midterm-733

Click here to read the report as one page.

Click here to read or download the report as a PDF.

Footnotes

  1. The number of gubernatorial seats up for election varies, with as many as 36 seats and as few as 12 seats being up in a single year.
  2. Lyndon Johnson's (D) first term began in November 1963 after the death of President John F. Kennedy (D), who was first elected in 1960. Before Johnson had his first midterm in 1966, he was re-elected president in 1964.