Big wins at "lower" levels but equally important to state impacts...
"In Georgia, Peter Hubbard and Alicia Johnson will be the newest members of the state's
five-person public utility regulator after earning roughly 60% of the vote. It's the first time Democrats have won a nonfederal statewide office there since 2006 and one where soaring energy costs and displeasure with incumbents dominated the race.
Also in Pennsylvania, Democrats swept the top "row offices" in the purple-hued Bucks County, electing the county's
first-ever Democratic district attorney and defeating an incumbent Republican sheriff a year after Trump narrowly won there. Democrats similarly notched commanding victories in county executive races in Erie, Lehigh and Northampton counties, all bellwether counties in recent presidential elections.
At the state legislative level, Mississippi Democrats have broken a GOP supermajority in the state Senate after flipping two seats in that chamber plus another pickup in the state House.
In many local races across the country, Democrats touted victories that will reshape their communities, like the flipping of all three city council seats in Georgetown, S.C., the unseating of the last remaining Republican city council member in Orlando, Fla., and
winning back mayoral races in Connecticut.
For the first time in a half-century, Democrats control the
Onondaga County legislature that includes Syracuse, N.Y. Democrats saw a
city council seat in Charlotte, N.C., switch parties for the first time since 1999."