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Why These 5 States Hold Odd-Year Elections, Bucking The Trend

President Trump has been campaigning for Kentucky Republican Gov. Matt Bevin (left), who is on the ballot for reelection Tuesday. Above, they step off Air Force One in August at Louisville, Ky.'s airport.
Mandel Ngan
/
AFP/Getty Images
President Trump has been campaigning for Kentucky Republican Gov. Matt Bevin (left), who is on the ballot for reelection Tuesday. Above, they step off Air Force One in August at Louisville, Ky.'s airport.

If you follow politics, you're probably inundated by news of the 2020 presidential race by now. But did you know that 2019 is an election year too? This month, five states will hold big general elections.

Voters in Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Jersey and Virginia will elect either a whole slew of state lawmakers or a governor and other statewide executives. Or, in the case of Louisiana and Mississippi, all of the above.

These races do get national attention. President Trump has been to nearly every one of the states in the past couple of months. Vice President Pence and several of the Democratic presidential contenders have held events with candidates, too.

But why do just five of the 50 states hold big general elections in years when there is no presidential or congressional election, and what does it mean for state political power and voter turnout?

We wanted to know, so some of our political reporters in those places waded into archives, combed state constitutions and spoke to political scientists to figure out why their state has bucked the trend and holds elections in odd-numbered years.

Below we'll share with you what we found, but first a quick note. We learned in our reporting that the idea that voting happens in even years on the first Tuesday after the first Monday is a relatively new one.

Before 1872 when Congress moved to standardize elections for the House of Representatives,states held congressional elections whenever — in odd years, in the spring, on Thursdays, just as a few examples.

Over time, most states aligned their elections with federal elections as a cost- and time-saving measure, said Gideon Cohn-Postar, a Ph.D. student at Northwestern University studying 19th-century U.S. history.

But a few resisted the move to even years. Others flipped the script altogether and decided to adopt an odd-year election schedule despite Congress' calendar.

The reasons why

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat, signs the National Industrial Recovery Act at the White House on June 16, 1933. After winning a fourth term, some state Republicans wanted distance from FDR on the ballot.
/ AP
/
AP
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat, signs the National Industrial Recovery Act at the White House on June 16, 1933. After winning a fourth term, some state Republicans wanted distance from FDR on the ballot.

Mississippi has held elections in odd years for more than 200 years. It would take until 1975 for the most recent state, Louisiana, to change to an off-year voting calendar, but over that century and a half, the rationale behind each state's decision to take up odd-year elections didn't shift much at all. In the simplest terms, these states wanted to keep federal authority and influence out of their local affairs.

Mississippi — 1817

  • Mississippi's odd-year elections date back to 1817, but in 1890, when the state rewrote its constitution (with the stated purpose of white supremacy), the door was wide open to move elections to even years. At the same time in D.C., though, the Republican-controlled Congress was debating something called the Federal Elections Bill. "It was essentially an early version of the Voting Rights Act," said Cohn-Postar. "It provided for federal observers to take over polling places, provide security to voters and count the ballots for congressional elections." In these Jim Crow years, the white power structure in Mississippi feared that regulations like those could threaten its control. "The [constitutional] convention had all the incentive in the world to keep state elections on a different date," said Cohn-Postar.
  • Kentucky — 1850

  • The change to odd-year elections was to "end the confusion of gubernatorial and presidential races the same year," according to Frank Mathias, author of "Gubernatorial Politics in Kentucky."
  • In 1891, when delegates wrote a new constitution, much like in Mississippi, delegates openly worried that holding state contests at the same time as federal ones meant that federal officials would send troops to Kentucky. "We want no federal authority to interfere with our local elections," said constitutional convention delegate Bennett H. Young, according to the official account of the 1891 debates. "If we have all county, state and district elections held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in the odd years, that will avoid the United States election."
  • An early photograph of the governor's mansion in Richmond, Va., estimated to be taken between 1876 and 1880, about 25 years after the state constitution established odd-year elections in Virginia.
    / Courtesy of Library of Virginia
    /
    Courtesy of Library of Virginia
    An early photograph of the governor's mansion in Richmond, Va., estimated to be taken between 1876 and 1880, about 25 years after the state constitution established odd-year elections in Virginia.

    Virginia — 1851

  • Virginia held its first gubernatorial election in 1851 with an update to its constitution, and since then the state has resisted a move to even-year elections.
  • "The conventional wisdom — often repeated in legislative circles — is that Virginia does not want to moor its ship to the federal man-of-war," said University of Virginia law professor Dick Howard, who helped author Virginia's current constitution. Virginia politicians seem to believe that the off-year schedule helps insulate the state from national moods.
  • New Jersey — 1947

  • In the mid-20th century, New Jersey updated its 100-year-old constitution and decided to stagger its elections. "The importance of a gubernatorial election merits an election that will not be overshadowed by a national contest for the presidency. The problems confronting the state are frequently distinct from those confronting the nation," New Jersey's Republican governor at the time, Alfred E. Driscoll, argued to the constitutional convention delegates.
  • But the catalyst may have been President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who won his fourth term a few years before. The Democratic president was popular across the country, including in New Jersey, and some surmised that Driscoll, a Republican, wanted distance from FDR on the ballot.
  • Louisiana — 1975

  • Even though it's the most recent state to join the off-year election trend, Louisiana's elections have been off-kilter since the 1800s. "We used to have our election in the early spring of the even-numbered year of a presidential race," said Mike Henderson, director of Louisiana State University's Public Policy Research Lab.
  • Then, in the 1970s, one of the state's most controversial political figures, Gov. Edwin Edwards, a Democrat (who served four nonconsecutive terms as governor and also federal prison time for corruption), saw other traditionally blue Southern states turning red during President Nixon's Republican administration and called for a constitutional convention to, among other things, move elections to odd years.
  • President Nixon and first lady Pat Nixon wave from their motorcade during a parade in Atlanta on Oct. 12, 1972. During his reelection campaign tour, the president met Republican leaders and candidates from nine Southern states, and Louisiana Democrats viewed him as a threat to their state power.
    / AP
    /
    AP
    President Nixon and first lady Pat Nixon wave from their motorcade during a parade in Atlanta on Oct. 12, 1972. During his reelection campaign tour, the president met Republican leaders and candidates from nine Southern states, and Louisiana Democrats viewed him as a threat to their state power.

    Real costs, low turnout

    Running elections every single year (federal in even years, state in odd) can cost a lot more money. Most election officials couldn't nail down the exact dollar amount for us, but in Kentucky, lawmakers who want to realign the elections calendar claim that doing so would save the state and county coffers about $15.5 million every four years.

    An official with the Virginia Department of Elections said the main cost is staff time. Staff members are almost always running the current election or preparing for the next imminent election.

    That means making changes in how an election is run, upgrading equipment or adjusting to changes in state code all have to happen in a very tight time frame.

    "There's no downtime," said Virginia Deputy Commissioner Jessica Bowman. "That's what our cost is."

    In New Jersey, Bob Giles, the director of the New Jersey Division of Elections, said that this kind of regularity can be beneficial too. The frequency of races means the state's 26,000 poll workers stay familiar with the Election Day process and how voting machines work.

    "The same with voters. They understand that every June there is a primary, every November there's an election," Giles said. "It's just a matter of who is on the ballot."

    But that doesn't necessarily translate into voter turnout. In Virginia, voters are likely to skip off-year elections, especially in years like 2019, when the focus is the legislature, not the governor.

    Just 29% of Virginia voters cast their ballot in the last such election, in 2015, compared with 72% in the presidential election the following year. That means less than half the number of voters came out to vote in 2015 as did in 2016.

    For those same years in Kentucky, about 31% of the electorate made it out to the polls in 2015. In 2016, turnout was up to 59%.

    Similarly, in New Jersey in 2016, 68% of registered voters came to the polls. A year later, in the 2017 gubernatorial race, just 39% of voters cast a ballot.

    Does one party benefit?

    Election experts havespeculated that staying in an odd-year election format has benefited Democrats in Kentucky, who until recently have stayed in power in the state while voters have long voted for Republicans at the federal level.

    The last time Kentucky voted to send a Democrat to the U.S. Senate was in 1992. The last time the state voted for a Democratic presidential candidate was Bill Clinton in 1996.

    Meanwhile, Democrats continued to dominate state government until recently. Current Gov. Matt Bevin is only the third Republican governor of the state since World War II and is running a tough reelection campaign against the state's Democratic attorney general, Andy Beshear.

    The same is true in Louisiana, where odd-year elections have allowed conservative Democrats to stay relevant as they have faded away throughout the region. Louisiana is currently the only state in the deep South with a Democratic governor.

    Outgoing Democratic Gov. Edwin Edwards (left) outside the Capitol in Baton Rouge, La., in 1980 during inaugural ceremonies for the newly elected Republican, Dave Treen (right). Treen was Louisiana's first Republican governor in more than 100 years.
    / AP
    /
    AP
    Outgoing Democratic Gov. Edwin Edwards (left) outside the Capitol in Baton Rouge, La., in 1980 during inaugural ceremonies for the newly elected Republican, Dave Treen (right). Treen was Louisiana's first Republican governor in more than 100 years.

    In Virginia, as the national Democratic Party tilted to the left with FDR, the state's conservative Democratic lawmakers benefited from not sharing the ticket in presidential elections.

    Republican President Dwight Eisenhower easily carried Virginia in 1952 and 1956, but Republicans didn't elect a governor until 1969 with Linwood Holton. The party didn't control a chamber of the legislature until it won the state Senate in 1998 in a special election.

    Today, though, political analysts broadly agree that the current schedule benefits Virginia Republicans because their base votes more reliably than blocs backing Democrats.

    "The people who are most motivated in the electorate tend to be older," Larry Sabato, the director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics, said. "They tend to be whiter, and they tend to be Republican."

    Efforts to (re)align with even-year elections

    There has been little appetite in changing Virginia's calendar, which would require a constitutional amendment.

    A 2015 bill by Democratic Delegate Marcus Simon that would have tracked Virginia onto the federal calendar didn't even make it to the floor. Sabato said politicians in the state are unlikely to change anytime soon. "There's one thing they know for sure: They were elected under the current rules."

    The conventional wisdom — often repeated in legislative circles — is that Virginia does not want to moor its ship to the federal man-of-war.

    Lawmakers in Kentucky have made more room for the discussion. Several bills over the past few years have been proposed to move the gubernatorial election to even years. (One complicating factor is that one governor would serve five years, instead of four, to realign the elections.)

    Opponents have called those bills a ploy to bring Kentucky's down-ballot races — which until lately favored Democrats — in line with federal elections, where the Kentucky electorate has skewed Republican in recent decades.

    Joshua Douglas, an election law professor at the University of Kentucky, said the move could increase voter turnout for state elections, which have been poorly attended in recent years.

    "I think [poor election turnout] is bad for democracy. Anything we can do to increase turnout is a good thing in my view," Douglas said.

    According to him, moving the state contests to presidential election years might make voters more informed and less fatigued.

    "My view is that if we do it all at once when people are talking about policy and political issues, then you're going to have higher turnout with a more informed political electorate as well," Douglas added. "They're not feeling like they're coming out to vote so often that it's hard to keep up."

    Paul Braun is a political reporter with WRKF in Baton Rouge, La. Ryland Barton is the statehouse reporter with WFPL in Frankfort, Ky. Mallory Noe-Payne is a political reporter with WVTF in Richmond, Va. Ben Paviour is a politics reporter with VPM in Richmond. Joe Hernandez covers the New Jersey state government for WHYY. Acacia Squires is the state government editor at NPR in D.C.

    Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Paul Braun is WRKF's Capitol Access reporter.
    Mallory Noe-Payne is a freelance reporter and producer based in Richmond, Virginia. Although she's a native Virginian, she's most recently worked for public radio in Boston. There, she helped produce stories about higher education, including a nationally-airing series on the German university system. In addition to working for WGBH in Boston, she's worked at WAMU in Washington D.C. She graduated from Virginia Tech with degrees in Journalism and Political Science.
    Ryland is the state capitol reporter for the Kentucky Public Radio Network, a group of public radio stations including WKU Public Radio. A native of Lexington, Ryland has covered politics and state government for NPR member stations KWBU in Waco and KUT in Austin.
    Ben Paviour