/historic_state_legislative_election_results

Dataset of state legislative elections from 1971–2018.

Primary LanguagePython

Note: The code in this repository is a bit of a mess, and the below documentation may be out of date. However, we are still maintaining the spreadsheet that you are probably interested in. Please contact us with any questions!

State Legislative Elections, 1971 - 2018

This repo contains results of general elections to the lower house of the state legislatures over the last five decades, from 1971 to 2018. Candidate information from Carl Klarner's State Legislative Election Returns dataset was used to compile these election results from 1971 - 2012. For each state, we only extract elections using Single Member districts (see below).

The elections dataset can be found in the output_data folder.

Analysis for elections up to 2012 (inclusive) can be re-run using the script main.py. Analysis for 2013-2017 elections can be re-run with post2013_scraper/run_scraper.py

This script and accompanying dataset are provided by the Princeton Gerrymandering Project. Please direct any feedback or questions to Brian Remlinger, brem at princeton dot edu. Although we have attempted to check the dataset for errors, accuracy cannot be guaranteed.

This dataset is distributed under a CC0 license, while the generator scripts are distributed under a GNU GPL license. If you use this data for research or projects, we'd love to know! Please send along an email describing your work.

Analysis Details

Input data

Input data for 1971 - 2012 is drawn from Carl Klarner's SLER 1967 - 2010 dataset, as well as its 2011-2012 extension. Some precalculation was done on the 2011-2012 extension; see the Excel file in input_data.

Input data from 2013 - 2017 are Ballotpedia's state assembly election results pages. These pages are scraped using BeautifulSoup, then combined into a single file.

Output dataset details

Each row of the output csv file represents an election. In 2013-2017 elections, the party winning the election is identified as Republican, Democrat, Independent, Other, or Both. For details on how parties are designated in previous elections, see the codebook accompanying the SLER dataset. "Both" refers to races won by a candidate nominated by both major parties. For winning candidates nominated by a major party and a minor party, only their major party is identified. Party vote totals represent the total number of votes received by each party in an election, even if they were split between several candidates.

In some elections, the number of votes cast was not recorded. The vast majority of these elections were uncontested races in Florida, Oklahoma, or other states where candidates in unopposed races did not or do not appear on the ballot. In these cases, the winning party is assigned 100 votes and all other vote categories are assigned 0 votes.

"Incumbency" indicates the party of the incumbent candidate, which could be either D, R, I, or O for "open seat," indicating that no incumbent is running.

In uncontested races from 2013 - 2017, the uncontested candidate is listed as receiving 1 vote when vote totals are not provided.

Data Extraction Details

Elections excluded from dataset

Several elections are excluded from the dataset. In particular, Georgia's 2002 election is excluded because it used multi-member districts, and several elections Massachusetts and Maine in the 1970s are excluded because they preceded a large change in the legislature size. Excluded elections can be found in elections_to_exclude.csv in the input_data folder.

Data modifications

In several states in the 2011-2012 dataset extension, some candidates ran as candidates for both parties but operated and identified as members of one party. These candidates are re-coded with the appropriate party ID in SLERs2011_2012_recoding.csv in the input_data folder.

First election using Single Member Districts, State By State

The trend in state legislative elections has been a move from multimember districts to single member districts, motivated in large part by the Voting Rights Act. The only exception to this is Georgia, which switched from single member to multimember districts in 2002, but was forced to switch back to single member districts by court order for the 2004 election.

States that switched from multimember districts to single member districts before 1972
Parenthetical is first election using single-member districts

California (pre- 1960)
Delaware (pre- 1960)
Kansas (pre- 1960)
Kentucky (pre- 1960)
Missouri (pre- 1960)
New York (pre- 1960)
Utah (pre- 1960)
Wisconsin (pre- 1960)
Michigan (1964)
Oklahoma (1964)
Connecticut (1966)
New Mexico (1966)
Pennsylvania (1966)
Rhode Island (1966)
Ohio (1966)
Colorado (1968)
Iowa (1968)
Louisiana (1971)
Massachusetts (1972)
Minnesota (1972)
Nevada (1972)
Oregon (1972)
Tennessee (1972)

States that switched from multimember districts to single member districts between 1974 and 1985
Parenthetical is first election using single-member districts

Montana (1974)
South Carolina (1974)
Alabama (1974)
Texas (1976)
Maine (1976)
Mississippi (1979)
Arkansas (1982) [still had 1 multimember district until at least 2002, but removed most MMDs before 1982 election]
Florida (1982)
Hawaii (1982)
Illinois (1982)
Virginia (1984)

States that switched from multimember districts to single member districts after 1985

Alaska (switched for 1992 election)
Georgia (switched to SMD for 1992 election; switched back to MMD in 2002 election, but reverted to SMD for 2004)
Indiana (switched for 1992 election)
Wyoming (switched for 1992 election)
North Carolina (switched for 2002 election)

States still using multimember districts

Arizona
Idaho
Maryland
New Hampshire
New Jersey (New Jersey 2013, 2015, 2017 elections are included in this dataset. The incumbency information may be unreliable for these races.)
North Dakota
South Dakota
Vermont
Washington (Washington 2014 and 2016 elections are included in this dataset)
West Virginia

Sources:

The Impact of Multimember Districts on Party Representation in U. S. State Legislatures, Richard G. Niemi, Jeffrey S. Hill and Bernard Grofman, Legislative Studies Quarterly, Vol. 10, No. 4 (Nov., 1985), pp. 441-455

Chapter 5: Multimember Districts, Redistricting Law 2000, National Conference of State Legislatures

Chapter 8 Multimember Districts, Redistricting Law 2010, National Conference of State Legislatures

Ballotpedia