In 2012, Michigan tied a state record by electing the lowest rate of U.S. Representatives of a major party whilst simultaneously casting its electoral votes for that party’s presidential nominee since statehood 175 years ago

michiganseal10.pngAlthough Democrats did not take back the U.S. House after the 2012 election cycle, the party was quick to point out its Pyrrhic victory that more votes were cast for its candidates across the 435 seats nationwide than for the Republicans.

Existing gerrymandered districts and the dreaded historical pullback against the president’s party in the midterm election means there is very little chatter of Democrats taking back the House in 2014.

In recent months, Smart Politics has turned its lens on the gerrymandering angle in a series of reports – and has demonstrated the degree of gerrymandering occurring in Rust Belt states (with large congressional delegations) has hurt the Democratic Party in the 113th Congress in historic fashion.

In Ohio, voters elected just 25 percent of its congressional delegation (four of 16 Democrats) from the party of the state’s winning presidential candidate – the lowest such number and percentage ever recorded in the history of the state.

In Pennsylvania, voters elected the lowest number (five) and lowest rate (27 percent) of U.S. Representatives of a major party whilst simultaneously casting its electoral votes for that party’s presidential nominee across the 47 presidential election cycles since the birth of the modern two-party system in 1828.

Today’s Rust Belt gerrymandering report is the third in the series, this time focusing on the State of Michigan.

In the 2012 cycle, Barack Obama carried Michigan by 9.5 points – the sixth consecutive cycle the Wolverine State cast its Electoral College votes for the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee.

Democratic candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives, however, were nearly doubled up by their Republican counterparts – winning just five seats to the GOP’s nine – despite winning more than 240,000 more votes statewide (2,327,985 for the Democrats vs. 2,086,804 for the Republicans).

Winning five of 14 seats is bad – but winning five of 14 seats when your party’s presidential nominee carries the state is historically bad.

A Smart Politics analysis finds that in 2012 Michiganders tied a state record by electing the lowest rate (35 percent) of U.S. Representatives by a major party whilst simultaneously casting its electoral votes for that party’s presidential nominee across the 45 presidential election cycles since statehood 175 years ago.

The 2012 cycle is tied in meager representation for a major political party with the 1944 cycle whereby six of 17 Democrats (35 percent) were sent to nation’s lower legislative chamber as Franklin Roosevelt narrowly carried the state over Thomas Dewey.

The big difference between 1944 and 2012, however, is that Obama was a much more decisive winner in Michigan at the top of the ticket (by 9.5 points over Romney) than FDR was over Dewey (winning in a squeaker by just 1.1 points).

The only time a smaller percentage of House seats was won by the party of Michigan’s victorious presidential candidate was in 1912, when third party Progressive nominee Teddy Roosevelt scored a plurality victory while two Progressives won House contests: Roy Woodruff in the 10th and William MacDonald in the 12th CD.

At 35 percent, the Democratic Michigan U.S. House delegation is nearly half the rate at which representatives have been elected to D.C. from the party of the winning presidential candidate in Michigan over the last 45 cycles.

Over the last 175 years, more than two-thirds of the representatives elected from Michigan during presidential cycles came from the party of the winning presidential nominee in the Wolverine State (68.2 percent).

Despite a six-cycle presidential winning streak, Democratic presidential candidates have not fared well in Michigan historically, carrying the state in just 16 of 45 cycles since statehood and just 12 of 40 cycles since the Republican Party fielded its first presidential candidate during the Election of 1856.

Even during those 16 winning cycles, however, Democratic congressional candidates have had trouble riding the coattails of their presidential nominee, winning just 51.4 percent of seats when their presidential candidate won the state (108 of 210 seats). (A rate the party would gladly take today — picking up two more seats in the 113th Congress).

That number drops to 49.2 percent (98 of 199 seats) for the Democrats since the GOP became its major party foe during the 1856 cycle.

By contrast, during the 25 cycles in which Michigan cast its Electoral College votes for the GOP nominee, the state has elected Republicans to 252 of its 344 U.S. House seats, or 73.3 percent.

Republicans had the run of the land during the early 20th Century – winning every House seat during the presidential election cycles of 1900, 1904, 1908, 1920, 1924, and 1928 – for a total of 75 seats during those cycles.

Percentage of Michigan U.S. House Seats Won by Party of Winning Presidential Candidate, 1836-2012

Cycle
MI Pres vote
Democrat
GOP/Whig
3rd
Total
% Seats MI Pres Party
2012
Democrat
5
9
0
14
35.7
2008
Democrat
8
7
0
15
53.3
2004
Democrat
6
9
0
15
40.0
2000
Democrat
9
7
0
16
56.3
1996
Democrat
10
6
0
16
62.5
1992
Democrat
10
6
0
16
62.5
1988
Republican
11
7
0
18
38.9
1984
Republican
11
7
0
18
38.9
1980
Republican
12
7
0
19
36.8
1976
Republican
11
8
0
19
42.1
1972
Republican
7
12
0
19
63.2
1968
Democrat
7
12
0
19
36.8
1964
Democrat
12
7
0
19
63.2
1960
Democrat
7
11
0
18
38.9
1956
Republican
6
12
0
18
66.7
1952
Republican
5
13
0
18
72.2
1948
Republican
5
12
0
17
70.6
1944
Democrat
6
11
0
17
35.3
1940
Republican
6
11
0
17
64.7
1936
Democrat
8
9
0
17
47.1
1932
Democrat
10
7
0
17
58.8
1928
Republican
0
13
0
13
100.0
1924
Republican
0
13
0
13
100.0
1920
Republican
0
13
0
13
100.0
1916
Republican
1
12
0
13
92.3
1912
Progressive
2
9
2
13
15.4
1908
Republican
0
12
0
12
100.0
1904
Republican
0
12
0
12
100.0
1900
Republican
0
12
0
12
100.0
1896
Republican
2
10
0
12
83.3
1892
Republican
5
7
0
12
58.3
1888
Republican
2
9
0
11
81.8
1884
Republican
7
4
0
11
36.4
1880
Republican
0
9
0
9
100.0
1876
Republican
1
8
0
9
88.9
1872
Republican
0
9
0
9
100.0
1868
Republican
0
6
0
6
100.0
1864
Republican
0
6
0
6
100.0
1860
Republican
0
4
0
4
100.0
1856
Republican
0
4
0
4
100.0
1852
Democrat
4
0
0
4
100.0
1848
Democrat
2
1*
0
3
66.7
1844
Democrat
3
0
0
3
100.0
1840
Whig
0
1*
0
1
100.0
1836
Democrat
1
0
0
1
100.0
Total
 
202
364
2
568
68.2

* Whig Party. Note: Far right column denotes the percentage of House seats won by the party of the winning presidential candidate in Michigan. Table compiled by Smart Politics.

Follow Smart Politics on Twitter.

3 Comments

  1. Lad on September 16, 2013 at 6:36 pm

    A very deceiving headline: The story states that it is Republicans doing the gerrymandering. It is not the “Democrats’ Gerrymandering” as your headline states.

    • Eric Ostermeier on September 16, 2013 at 6:43 pm

      The headline does not mean to deceive. To the extent gerrymandering exists in Michigan, new congressional district lines have benefited Republicans, not Democrats. Hence, it is a Democratic problem, not one the GOP is trying to overcome.

  2. Lisa Parker on March 19, 2018 at 6:40 pm

    What an awful headline! It implies that the gerrymandering is caused by Democrats. You really should change it.

Leave a Comment