Photo: ANGELA WEISS / AFP / Getty Images
Democrats scored sweeping victories across several closely watched races on Tuesday (November 4), delivering a powerful rebuke to President Donald Trump and signally renewed energy for the party ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
From Virginia to California, Democratic candidates and ballot measures prevailed by decisive margins in a blue wave that underscored apparent voter frustrations with Trump’s economic and immigration policies.
In Virginia, former congresswoman Abigail Spanberger defeated Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, becoming the state’s first female governor. Spanberger, who centered her campaign on affordability, dominated in suburban counties and won 61 percent of voters in federal worker households, a group hit hard by Trump-era spending cuts. Spanberger's win also helped carry Democratic attorney general candidate Jay Jones, who overcame a late campaign controversy, to victory in Tuesday's election.
In New Jersey, Rep. Mikie Sherrill delivered another major Democratic victory, defeating Republican Jack Ciattarelli in a race once considered competitive. Sherrill’s emphasis on lowering costs and protecting reproductive rights resonated with suburban and Latino voters, while Ciattarelli struggled to recreate Trump’s coalition. Exit polls showed Sherrill winning 64 percent of Latino voters and a majority of independents, a clear rejection of Trump’s influence in the Garden State.
In New York City, progressive Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani won the mayoral race by a landslide over former governor Andrew Cuomo, who mounted a last-minute independent bid backed by Trump. Mamdani’s victory, his second over Cuomo this year after beating him in the Democratic primary, marks a defining moment for the city’s left wing. His affordability-focused platform, along with voters’ approval of housing reform ballot measures, could make New York a test case for progressives in the future.
In California, voters approved Proposition 50, a measure allowing lawmakers to redraw congressional districts, marking a major win for Governor Gavin Newsom and Democrats nationwide. The initiative is expected to create up to five new Democratic-leaning House seats, countering GOP redistricting efforts across the country.
Democratic-backed Pennsylvania Supreme Court justices retained their seats, preserving the party’s 5-2 majority on a court that will likely decide key election law and abortion cases in 2026. In Maine, voters rejected a GOP-led initiative to tighten voting restrictions, maintaining access to absentee and early voting.
Democrats also made history in Georgia, where Alicia Johnson and Peter Hubbard flipped two Public Service Commission seats, marking the first Democratic statewide wins there in nearly 25 years.
In Detroit, City Council President Mary Sheffield became the city's first woman mayor after defeating popular megachurch pastor the Rev. Solomon Kinloch in Tuesday’s general election.
One of Tuesday's biggest surprises came in Mississippi, where Democrats broke the GOP’s long-standing supermajority in the state Senate for the first time in years. The gains followed court-ordered redistricting aimed at increasing Black voter representation after a federal panel ruled the state’s maps had diluted minority voting power.
Democrats flipped Senate Districts 2 and 45 and secured an additional state House seat with Justin Crosby’s victory in District 22. Those wins reduced Republicans’ hold to 34 seats in the 52-member Senate, erasing their ability to pass measures without bipartisan support.
The Democratic Party is hoping to continue riding the momentum from Tuesday into the 2026 midterms, which will determine who will hold the majority in Congress for years to come.
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