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West Virginia Democratic Party
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | West Virginia Democratic Party | |
| colorcode | ||
| logo | West Virginia Democratic Party Logo.png | |
| headquarters | Charleston, West Virginia | |
| chairman | Mike Pushkin | |
| membership_year | 2024 | |
| membership | 355,630 | |
| national | Democratic Party | |
| colors | Blue | |
| seats1_title | U.S. Senate | |
| seats1 | ||
| seats2_title | U.S. House | |
| seats2 | ||
| seats3_title | Executive offices | |
| seats3 | ||
| seats4_title | Senate | |
| seats4 | ||
| seats5_title | House of Delegates | |
| seats5 | ||
| website | ||
| country | the United States | |
| symbol | [[File:Democratic Disc.svg | 100px]] |
The West Virginia Democratic Party is the affiliate of the Democratic Party in the U.S. state of West Virginia.
Although West Virginia was historically one of the most Democratic-voting states in the nation, the party has rapidly lost ground in the state in the 21st century. The party currently has very weak electoral power in the state, and is one of the weakest affiliates of the national Democratic Party. It controls no statewide or federal elected offices and holds very few seats in both houses of the state legislature.
Bill Clinton remains the last Democratic Presidential Candidate to win the state, having done so in 1992 and 1996.
History
The state of West Virginia granted itself statehood after its people, through a state constitutional convention, became a free state and broke away from the slave holding state of Virginia in 1861 during the first year of the Civil War. Article IV of the U.S. Constitution requires consent of the newly formed state, the original state, and Congress. The pro-Union Restored Government of Virginia had been recognized by Washington as the legitimate government of the entire Commonwealth, and quickly asserted its right to consent to the formation of the new state. After Congressional consent, self-statehood was gained and political party formation prospered.
The West Virginia Democratic Party was started as a coalition of conservative Pro-Union Democrats, Pro-Confederate Democrats, and former members of the Whig Party. After 1872, its political dominance flourished when restrictions that disenfranchised former Confederates were struck from the state constitution.
Presidential Elections
| 2024 | Kamala Harris/Tim Walz | 214,309 | 28.06% | Lost |
|---|
West Virginia Democrats in government
The West Virginia Democratic Party holds minorities in both state legislative chambers. Democrats hold none of the state's U.S. House seats. Incumbent governor Jim Justice was elected as a Democrat in 2016, but switched parties to Republican in August 2017. Senator Joe Manchin was West Virginia's only congressional Democrat from 2015 to 2024, and the state's only Democratic statewide officeholder from 2021 to 2024, before changing his party affiliation to independent.
Judicial ([[West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals]])
- Justice William R. Wooton
Mayors
- Charleston: Amy Shuler Goodwin (1)
Democratic electorate
Democratic and Republican parties have dominated the American political scene for close to two centuries. In West Virginia, the Republican Union-supporting party held political power in the state from 1863 to 1872. The Democrats took power in the 1872 elections and held it until 1896. Republicans once again had control in 1896 until 1932. During the Great Depression, The Democratic Party began its dominance that lasted until 2014.
Democratic dominance in West Virginia in the 20th century
From 1930 to 2014, Democrats held majorities in both chambers of the West Virginia Legislature.
Today's party organization
The party organization is governed by the West Virginia State Democratic Executive Committee. This committee comprises its leadership. The chair is Delegate Mike Pushkin and the vice chairwoman is Wheeling attorney Teresa Toriseva.
Notes
References
- west Virginia Statehood http://www.wvculture.org/history/statehoo.html {{Webarchive. link. (2007-03-07)
- Robert Rupp. (November 22, 2016). "Democratic Party".
- "house roster".
- "senate roster".
- Broadcasting, West Virginia Public. (2017-08-03). "Justice, a Democrat, to Switch Parties".
- Brisbin, Richard. ''West Virginia Politics and Government''. University of Nebraska Press, 1996. p. 35 para 1.
- "Pushkin, Walker elected to lead West Virginia Democratic Party".
- "West Virginia Democrats Elect Toriseva Vice Chair".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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