
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Heading into the 2022 Midterms, 37 states are governed by trifectas: a single party controls a majority in the state house, state senate, and also holds the governor’s seat. There are 23 Republican trifectas and 14 Democratic trifectas. This sort of single party control of states has increased since 2018, and in this election cycle, a handful of states could gain or lose trifectas.
We speak with Archon Fung, Director of the Harvard Ash Center at the Harvard Kennedy School, about what trifectas mean for democracy and for public policy.
4.3
712712 ratings
Heading into the 2022 Midterms, 37 states are governed by trifectas: a single party controls a majority in the state house, state senate, and also holds the governor’s seat. There are 23 Republican trifectas and 14 Democratic trifectas. This sort of single party control of states has increased since 2018, and in this election cycle, a handful of states could gain or lose trifectas.
We speak with Archon Fung, Director of the Harvard Ash Center at the Harvard Kennedy School, about what trifectas mean for democracy and for public policy.
6,185 Listeners
459 Listeners
9,163 Listeners
665 Listeners
3,762 Listeners
915 Listeners
38,489 Listeners
43,774 Listeners
316 Listeners
90,802 Listeners
37,766 Listeners
27,078 Listeners
914 Listeners
11,504 Listeners
32,071 Listeners
923 Listeners
8,247 Listeners
43,337 Listeners
6,624 Listeners
11,913 Listeners
4,630 Listeners
320 Listeners
1,877 Listeners
16,109 Listeners
1,513 Listeners