Why State Legislatures are way more critical than Congress
Matt Royer at By The Ballot:
With national 24/7 news channels and wall-to-wall White House coverage, it’s always about flipping the Senate, taking back the House, or primarying someone on a federal level. That’s the shiny object. But the real battleground right now isn’t Congress—it’s the state legislatures. Those are the last line of defense. Republicans control 28 state legislatures, Democrats control 21 (excluding Nebraska’s unique setup). That means most states don’t have the same protection from Trump’s administration as Democratic states do. And Trump himself has said he’d rather let states decide their own laws. While it’s tempting to focus on getting more progressives into Congress, the biggest impact—and biggest gains to be made—are in the statehouses. And you know who’s understood this for decades? Republicans. The GOP has systematically stacked state legislatures, supreme courts, county boards, and school boards. It’s been a slow burn for years, and it’s now paying off. If Democrats want lasting, direct change, we need to build the infrastructure from the bottom up.
Direct Impacts
Though many state legislatures only meet for part of the year, their influence is enormous. They introduce far more bills than Congress—sometimes as much as 23 times more annually. The smaller district sizes and closer proximity to constituents means state reps and senators take up a wider variety of issues, including very local problems that would never reach the federal level. Think about it this way: in most companies, you’ve got your boss, your boss’s boss, and then the C-Suite, board of directors, and CEO. The C-Suite and board (Congress and the President) set the overall direction, but those decisions often take years to trickle down. Your boss’s boss (the Governor) influences things above you, but you’re only indirectly affected. Your boss (the state legislature) makes the decisions that shape your daily life immediately—what you work on, how your environment functions, and what rules you operate under. That’s the role of state legislatures in government. They control the “everyday levers” of policy, backed by the Constitution’s Tenth Amendment, which reserves powers not given to the federal government for the states and the people. That means legislatures oversee:
Education – determining most school funding, setting curricula, and academic standards.
Healthcare – managing Medicaid, regulating health insurance, overseeing nursing homes.
Crime and safety – writing criminal codes, setting penalties, and supervising police.
Transportation – funding roads, maintaining infrastructure, regulating licenses and registration.
Elections – running voter registration, defining voting processes, and drawing districts.
And unlike Congress, state legislatures are often more efficient. Less partisan gridlock. Faster legislative sessions. Bills tailored to local problems. That means state laws usually take effect much faster than federal legislation, creating immediate changes in people’s lives.
Because districts are smaller, residents also have a much greater ability to influence outcomes. While a U.S. Senator may have staff to filter thousands of calls and emails, many state reps personally answer correspondence from constituents. A determined group of residents can move the needle in a statehouse in a way that would be almost impossible in Congress.
[...]
For over 13 years, Republicans have controlled nearly 60% of state legislatures, fueled by the perfect storm: REDMAP’s gerrymandering, ALEC’s bill mill, and Democrats’ complacency during the Obama years. While Democrats chased the glamour of Congress and the White House, Republicans were quietly building trenches in state capitals. By the time Democrats woke up, the battlefield was already rigged. We had a shot of adrenaline after Trump’s first term. Volunteers flooded the streets, statehouse campaigns saw unprecedented energy, and Democrats flipped chambers in Virginia, Colorado, New Mexico, and Minnesota. But that fire dimmed under Biden, compounded by the pandemic, and Republicans seized the chance to dig in further. Now, with another Trump administration barreling ahead, Democrats are again at risk of missing the forest for the trees.
The truth is this: Congress is flashy, but state legislatures are where the change actually happens. That’s not just rhetoric; it’s how federalism was designed. The Tenth Amendment gives states sweeping power over education, healthcare, criminal law, transportation, and elections. The day-to-day struggles that make or break people’s lives aren’t set in Washington — they’re decided in Richmond, Tallahassee, Austin, Harrisburg, and Lansing. And Republicans know it. They’ve run everywhere, even in deep-blue states, and invested in infrastructure to support their candidates from school boards to statehouses. Democrats, meanwhile, often treat red districts as lost causes. That has to change. There’s a reason this year in Virginia made headlines: Democrats filed a candidate in every single one of the 100 House of Delegates seats. That forced Republicans to defend turf everywhere, draining their resources and keeping them from funneling money to battlegrounds. That’s the model we need to replicate nationwide. Imagine if we did that in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, or North Carolina. Even if we didn’t win all those seats, we’d make Republicans fight on every front instead of cherry-picking their battlegrounds.
The payoff isn’t just immediate — it’s generational. Once Democrats win back these chambers, we can redraw maps in 2030. Trump is already pressuring GOP legislatures to pass unconstitutional gerrymanders in 2025. So yes, Democrats must be willing to play hardball, too. If Republicans can twist maps into grotesque, snake-shaped caricatures of democracy, why shouldn’t we redraw them to empower working people, protect communities of color, and actually reflect voters?
[...] Republicans have spent decades building power from the bottom up — stacking state legislatures, courts, and local offices while Democrats focused too much on Washington. Tools like ALEC’s model bills and Karl Rove’s REDMAP gerrymandering strategy have locked in GOP dominance across the country, giving them control over everyday issues like schools, healthcare, and voting rights. If Democrats want lasting change, they must invest seriously in statehouse races — everywhere, not just in swing states. Running candidates in every district (like Virginia did this year) forces Republicans to fight everywhere, drains their resources, and sets Democrats up to redraw fair maps after the 2030 census. Governors with backbone, like Whitmer, Moore, and Shapiro, show how state-level leadership can defend against Trumpism.
Matt Royer has an excellent column in By The Ballot that the Democrats should learn the bottom-up approach in the state legislatures, where the day-to-day impacts are more direct than Congress and the Presidency.
For too long, the Dems have allowed the GOP to dominate the state legislatures, and we’re recently learned how to begin clawing back.
















