First look at the Iowa House landscape for 2020
Republicans used their control over state government to inflict tremendous damage on Iowa during the 2019 legislative session: underfunding education, blocking steps that would improve Medicaid services, dismantling effective sex education programs, further undermining workers rights, targeting health care for transgender Iowans, and giving Governor Kim Reynolds the ability to pack our highest courts with conservative ideologues.
The disastrous outcomes underscored the urgent need for Democrats to break the Republican trifecta in 2020. The Iowa House is the only realistic path for doing so, since Reynolds wont be up for re-election next year, and the 32-18 GOP majority in the Iowa Senate will take several cycles to undo. State Representative Andy McKeans recent party switch improved Democratic prospects, shrinking the Republican majority in the chamber from 54-46 to 53-47. Nevertheless, a net gain of four House seats will be no easy task for Democrats.
The Daily Kos Elections team calculated the 2018 election results for governor and state auditor in every Iowa House district. Jeff Singer discussed their key findings in a May 2 post: Reynolds carried 60 state House districts, Democratic nominee Fred Hubbell just 39. The median seat backed Reynolds 51.0-46.3, a margin of 4.7 points. Thats about 2 points to the right of her statewide margin of 2.8 points. Eight Democrats represent districts Reynolds carried, and one (Dave Williams) represents a district where Reynolds and Hubbell tied, while only one Republican is in a Hubbell district.
Id encourage all Iowa politics watchers to bookmark the DK Elections number-crunching, as well as the teams spreadsheet on 2016 presidential results by House district.
https://www.bleedingheartland.com/2019/05/06/first-look-at-the-iowa-house-landscape-for-2020/