By any measure, Election Day 2019 was an overwhelming success for Indiana Republicans. We made unprecedented gains in mayoral races across the...
John -
By any measure, Election Day 2019 was an overwhelming success for Indiana Republicans.
Election 2019 will be remembered as a record-setting night for the Indiana Republican Party. We made unprecedented gains in mayoral races across the state, ending the night with a record-setting 70 wins. When our new Republican mayors are all sworn in, Indiana will have the largest number of GOP-led cities in the history of our state. This is a testament to the strength of our candidates, the hard work and support of the state party, and the organization and enthusiasm of grassroots Republican volunteers in all corners of our state.
Republicans flipped 19 mayoral seats, 17 Democrat and 2 independents. This included former Democrat strongholds of Kokomo, Muncie, Logansport and Michigan City.
Republicans will now hold 23 more mayoral offices than Democrats, another record.
Some highlights:
* Tyler Moore brings the Kokomo mayor’s office back into the Republican column for the first time in over a decade, cruising to victory with 68% of the vote and sweeping city council races as well.
* Dan Ridenour led a Republican wave in Muncie, taking back the mayor’s office and ushering in a GOP-majority city council. This is the first time in forty years the GOP has controlled the Muncie City Council.
* In Michigan City, voters rejected the embattled Democrat mayor and elected Republican Duane Parry, who campaigned on cleaning up city hall and restoring trust in local government.
* Democrats in Evansville and Columbus didn’t even oppose Republican mayors Lloyd Winnecke and Jim Lienhoop.
* Salem will have its first Republican mayor in 34 years when Justin Green is sworn in.
* The voters of Jeffersonville gave four more for Moore as Mike Moore easily secured a third term.
* Matt Murphy is keeping the Valpo mayor’s office in Republican hands.
This trend continued throughout the state. Terre Haute, Lawrence, Logansport, Winchester, Bluffton, Hartford City and Greensburg—just to name a few—all elected Republican mayors. A full list of elected Republican mayors is available below my signature.
The Indiana Republican Party was involved in upwards of 45 municipal elections this year, investing over $250,000 and unleashing an army of grassroots staff and volunteers who made hundreds of thousands of phone calls and knocked on thousands of doors.
While yesterday was a historic day for Hoosier Republicans, we’re not ignoring those races where we came up short. The opposition flipped some mayoral and city council seats in central Indiana and defeated some of our strong mayoral candidates in targeted cities. We will work extremely hard to win back those voters who didn’t vote Republican this cycle. We’ll also have deep benches from which to recruit stellar candidates when it comes time to win back those offices and expand our map even more.
The Indiana Republican Party is competitive in areas where we’d long been written off. We’re playing the entire board and making Democrats compete everywhere, which they simply cannot do. This is how we’ve built a dominate political organization, including winning every statewide race, both United States Senate seats, seven of nine US House seats, over 80% of county offices throughout the state, supermajorities in both houses of the state legislature and, now, 70 mayoral offices in Indiana.
This strength reflects the continued upward trajectory of our party under Governor Holcomb’s leadership. Election 2019 bodes well for the strength of our apparatus as we now begin the 2020 election cycle.
Thank you for your continued support of Indiana Republicans. Together, we’re Putting People First and delivering real results for Hoosiers in all corners of our state.
Kyle Hupfer
Chairman, Indiana Republican Party
Indiana's Incoming Republican Mayors:
Flipped Cities Candidate
Bedford Sam Craig
Southport James Cooney
Alexandria Todd Naselroad
Bluffton John Whicker
Connersville Chad Frank
Greensburg Joshua Marsh
Hartford City Dan Eckstein
Jasonville Larry Watters Sr.
Kokomo Tyler Moore
Logansport Chris Martin
Michigan City Duane Parry
Muncie Dan Ridenour
Oakland City James Deffendall
Peru Miles Hewitt
Portland John Boggs
Rising Sun Steven Slack
Rockport Don Winkler
Salem Justin Green
Winchester Bob McCoy
City Candidate's Name
Attica Duane Roderick
Auburn Michael Ley
Aurora Mark Drury
Batesville Mike Bettice
Berne Gregg Sprunger
Butler Mike Hartman
Cannelton Ralph Terry
Carmel Jim Brainard
Columbia City Ryan Daniel
Columbus Jim Lienhoop
Covington Bradley Crain
Crawfordsville Todd Barton
Evansville Lloyd Winnecke
Fishers Scott Fadness
Frankfort Chris McBarnes
Franklin Steve Barnett
Greenfield Chuck Fewell
Greenwood Mark Myers
Huntingburg Dennis Spinner
Jasper Dean Vonderheide
Jeffersonville Mike Moore
Jonesboro Robert "Bob" McNutt
Kendallville Suzanne Handshoe
LaPorte Tom Dermody
Lawrenceburg Kelly Moullaun
Lebanon Matt Gentry
Ligonier Patricia Fisel
Madison Bob Courney
Martinsville Kenny Costin
Mishawaka Dave Woods
Montpelier Kathy Bantz
Nappanee Phil Jenkins
New Haven Steve McMichael
Noblesville Chris Jensen
North Vernon Mike Ochs
Petersburg R.C. Klipsch
Plymouth Mark Senter
Princeton Greg Wright
Rochester Ted Denton
Rushville Mike Pavey
Seymour Matt Nicholson
Terre Haute Duke Bennett
Union City Chad Spence
Wabash Scott Long
Warsaw Joe Thallemer
West Lafayette John Dennis
Westfield Andy Cook
Woodburn Joseph Kelsey
Lawrence Steve Collier
Mitchell John "JD" England
Valparaiso Matt Murphy
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