Oregon
Related: About this forumFrom red to blue: Deschutes County politics shift left after election
After Tuesdays election results, the balance of power on the Deschutes County Commission is undergoing what some observers describe as a seismic shift to the left. Democrats and left-leaning candidates now have the potential to control the board for the first time in recent memory.
Political scientist and Bend City Councilor Ariel Mendez said the results appear to reflect both changing voter registration trends in Deschutes County and broader demographic and political changes in Central Oregon.
Democrats now outnumber Republicans by a few thousand registered voters (in the county), Mendez said, noting that non-affiliated voters remain the countys largest voting bloc but often reflect the broader partisan leanings of registered voters.
The shift marks a significant political reversal from previous decades. In 2006, Oregons 2nd Congressional District which then included Deschutes County and much of Eastern Oregon had 36,311 registered Republicans compared to 27,354 registered Democrats, reflecting the regions tradition conservative political makeup.
https://bendbulletin.com/2026/05/23/from-red-to-blue-county-politics-shift-left-after-election/#google_vignette
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(15,051 posts)SSJVegeta
(3,166 posts)And the specials have absolutely indicated such things can happen... 🤔
not fooled
(6,775 posts)Growth in jobs that attract talented, better educated people...those people move into an area...perhaps that's part of the reason. Plus GQPee not addressing people's concerns even if they are not as bad as the pukes in Washington DC.