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Celerity

(55,097 posts)
Tue Jun 2, 2026, 04:30 PM Yesterday

One of the Democrats' Best Chances to Flip a Governor's Mansion in a Red State


Gubernatorial candidate Rob Sand is thinking locally to win Iowa.

https://prospect.org/2026/06/01/rob-sand-democrat-governor-red-state-iowa/


Iowa state auditor Rob Sand, who is running for Iowa governor, talks to reporters in Des Moines, Iowa, April 2, 2026. Credit: Hannah Fingerhut/AP Photo

As Democrats’ confidence in retaking Congress in November begins to swell, swing-district insurgents and populist, outsider candidates such as Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner have commanded most of the public’s attention. But a key test of Democratic strength in the midterms will take place in Iowa’s gubernatorial contest, where state auditor Rob Sand, the lone Democrat elected to statewide office since 2022, is mounting a serious challenge to the ruling Republican establishment in Des Moines.

Though polling remains limited, Sand is seen as one of the best Democratic opportunities for a major upset in red territory this year. If he prevails in a state that has experienced one of the largest shifts to the right in the extended Trump era, the narrative about Democrats’ dismal prospects in the farm belt—and perhaps even their pathways in the Electoral College—could flip overnight. Sand’s viability no doubt reflects the worsening national environment for Republicans, particularly due to how some of Trump’s most unpopular actions have affected this quintessential farm state: the spike in energy and fertilizer prices catalyzed by the Iran war, the fallout from Trump’s chaotic tariff policy, cuts to Medicaid spending and food assistance in rural areas, as well as stubbornly high food prices and housing costs that have deepened consumer pessimism.


Still, Sand’s momentum will most likely be determined by local concerns. He will face off against a non-incumbent—Rep. Randy Feenstra is poised to win the Republican primary on June 2—and an " target="_blank">unusually divided Republican electorate, which has grown discontent under two-term governor Kim Reynolds, a Christian conservative who has prioritized an increasingly maligned “school choice” private school voucher subsidy program, a cap on property taxes and municipal spending, and severe restrictions on abortion, including via medication. Iowa is surprisingly competitive this cycle. Amid talk of a new, 1980s-style farm crisis, Republicans are at risk of losing at least two House seats and an open Senate seat currently held by Joni Ernst, who is retiring.

The deeply local focus is terrain that Sand seems more than comfortable with, and may well give him an advantage in a state where registered Republicans and independents significantly outnumber Democrats. An evangelist for transparent and effective public administration, Sand seems most at home discussing the needs of local communities and Iowa’s declining quality of life. Like virtually every Democrat running for office this cycle, he has gamely emphasized the affordability crisis, pointing to the harms that result from conglomerates and middlemen squeezing community businesses and consumers. But Sand’s signature theme is really “accountability”—and its unacceptable deficit in Iowa. His argument is that unless public officials and powerful industries are held to a rigorous standard, the problems that afflict the state—from one of the highest rates of cancer in the nation to rising food insecurity—will only worsen.

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