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Cumulatively, major losses
Raising the prospect that a Hillary Clinton presidency will weaken the Democratic party nationally, a mailer sent on behalf of Barack Obama in the days before Super Tuesday spells out how many governorships and congressional seats the party lost during the eight years of Bill Clinton's presidency.
"8 years of the Clintons, major losses for Democrats across the nation," the mailer read, comparing the number of Democratic governors, U.S. senators and representatives after the 1992 and 2000 elections. It shows Democrats lost 12 governorships, seven Senate and 46 House seats over that span.
Factually, the mailer's claims are borne out in breakdowns by the Senate, Clerk of the House and Congressional Quarterly, using 1993 and 2001 as the reference years.
Many of the Democratic losses came in the 1994 election cycle, when voters dealt a stunning rebuke to Clinton's first-term policies and put Republicans in control of both houses of Congress for the first time in 40 years.
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But the GOP began to lose congressional seats in the 1996 and 1998 elections, while Clinton still was in office. And just months after he departed, the Senate shifted back to Democratic control after Vermont Sen. Jim Jeffords switched his affiliation from Republican to Independent.
While it's true that Democrats suffered major losses in 1994, they recouped some of those seats before Clinton left office. We find the claim to be Mostly True.
Our Sources
U.S. House of Representatives, House History, Office of the Clerk, Party Divisions of the House of Representatives (1789 to Present)
U.S. Senate, Origins & Development, Party Division in the Senate, 1789-Present
National Governors Association Web site
Talking Points Memo Election Central, "Obama Directly Attacks Bill's Presidency, Blames It For Massive Dem Losses," by Greg Sargent, Feb. 6, 2008
U.S. Census, Number of Governors, by Political Party Affiliation, 1970-2000
Congressional Quarterly Almanac, 1993 and 2001
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Cumulatively, major losses
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