While the national narrative fixates on a few high-profile blue-state victories, Judd Legum argues that the most consequential political shifts of 2025 are happening in the quiet corners of red and purple America. This piece is notable not for what it adds to the noise, but for what it silences: the assumption that the MAGA agenda is an unstoppable force in conservative strongholds. Legum presents a forensic accounting of six specific elections where voters explicitly rejected federal overreach, book censorship, and utility monopolies, proving that local politics remains a potent check on national polarization.
The Local Rejection of Federal Overreach
Legum begins by dismantling the Vice President's dismissal of recent losses as merely "a couple of elections in blue states." The author points to Bucks County, Pennsylvania, a swing region that narrowly supported the 2024 presidential candidate, as the primary evidence. Here, Democrat Danny Ceisler unseated a Republican sheriff who had signed a 287(g) agreement with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The author notes that Ceisler described the ICE deal as "the big issue in this race," and the result was a decisive 55% victory for the challenger who promised to restore trust with immigrant communities.
This framing is powerful because it moves the debate from abstract immigration policy to tangible local consequences. The argument suggests that when federal enforcement mechanisms are exported to local police forces, the backlash is immediate and electoral. Critics might note that a single county race does not necessarily signal a national trend reversal, yet the specificity of the 287(g) program makes the voter rejection difficult to dismiss as mere partisanship.
"Voters rejected the MAGA agenda" in deep red states like Texas and Mississippi, according to Legum's analysis of six under-reported results.
Education and the Fight for Truth
The commentary shifts to the battle for the soul of public education in Texas, where the Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District saw a complete turnover of its board. Legum details how progressive candidates flipped the district's control, ending a conservative supermajority that had spent two years removing textbook chapters on climate change and vaccines, firing librarians, and creating Bible electives. The author highlights the stark contrast between the outgoing board's agenda and the incoming majority's mandate.
Legum writes, "The board has removed textbook chapters on climate change, vaccines, Covid-19, and diversity," a list that reads like a catalog of scientific and historical erasure. The victory here is framed not just as a political upset, but as a restoration of educational integrity. The author's choice to focus on the firing of over half the librarians underscores the human cost of these policy shifts, moving beyond abstract culture war rhetoric to the actual dismantling of school resources.
A counterargument worth considering is whether a single school board election can reverse the broader national trend of curriculum restrictions, but Legum's evidence of a 4-3 majority shift in the state's third-largest district suggests a crack in the conservative wall. The author effectively uses the email from a defeated candidate, who stated her goal was to "tear down the over-interpretation of the separation of church and state," to illustrate the ideological rigidity that voters ultimately rejected.
Economic Power and Voting Rights
In Georgia, the narrative turns to utility regulation and historic representation. Legum reports that two Democrats won seats on the Public Service Commission, ending a 19-year drought for the party in statewide non-federal offices. The stakes were financial: the commission had approved six rate hikes for Georgia Power, adding "$43 a month to the average household bill." By framing the election around affordability, the author connects abstract regulatory power to the daily struggle of the average family.
The piece also highlights a landmark victory in Mississippi, where Democrats broke a 13-year Republican supermajority in the state Senate. This shift was the direct result of federal judges ordering redistricting to comply with the Voting Rights Act, a legal intervention that Legum presents as a vindication of minority voting power. The author notes that the GOP supermajority was reduced from 36 to 34 members, a narrow margin that will now make it "more difficult for Republicans to propose amendments to the state constitution."
"The commission has not had a Democrat since 2007, and this is the first time since 2006 that Georgia Democrats have won a statewide constitutional office."
Legum's analysis of these results is bolstered by the inclusion of Colorado and Maine, where voters directly addressed economic inequality and voting access. In Colorado, the electorate approved tax increases on households earning over $300,000 to fund free school meals, while in Maine, voters overwhelmingly rejected a restrictive voter ID initiative. The author describes the Maine measure as a "voter suppression bill" that would have banned prepaid postage for absentee ballots and limited drop boxes. These results collectively argue that when voters are given a clear choice between restriction and expansion, they often choose the latter.
Bottom Line
Judd Legum's strongest contribution is the reframing of the 2025 election cycle as a series of localized rejections of authoritarian overreach rather than a monolithic national trend. The piece's biggest vulnerability lies in its reliance on specific, favorable judicial outcomes in Mississippi, which face an uncertain future pending a Supreme Court decision on racial demographics in redistricting. However, the cumulative weight of these six results offers a compelling counter-narrative: that the appetite for the current administration's agenda is far more fragile than the headlines suggest.
"Voters rejected the MAGA agenda" in deep red states like Texas and Mississippi, proving that local politics remains a potent check on national polarization.