“Republicans have won the Senate half the time since 2000 despite winning fewer votes than Democrats”

Stephen Wolf analysis for Daily Kos:

Even though Democrats retained the Senate—and expanded their majority—in 2022, the results nonetheless marked the continuation of an unwelcome trend: Our new data shows that Senate Republicans last won more votes or represented more Americans than Democrats in 1998, but the GOP has controlled the upper chamber fully half the time since then nonetheless….

Ever since 2000, Republicans have repeatedly won control of the Senate despite losing the popular vote; at the same time, they’ve also represented states with a minority of the U.S. population. This was the case from 2000 through 2006 and again from 2014 through 2020, covering six of the last 12 federal elections. (To determine the Senate popular vote in a given year, we combined the most recent results for all 100 seats; you can see our data below and find a detailed accounting of our methodology here.)

That asymmetry has only grown more extreme. As illustrated by the graph below, the 51 members of the Democratic caucus today represent 58% of the country’s population compared to only 42% for the chamber’s 49 Republicans; that’s an increase from two years ago, when the population gap was already a considerable 57-43. That means Democrats continue to have tens of millions more constituents while controlling just two more seats, and they’ve likewise won millions more votes than Republicans across the three most recent election cycles that have elected the current members of the Senate….

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