Democrats see hope in special election after years of setbacks

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From the Arkansas Advocate:
The Arkansas Democrats’ flip of a Republican-held state House race in a special election last week didn’t change or come close to threatening the predominantly GOP tilt of the Legislature. But shortly after the results rolled in, Democratic National Committee Chairman Ken Martin nonetheless hailed the victory in Trump territory.

“This big win is yet another warning sign to Republicans across the country, and a new reality is now sinking in: no Republican seat is safe,” Martin said.

Martin’s comments about the 20-point win, in a district that swung 17 points from 2024, show how hopeful Democrats are about making inroads in a state where Republicans have been firmly in control for well over a decade. They’re also a hopeful sign for state Democrats frustrated by Arkansas being written off as unwinnable for the party.

is a foregone conclusion, but I think we’ve proven that’s not the case,” said Marcus Jones, chairman of the Democratic Party of Arkansas. Shortly after Rep.-elect Alex Holladay’s win, Jones said he made a point of sending Martin a selfie with him.

Democrats still face tremendous obstacles in Arkansas, where Republicans hold a majority in the Legislature, every statewide partisan office and every seat in the federal delegation. The GOP has also dwarfed the party in fundraising in every major race. But party leaders and observers say Holladay’s win offers some lessons in a midterm election year that poses challenges elsewhere for Republicans.

“We’re back and breathing air, making some good moves, picking up some strategic gains and showing ourselves, as much as anybody, how we can do it in the future,” said Grant Tennille, a former state party chairman who is now managing Hallie Shoffner’s campaign against Republican U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton.

The top contests for Democrats this year are efforts to unseat two of the biggest players in the Republican Party’s dominance in state politics.

U.S. Rep. French Hill was first elected in 2014, the year Republicans expanded their legislative majority and swept all of the statewide and federal offices on the ballot. GOP lawmakers redrew state and federal legislative districts in 2021, giving Democrats disadvantages in both.

Cotton unseated two-term Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor in 2014, in one of the most closely watched and expensive U.S. Senate races that year. Cotton easily won reelection without a Democratic opponent in 2020.

Shoffner decided to challenge Cotton last year when tariffs forced her family out of the farming business after six generations. She has repeatedly pitched herself to voters as a fighter for both the agriculture industry and everyday Arkansans.

Shoffner “has a tough road ahead,” Democratic consultant Michael Cook said, but Cotton and Republicans seem to be “taking her very seriously.”

The Republican Party of Arkansas and the National Republican Senatorial Committee each called Shoffner a “far-left fraud” in statements issued Tuesday after Shoffner and Cotton won their primaries.

However, some voters told Shoffner after her win that they voted on Democratic primary ballots for the first time, Tennille said.

Cotton has reported having more than $9.6 million in the bank for his reelection. Shoffner’s campaign received more than $1 million in contributions between July and December 2025, and she had about $500,000 in cash on hand in February.

For more original reporting visit this story at the Arkansas Advocate.

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