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Louis Jacobson

Louis Jacobson

Contributor

Louis Jacobson is the senior correspondent at the fact-checking website PolitiFact. He is also senior author of the 2016 and 2018 editions of the Almanac of American Politics and was a contributing writer for the 2000 and 2004 editions. For Governing, Jacobson has written a column on state politics since the 2010 election cycle, including handicapping gubernatorial, state legislative and state attorney general races. Before that, he wrote a similar column for Stateline.org and Roll Call. He has also handicapped state and federal races for such publications as the Cook Political Report, the Rothenberg Political Report, PoliticsPA.com and the Tampa Bay Times. Earlier in his career, Jacobson served as deputy editor of the congressional newspaper Roll Call, as the founding editor of its affiliate, CongressNow, and as a staff correspondent at National Journal. In 2014, he received the Weidenbaum Center Award for Evidence-Based Journalism from Washington University in St. Louis, and in 2017, the Society of American Business Editors and Writers gave him a Best in Business award for his economics coverage.

These politicians and candidates are breaking with today's aggressively partisan times to advocate a more centrist line.
There are fewer organizations gauging how citizens feel about their governors. Political experts say it's a problem.
The GOP holds the majority of governorships, but the number of those vulnerable next year has doubled.
As the practice spreads to more states, Census data suggest it could benefit both parties.
A hint: In states, it all starts with the top of the ticket.
While Democratic AGs go on the offensive, their Republican counterparts are urging Trump to get even tougher against Obama-era policies.
The wealthy are increasingly seeking their state's highest office. Winning has been the easy part.
In this year's class, even the weakest-performing governors are surviving.
The president's victory has been extensively explored. But a state- and county-level look at the data offers stunning evidence of just how large the shifts were in certain places.
With elections in dozens of states, the leading parties have reason to worry in almost half of them.