Attorney General Trends & Analytics

Historical partisan balance, party flips, and AG trends since 1960

The state attorney general's office has become one of the most consequential statewide offices in the country, with multistate coalitions of AGs driving major federal-policy litigation. The charts below trace partisan control over time. Note that the AG is appointed (not popularly elected) in seven states: Alaska, Hawaii, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Tennessee, Wyoming, and Maine. In those states, partisan control tracks the governor's party rather than independent voter choice. See Attorneys General for the full institutional overview.

AGs Tracked
Party Flips Since 1960
Peak Dem. AGs
Peak GOP AGs

Partisan Balance of Attorneys General (1960–2026)

Number of Democratic and Republican attorneys general serving on January 15 of each year.

Party Flips by Decade

Number of times an AG office changed party hands in each decade, split by direction.

Longest Single-Party Streaks

States with the longest unbroken runs of attorneys general from one party (since 1960).

Recent Party Flips (Since 2018)

Every time an AG office changed party hands.

YearStateFlipNew AG