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The only ones I know are North Carolina, Florida, Nevada, Colorado, and Ohio. North Carolina is usally republican but now it is a swing state
No, it is a Blue State with a Republican as Governor.
It is a Blue state with a Republican Governor.
The color of a swing state on an electoral college map differs and doesn't have an exact color. It's usually either white or grey. Democratic states are blue while Republican states are red, so you will just have to use this logic to differentiate.
Florida is actually a swing state, which means it sometimes chooses democratic and sometimes republican. It is sort of bipartisan.
It has a Democratic Governor and a Republican Lieutenant Governor and at the state level a Democratic Senate and a Republican House. Both US Senators are democrats and the US House delegates are divided six to five in favor of the democrats. Call it a swing state but it is still a conservative southern state.
Ohio is so important in the election season because it is a swing state. This means it is one of the few states in the Union that is not heavily Democratic or Republican and can vote either way. These states are often what decides the outcome of the election. Florida and Nevada are other swing states. Ohio has been a swing state in most Presidential elections, in large part because its population mirrors that of the US as a whole. No Republican candidate has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio's 18 electoral votes, the most of any swing state except Florida (27 votes), which has only really been competitive since the extremely close 2000 election.
No West Virginia is a Red state. It went Republican in the 2008, 2004 and 2000
Colorado is considered a purple state. This is because it is a swing state and has gone Democratic and Republican. The state has not overwhelming majority for either party. vote for democrates
No
In United States presidential politics, a swing state (also, battleground state or purple state) is a state in which no single candidate or party has overwhelming support in securing that state's electoral college votes. Such states are targets of both major political parties in presidential elections, since winning these states is the best opportunity for a party to gain electoral votes. Non-swing states are sometimes called safe states, because one candidate has strong enough support that he or she can safely assume that he or she will win the state's votes.
Ohio is considered a "battleground state". This means that Ohio can swing democrat or republican depending on the actual candidates and issues.