A Republican was elected as Guam’s U.S. House delegate for the first time in decades, according to the Guam Election Commission on Nov. 8.
Moylan is the first Republican to be elected as Guam’s delegate in about 30 years. Guam, which is 15 hours ahead of the East Coast, has sent only Democrats to the House since 1993.
Moylan is also only the second Republican to ever serve as Guam’s delegate. That seat was created by Congress in 1972.
Some political commentators wrote on Twitter that it’s evidence that a U.S.-wide “red wave” is brewing. However, Democrats won the governor’s race and retained control of the island territory’s legislature.
Guam Gov. Lou Leon Guerrero, a Democrat, won reelection over former Gov. Felix Camacho, a Republican, according to the Guam Election Commission. And Democrats have retained control of the legislature by expanding their majority to nine seats as opposed to six held by Republicans.
Currently, other than Guam, there are four House delegates representing the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Heading into Nov. 8, nearly 44.5 million people across the United States had already cast ballots.
The Justice Department stated that it was sending monitors to 24 states to ensure compliance with federal voting rights laws. Republican election officials in some states have tried to block the monitors from coming inside polling places. In some counties in Florida and Missouri, the Justice Department stated that the monitors would be outside the polling places.