How many republicans in the senate




















House Kansas District 1. Tracey Mann. House Kansas District 2. Jacob LaTurner. House Kansas District 3. Sharice Davids. House Kansas District 4. Ron Estes. House Kentucky District 1. James Comer Jr. House Kentucky District 2. Brett Guthrie. House Kentucky District 3. John A. House Kentucky District 4. Thomas Massie. House Kentucky District 5. Hal Rogers. House Kentucky District 6. Andy Barr. House Louisiana District 1. Steve Scalise. House Louisiana District 2.

Troy Carter. House Louisiana District 3. Clay Higgins. House Louisiana District 4. Mike Johnson. House Louisiana District 5. Julia Letlow. House Louisiana District 6. Garret Graves. House Maine District 1. Chellie Pingree. House Maine District 2. Jared Golden. House Maryland District 1.

Andrew Harris. House Maryland District 2. Dutch Ruppersberger. House Maryland District 3. John Sarbanes. House Maryland District 4. Anthony G. House Maryland District 5. Steny Hoyer. House Maryland District 6. David Trone. House Maryland District 7. Kweisi Mfume. House Maryland District 8. Jamie Raskin. House Massachusetts District 1. Richard Neal. House Massachusetts District 2. Jim McGovern. House Massachusetts District 3. Lori Trahan.

House Massachusetts District 4. Jake Auchincloss. House Massachusetts District 5. Katherine Clark. House Massachusetts District 6. Seth Moulton. House Massachusetts District 7. Ayanna Pressley. House Massachusetts District 8. Stephen Lynch. House Massachusetts District 9. Bill Keating. House Michigan District 1.

Jack Bergman. House Michigan District 2. Bill Huizenga. House Michigan District 3. Peter Meijer. House Michigan District 4. John Moolenaar. House Michigan District 5. Dan Kildee.

House Michigan District 6. Fred Upton. House Michigan District 7. Tim Walberg. House Michigan District 8. Elissa Slotkin. House Michigan District 9. Andy Levin. House Michigan District Lisa McClain. Haley Stevens. Debbie Dingell. Rashida Tlaib. Brenda Lawrence. House Minnesota District 1. Jim Hagedorn. House Minnesota District 2. Angie Craig. House Minnesota District 3. Dean Phillips. House Minnesota District 4. Betty McCollum. House Minnesota District 5. Ilhan Omar. House Minnesota District 6.

Tom Emmer. House Minnesota District 7. Michelle Fischbach. House Minnesota District 8. Pete Stauber. House Mississippi District 1. Trent Kelly. House Mississippi District 2. Bennie Thompson. House Mississippi District 3. Michael Guest. House Mississippi District 4. Steven Palazzo.

House Missouri District 1. Cori Bush. House Missouri District 2. Ann Wagner. House Missouri District 3. Blaine Luetkemeyer. House Missouri District 4. Vicky Hartzler. House Missouri District 5. Emanuel Cleaver. House Missouri District 6. Sam Graves. House Missouri District 7. Billy Long. House Missouri District 8. Jason Smith. House Montana At-large District. Matt Rosendale. House Nebraska District 1. Jeffrey Fortenberry. House Nebraska District 2. Don Bacon. House Nebraska District 3.

Adrian Smith. House Nevada District 1. Dina Titus. House Nevada District 2. Mark Amodei. House Nevada District 3. Susie Lee. House Nevada District 4. Steven Horsford.

House New Hampshire District 1. Chris Pappas. House New Hampshire District 2. Annie Kuster. House New Jersey District 1. Donald Norcross. House New Jersey District 2. Jeff Van Drew. House New Jersey District 3. Andrew Kim. House New Jersey District 4. Chris Smith. House New Jersey District 5. Josh Gottheimer. House New Jersey District 6. Frank Pallone. House New Jersey District 7. Tom Malinowski. House New Jersey District 8. Albio Sires. House New Jersey District 9. Bill Pascrell. House New Jersey District Donald Payne Jr.

Mikie Sherrill. Bonnie Watson Coleman. House New Mexico District 1. Melanie Ann Stansbury. House New Mexico District 2. Yvette Herrell. House New Mexico District 3. Teresa Leger Fernandez. House New York District 1. Lee Zeldin. House New York District 2. Andrew Garbarino. House New York District 3. Tom Suozzi. House New York District 4. Kathleen Rice. House New York District 5. Gregory W. House New York District 6. Grace Meng. House New York District 7. Nydia Velazquez. House New York District 8.

Hakeem Jeffries. House New York District 9. Yvette D. House New York District Jerrold Nadler. Nicole Malliotakis. Carolyn B. Adriano Espaillat. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Ritchie Torres. Jamaal Bowman. Mondaire Jones. Sean Maloney. Antonio Delgado. Paul Tonko. Elise Stefanik. Claudia Tenney. Tom Reed. John Katko. Joseph Morelle.

Brian Higgins. Christopher Jacobs. Eleanor Holmes Norton. House North Carolina District 1. House North Carolina District 2. Deborah Ross. House North Carolina District 3. Gregory Murphy. House North Carolina District 4. David Price.

House North Carolina District 5. Virginia Foxx. House North Carolina District 6. Kathy Manning. House North Carolina District 7. David Rouzer. House North Carolina District 8. Richard Hudson. House North Carolina District 9. Dan Bishop. House North Carolina District Patrick T. Madison Cawthorn. Alma Adams. Ted Budd. House North Dakota At-large District. Kelly Armstrong. Gregorio Kilili Camacho Sablan.

House Ohio District 1. Steve Chabot. House Ohio District 2. Brad Wenstrup. House Ohio District 3. Joyce Beatty. House Ohio District 4. Jim Jordan. House Ohio District 5. Bob Latta.

House Ohio District 6. Bill Johnson. House Ohio District 7. Bob Gibbs. House Ohio District 8. Warren Davidson. House Ohio District 9.

Marcy Kaptur. House Ohio District Michael Turner. Shontel Brown. Troy Balderson. Tim Ryan. David Joyce. Mike Carey. Anthony Gonzalez. House Oklahoma District 1. Kevin Hern. House Oklahoma District 2.

Markwayne Mullin. House Oklahoma District 3. Frank Lucas. House Oklahoma District 4. Tom Cole. House Oklahoma District 5. Stephanie Bice. House Oregon District 1. Suzanne Bonamici. House Oregon District 2. Cliff Bentz. House Oregon District 3. Earl Blumenauer. House Oregon District 4. Peter DeFazio.

House Oregon District 5. Kurt Schrader. House Pennsylvania District 1. Brian Fitzpatrick. House Pennsylvania District 2. Brendan Boyle. House Pennsylvania District 3. Dwight Evans. House Pennsylvania District 4. Madeleine Dean. House Pennsylvania District 5. Mary Gay Scanlon.

House Pennsylvania District 6. Chrissy Houlahan. House Pennsylvania District 7. Susan Wild. House Pennsylvania District 8. Matt Cartwright. House Pennsylvania District 9. Dan Meuser. House Pennsylvania District Scott Perry. Lloyd Smucker. Fred Keller. John Joyce. Guy Reschenthaler. Glenn Thompson. Mike Kelly. Conor Lamb. Michael Doyle. House Resident Commissioner. House Rhode Island District 1.

David N. House Rhode Island District 2. Jim Langevin. House South Carolina District 1. Nancy Mace. House South Carolina District 2.

Of the U. Representatives and U. Senators who were eligible to run for re-election in , 55 of them In the 53 open seats where an incumbent either did not seek re-election or was defeated in a primary, there were 13 races where the incumbent's district overlapped at least one pivot county a county that voted for President Barack Obama D in and , before switching to support President Donald Trump R in In 20 races, only one major party candidate appeared on the general election ballot, the lowest number compared to the preceding decade.

Senate special election partisan change from special elections, th Congress to th Congress Party As of special election After special election Democrats 4 7 Republicans 6 3 Total 10 10 U.

House special election partisan change from special elections, th Congress to th Congress Party As of special election After special election Democrats 12 14 Republicans 28 26 Total 40 To see a list of all the Congressional special elections referenced in the table above, click [show] at the right. Jon Kyl R-Ariz. John McCain R-Ariz. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.

In most instances, this would be the general election ballot. In the case of top-two primary states, that primary would also be taken into consideration even if two candidates from the same party eventually advance to the general election.

This definition differs from elsewhere on Ballotpedia and therefore numbers for this metric on other pages might not equal what is included here.

Ballotpedia is in the process of updating competitiveness data from to and bringing this section in line with the definition used elsewhere will be part of that process.

Senate following the election. Before he had his first midterm in , Coolidge was re-elected as president in Voter information What's on my ballot?

Where do I vote? How do I register to vote? How do I request a ballot? When do I vote? When are polls open? Who Represents Me? Congress special elections Governors State executives State legislatures Ballot measures State judges Municipal officials School boards. How do I update a page? Election results. Privacy policy About Ballotpedia Disclaimers Login. Senate Elections.

House Elections. Richard Shelby. Lisa Murkowski. Mark Kelly. John Boozman. Alex Padilla [1]. Michael Bennet. Richard Blumenthal.

Marco Rubio. Raphael Warnock. Brian Schatz. Mike Crapo. Tammy Duckworth. Todd Young. Chuck Grassley. Jerry Moran. Rand Paul. John Neely Kennedy. Chris Van Hollen. Roy Blunt. Catherine Cortez Masto. New Hampshire.

Maggie Hassan. New York. Charles Schumer. North Carolina. Richard Burr. North Dakota. John Hoeven. Rob Portman.

James Lankford. Ron Wyden. Pat Toomey. South Carolina. Tim Scott. South Dakota. John Thune. Unknown [2]. Mike Lee. Patrick Leahy. Patty Murray. Ron Johnson. July 20, [3]. March 8, [7]. Alex Padilla [11]. Republican John Flynn Robert Hyde. Republican Danny Niederberger Todd C. Democratic Mark R.

Martha McSally. Kelly Loeffler. Mark Kirk. Kelly Ayotte. Alex Padilla [22]. Doug Ducey. Brian Kemp. Laura Kelly. Andy Beshear. John Bel Edwards. Larry Hogan. Chris Sununu. Roy Cooper. Tom Wolf. Phil Scott. Tony Evers. Sherrod Brown. Bob Casey Jr. Tammy Baldwin. Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. Robin Kelly. South Carolina's 1st Congressional District. Mark Sanford. Missouri's 8th Congressional District. Jo Ann Emerson. Jason Smith. Senate in Massachusetts. John Kerry. Ed Markey. Senate in New Jersey.

Frank Lautenberg. Cory Booker. Louisiana's 5th Congressional District. Rodney Alexander. Vance McAllister. Massachusetts' 5th Congressional District. Katherine Clark. Alabama's 1st Congressional District. Jo Bonner. Bradley Byrne. Florida's 13th Congressional District. Bill Young. David Jolly. Florida's 19th Congressional District. Trey Radel. Curt Clawson.

Senate in Hawaii. Daniel Inouye. Senate in South Carolina. Jim DeMint. North Carolina's 12th Congressional District. Melvin Watt. Alma Adams. Senate in Oklahoma. Tom Coburn. Virginia's 7th Congressional District. Eric Cantor. David Brat. With Republicans assured of at least half the Senate seats, attention now turns to the two January 5 runoff elections in the southern state of Georgia.

Two conservative Republican lawmakers — Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler — now hold the two seats, but both failed in separate contests last week to win a majority, forcing them into the runoffs. Perdue faces Democrat Jon Ossoff, an investigative journalist who narrowly lost a race for a seat in the House of Representatives before trying to oust Perdue from the Senate seat he has held since Loeffler, who was appointed to her Senate seat in early , is facing Raphael Warnock, a progressive Democrat who is senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.

Warnock led a multi-candidate field in last week's voting, with Loeffler second, but he finished well short of the majority he needed to avoid a runoff. As it stands, Democrats will hold at least 48 seats in the Senate over the next two years, a net gain of one seat after losing one and gaining two in last week's voting.

If Republicans retain either of the Georgia seats or both, they will hold a majority in the Senate for the next two years. But if Ossoff and Warnock were both to win, there would be a split between Republicans and Democrats. In the case of a tie vote in the Senate, the decisive vote is cast by the vice president, in this case Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

Democrats would thus be able to secure a majority on all the chamber's committees that consider legislation and approve the president's appointments to key government positions and judgeships on federal courts.



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