User:Rihioser/sandbox
US Representatives by Seniority (with all predictions correct)[edit]
US House Predictions[edit]
2004[edit]
2006[edit]
District | Cook PVI | Incumbent | Crystal Ball | Rothenberg Political Report | Rihioser |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arizona 1 | R+2 | Rick Renzi (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R |
Arizona 2 | R+1 | Jim Kolbe (R) (retiring) |
Likely D | Likely D | Lean D |
Arizona 6 | R+4 | J. D. Hayworth (R) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
California 4 | R+11 | John Doolittle (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R |
California 11 | R+3 | Richard Pombo (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt D |
California 49 | R+5 | Brian Bilbray (R) | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R |
Colorado 4 | R+9 | Marilyn Musgrave (R) | Lean D | Tilt R | Tilt R |
Colorado 5 | R+16 | Joel Hefley (R) (retiring) |
Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
Colorado 6 | R+10 | Tom Tancredo (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Colorado 7 | D+2 | Bob Beauprez (R) (retiring) |
Likely D | Likely D | Lean D |
Connecticut 2 | D+8 | Rob Simmons (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt D |
Connecticut 4 | D+5 | Chris Shays (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt R |
Connecticut 5 | D+4 | Nancy Johnson (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt D |
Florida 8 | R+3 | Ric Keller (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Florida 9 | R+4 | Michael Bilirakis (R) (retiring) |
Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Florida 13 | R+4 | Katherine Harris (R) (retiring) |
Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt R |
Florida 16 | R+4 | Mark Foley (R) (resigned) |
Lean D | Tossup | Tilt D |
Florida 22 | D+4 | Clay Shaw (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt D |
Georgia 8 | R+8 | Jim Marshall (D) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
Georgia 12 | D+2 | John Barroww (D) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
Idaho 1 | R+8 | Butch Otter (R) (retiring) |
Lean D | Tilt R | Tilt R |
Illinois 6 | R+3 | Henry Hyde (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt R |
Illinois 8 | R+5 | Melissa Bean (D) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
Illinois 10 | D+4 | Mark Kirk (R) | Lean R | Safe R | Likely R |
Indiana 2 | R+4 | Chris Chocola (R) | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt D |
Indiana 3 | R+4 | Mark Souder (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Indiana 7 | D+9 | Julia Carson (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Indiana 8 | R+9 | John Hostettler (R) | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D |
Indiana 9 | R+7 | Baron Hill (D) | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D |
Iowa 1 | D+5 | Jim Nussle (R) (retiring) |
Lean D | Lean D | Tilt D |
Iowa 2 | D+7 | Jim Leach (R) | Lean R | Safe R | Tilt D |
Iowa 3 | D+1 | Leonard Boswell (D) | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt D |
Kansas 2 | R+7 | Jim Ryun (R) | Lean R | Tossup | Lean R |
Kentucky 1 | R+10 | Ed Whitfield (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R |
Kentucky 2 | R+13 | Ron Lewis (R) | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R |
Kentucky 3 | D+2 | Anne Northup (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R |
Kentucky 4 | R+12 | Geoff Davis (R) | Lean D | Tilt R | Lean R |
Louisiana 3 | R+5 | Billy Tauzin III (R) | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D |
Michigan 7 | R+2 | Joe Schwarz (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Safe R |
Minnesota 1 | R+2 | Gil Gutknecht (R) | Lean R | Tossup | Tilt D |
Minnesota 2 | R+3 | John Kline (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Minnesota 6 | R+5 | Mark Kennedy (R) (retiring) |
Lean R | Tossup | Tilt R |
Nebraska 3 | R+24 | Tom Osborne (R) (retiring) |
Lean R | Tilt D | Tilt R |
Nevada 2 | R+8 | Jim Gibbons (R) | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R |
Nevada 3 | D+1 | Jon Porter (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R |
New Hampshire 1 | EVEN | Jeb Bradley (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
New Hampshire 2 | D+3 | Charles Bass (R) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
New Jersey 7 | R+1 | Mike Ferguson (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt R |
New Mexico 1 | D+2 | Heather Wilson (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt R |
New York 3 | D+2 | Peter T. King (R) | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
New York 19 | R+1 | Sue W. Kelly (R) | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R |
New York 20 | R+3 | John E. Sweeney (R) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
New York 24 | R+1 | Sherwood Boehlert (R) (retiring) |
Tilt D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
New York 25 | D+3 | Jim Walsh (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R |
New York 26 | R+3 | Thomas M. Reynolds (R) | Tilt R | Tossup | Tilt R |
New York 29 | R+5 | Randy Kuhl (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt D |
North Carolina 8 | R+3 | Robin Hayes (R) | Lean R | Safe R | Likely R |
North Carolina 11 | R+7 | Charles H. Taylor (R) | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt D |
Ohio 1 | R+1 | Steve Chabot (R) | Tilt R | Tossup | Tilt R |
Ohio 2 | R+13 | Jean Schmidt (R) | Tilt D | Tossup | Tilt R |
Ohio 6 | Even | Ted Strickland (D) (retiring) |
Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Ohio 12 | R+1 | Pat Tiberi (R) | Likely R | Lean R | Lean R |
Ohio 15 | R+1 | Deborah Pryce (R) | Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt D |
Ohio 18 | R+6 | Bob Ney (R) (retiring) |
Lean D | Lean D | Tilt D |
Pennsylvania 4 | R+3 | Melissa Hart (R) | Tilt R | Tossup | Tilt R |
Pennsylvania 6 | D+2 | Jim Gerlach (R) | Lean D | Tossup | Tilt R |
Pennsylvania 7 | D+4 | Curt Weldon (R) | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D |
Pennsylvania 8 | D+3 | Mike Fitzpatrick (R) | Tilt R | Tossup | Tilt R |
Pennsylvania 10 | R+8 | Don Sherwood (R) | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D |
Pennsylvania 17 | R+7 | Tim Holden (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D |
South Carolina 5 | R+6 | John Spratt (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D |
Texas 17 | R+18 | Chet Edwards (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Texas 22 | R+15 | Tom DeLay (R) (resigned) |
Tilt D | Tossup | Tilt R |
Texas 23 | R+4 | Henry Bonilla (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt D |
Vermont at-large | D+8 | Bernie Sanders (D) (retiring) |
Likely D | Likely D | Likely D |
Virginia 2 | R+6 | Thelma Drake (R) | Tilt R | Tossup | Tilt R |
Virginia 10 | R+5 | Frank Wolf (R) | Lean R | Safe R | Lean R |
Washington 8 | D+2 | Dave Reichert (R) | Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt R |
West Virginia 1 | R+6 | Alan Mollohan (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
West Virginia 2 | R+5 | Shelley Moore Capito (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Wisconsin 8 | Even | Mark A. Green (R) (retiring) |
Tilt R | Tossup | Tilt D |
Wyoming at-large | R+19 | Barbara Cubin (R) | Tilt R | Likely R | Lean R |
2020[edit]
District | CPVI | Incumbent | Cook November 2, 2020 |
IE October 28, 2020 |
Sabato November 2, 2020 |
Daily Kos November 2, 2020 |
RCP November 2, 2020 |
538[a] November 3, 2020 |
Rihioser November 2, 2020 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alaska at-large | R+9 | Don Young (R) | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
Arizona 1 | R+2 | Tom O'Halleran (D) | Lean D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D |
Arizona 2 | R+1 | Ann Kirkpatrick (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Arizona 6 | R+9 | David Schweikert (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
Arkansas 2 | R+7 | French Hill (R) | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R |
California 1 | R+11 | Doug LaMalfa (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
California 3 | D+5 | John Garamendi (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D |
California 4 | R+10 | Tom McClintock (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
California 7 | D+3 | Ami Bera (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
California 8 | R+9 | Paul Cook (R) (retiring) |
Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
California 10 | EVEN | Josh Harder (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Lean D | Likely D | Likely D |
California 21 | D+5 | TJ Cox (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Tilt R (flip) |
California 22 | R+8 | Devin Nunes (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
California 25 | EVEN | Mike Garcia (R) | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
California 39 | EVEN | Gil Cisneros (D) | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt D |
California 42 | R+9 | Ken Calvert (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
California 45 | R+3 | Katie Porter (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D |
California 48 | R+4 | Harley Rouda (D) | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
California 50 | R+11 | Duncan D. Hunter (R) (resigned) |
Lean R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
Colorado 3 | R+6 | Scott Tipton (R) (lost primary) |
Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R |
Florida 7 | EVEN | Stephanie Murphy (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Florida 13 | D+2 | Charlie Crist (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Florida 15 | R+6 | Ross Spano (R) (lost primary) |
Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Tilt R | Likely R | Lean R |
Florida 16 | R+7 | Vern Buchanan (R) | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R |
Florida 18 | R+5 | Brian Mast (R) | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
Florida 26 | D+6 | Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D) | Lean D | Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt D | Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
Florida 27 | D+5 | Donna Shalala (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D |
Georgia 6 | R+8 | Lucy McBath (D) | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Lean D | Tilt D |
Georgia 7 | R+9 | Rob Woodall (R) (retiring) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt D (flip) |
Illinois 6 | R+2 | Sean Casten (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D |
Illinois 13 | R+3 | Rodney Davis (R) | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R |
Illinois 14 | R+5 | Lauren Underwood (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
Illinois 17 | D+3 | Cheri Bustos (D) | Lean D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Safe D | Lean D |
Indiana 5 | R+9 | Susan Brooks (R) (retiring) |
Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
Iowa 1 | D+1 | Abby Finkenauer (D) | Tilt D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt D |
Iowa 2 | D+1 | Dave Loebsack (D) (retiring) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
Iowa 3 | R+1 | Cindy Axne (D) | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
Iowa 4 | R+11 | Steve King (R) (lost primary) |
Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Lean R | Safe R | Likely R |
Kansas 2 | R+10 | Steve Watkins (R) (lost primary) |
Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R |
Kansas 3 | R+4 | Sharice Davids (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
Kentucky 6 | R+9 | Andy Barr (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R |
Maine 2 | R+2 | Jared Golden (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Safe D | Lean D |
Michigan 3 | R+6 | Justin Amash (L) (retiring) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Lean R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Michigan 6 | R+4 | Fred Upton (R) | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R |
Michigan 7 | R+7 | Tim Walberg (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
Michigan 8 | R+4 | Elissa Slotkin (D) | Lean D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Tilt D | Likely D | Lean D |
Michigan 11 | R+4 | Haley Stevens (D) | Lean D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Tilt D | Likely D | Lean D |
Minnesota 1 | R+5 | Jim Hagedorn (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt R |
Minnesota 2 | R+2 | Angie Craig (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D |
Minnesota 7 | R+12 | Collin Peterson (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Lean R (flip) |
Lean R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Likely R (flip) |
Lean R (flip) |
Minnesota 8 | R+4 | Pete Stauber (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
Missouri 2 | R+8 | Ann Wagner (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R |
Montana at-large | R+11 | Greg Gianforte (R) (retiring) |
Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt R | Likely R | Lean R |
Nebraska 2 | R+4 | Don Bacon (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R |
Nevada 3 | R+2 | Susie Lee (D) | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
Nevada 4 | D+3 | Steven Horsford (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Tilt D |
New Hampshire 1 | R+2 | Chris Pappas (D) | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Tilt D | Likely D | Lean D |
New Hampshire 2 | D+2 | Ann McLane Kuster (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Lean D | Safe D | Likely D |
New Jersey 2 | R+1 | Jeff Van Drew (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
New Jersey 3 | R+2 | Andy Kim (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Lean D | Tilt D | Likely D | Tilt D |
New Jersey 5 | R+3 | Josh Gottheimer (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
New Jersey 7 | R+3 | Tom Malinowski (D) | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
New Jersey 11 | R+3 | Mikie Sherrill (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D |
New Mexico 2 | R+6 | Xochitl Torres Small (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Tilt R (flip) |
New York 1 | R+5 | Lee Zeldin (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R |
New York 2 | R+3 | Peter T. King (R) (retiring) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
New York 3 | D+1 | Tom Suozzi (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D |
New York 11 | R+3 | Max Rose (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Tilt R (flip) |
New York 18 | R+1 | Sean Patrick Maloney (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Lean D |
New York 19 | R+2 | Antonio Delgado (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D |
New York 22 | R+6 | Anthony Brindisi (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
New York 24 | D+3 | John Katko (R) | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R |
New York 27 | R+11 | Chris Jacobs (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R |
North Carolina 1 | D+5 | G. K. Butterfield (D) | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D |
North Carolina 2 | D+9 | George Holding (R) (retiring) |
Likely D (flip) |
Likely D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Likely D (flip) |
North Carolina 6 | D+8 | Mark Walker (R) (retiring) |
Likely D (flip) |
Likely D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Safe D (flip) |
Likely D (flip) |
North Carolina 8 | R+5 | Richard Hudson (R) | Lean R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R | Lean R |
North Carolina 9 | R+7 | Dan Bishop (R) | Lean R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
North Carolina 11 | R+14 | Mark Meadows (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R | Lean R | Likely R |
Ohio 1 | R+5 | Steve Chabot (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Likely R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean R |
Ohio 10 | R+4 | Mike Turner (R) | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
Ohio 12 | R+7 | Troy Balderson (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R |
Oklahoma 5 | R+10 | Kendra Horn (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Tilt R (flip) |
Oregon 4 | EVEN | Peter DeFazio (D) | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Tilt D | Likely D | Lean D |
Pennsylvania 1 | R+1 | Brian Fitzpatrick (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Likely R | Lean R |
Pennsylvania 7 | D+1 | Susan Wild (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Safe D | Lean D |
Pennsylvania 8 | R+1 | Matt Cartwright (D) | Lean D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Tilt D | Likely D | Lean D |
Pennsylvania 10 | R+6 | Scott Perry (R) | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
Pennsylvania 16 | R+8 | Mike Kelly (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R |
Pennsylvania 17 | R+3 | Conor Lamb (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Tilt D | Likely D | Lean D |
South Carolina 1 | R+10 | Joe Cunningham (D) | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
South Carolina 2 | R+12 | Joe Wilson (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R |
Texas 2 | R+11 | Dan Crenshaw (R) | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R |
Texas 3 | R+13 | Van Taylor (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
Texas 6 | R+9 | Ron Wright (R) | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
Texas 7 | R+7 | Lizzie Fletcher (D) | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Tilt D |
Texas 10 | R+9 | Michael McCaul (R) | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt R | Likely R | Lean R |
Texas 21 | R+10 | Chip Roy (R) | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R |
Texas 22 | R+10 | Pete Olson (R) (retiring) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Tilt R |
Texas 23 | R+1 | Will Hurd (R) (retiring) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Lean D (flip) |
Tilt D (flip) |
Texas 24 | R+9 | Kenny Marchant (R) (retiring) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt D (flip) |
Lean D (flip) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Tilt D (flip) |
Tilt R |
Texas 25 | R+11 | Roger Williams (R) | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
Texas 31 | R+10 | John Carter (R) | Lean R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R | Likely R |
Texas 32 | R+5 | Colin Allred (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D |
Utah 4 | R+13 | Ben McAdams (D) | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt D | Tilt R (flip) |
Virginia 1 | R+8 | Rob Wittman (R) | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Safe R | Likely R | Likely R |
Virginia 2 | R+3 | Elaine Luria (D) | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt D |
Virginia 5 | R+6 | Denver Riggleman (R) (lost primary) |
Tilt R | Tilt R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Tilt D (flip) |
Lean R |
Virginia 7 | R+6 | Abigail Spanberger (D) | Lean D | Tilt D | Lean D | Tilt R (flip) |
Tilt R (flip) |
Likely D | Tilt R (flip) |
Washington 3 | R+4 | Jaime Herrera Beutler (R) | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Lean R | Likely R | Lean R |
Washington 8 | EVEN | Kim Schrier (D) | Likely D | Safe D | Lean D | Safe D | Lean D | Safe D | Lean D |
Wisconsin 3 | EVEN | Ron Kind (D) | Lean D | Safe D | Likely D | Likely D | Lean D | Likely D | Lean D |
Wisconsin Supreme Court Election of 2013[edit]
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Elections in Wisconsin |
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The Wisconsin Supreme Court election of 2013 took place on Tuesday, April 2, 2013.
Primary election[edit]
In December 2010, Prosser's campaign director expressed strong support for governor-elect Walker, saying Prosser's "personal ideology more closely mirrors" Walker's, and that a win by Prosser would result in, "protecting the conservative judicial majority and acting as a common sense compliment to both the new administration and Legislature."[1] He later disavowed the statements and claimed he had not seen the release.[2] Prosser's campaign manager also said that, "This election is about a 4-3 commonsense conservative majority vs. a 3-4 liberal majority, and nothing more."[3][4]
In a survey of attorneys conducted by the Milwaukee Bar Association that was published February 2011, Prosser received more votes saying he was "qualified" than any of his opponents; besting Kloppenburg by a margin of 296 to 112.[5] He was endorsed in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and the Sun Prairie Star.[6][7][8] He won the primary handily, receiving 231,000 votes to second place finisher Kloppenburg's 105,000 votes; a 30% margin.
Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|
Patience D. Roggensack (incumbent) | 231,822 | 64 | |
Ed Fallone | 108,490 | 30 | |
Vince Menga | 22,391 | 6 |
General election[edit]
In the general election of April 2, 2013, Roggensack again faced Fallone. Issues which would likely soon come before the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Heading into the election, the court had a conservative majority of 4-2-1 with Prosser identifying as a conservative and N. Patrick Crooks[10] considered a swing vote. Both candidates stated their unhappiness with the increasingly partisan nature of the race.[11]
Results[edit]
On April 6, the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, with 100% of precincts reporting and absentee ballots all tallied, had Kloppenburg maintaining a 204 vote lead.[12] Recanvassing began the next day to verify to election results, and errors were found in counties favoring both contestants; Prosser gained votes from Winnebago and Waukesha, while Kloppenburg regained ground from a scattering of other counties, including Grant, Portage, Door, Iowa, Rusk, Vernon, and Shawano.[13] A news conference on April 7, held by the County Clerk of Waukesha County reported the existence of errors in Brookfield, Wisconsin where votes were never submitted to the Waukesha County total due to human error and that Prosser had picked up a 7,500-vote margin over Kloppenburg in the county as a result. In response, the Kloppenburg campaign filed an Open Records request for the contact records of the Waukesha County Clerk and a request was filed with the region's US Attorney to impound the additional ballots.[14]
As of April 8, 2011, Waukesha County's turnout was officially 47% (increased from 42% before the correction).[15] Statewide turnout during the election was officially 33%. On election day, Deputy Clerk Gina Kozlik had estimated turnout in the county to be 20-25%,[16] with up to 35% turnout in some polling locations within the county.[17] Nate Silver of Fivethirtyeight.com did an analysis on the turnout numbers and found the Waukesha results to be in line with previous elections.[18] An independent investigation into the actions of Waukesha County Clerk found probable cause to believe that she violated the state law requiring county clerks to post all returns on Election Night, but concluded that the violation was not willful and therefore did not constitute criminal misconduct.[19]
The Wisconsin Government Accountability Board announced on April 8 that they were sending voting officials to Waukesha County to confirm the 14,315 votes that were found to never have been submitted from Brookfield.[20] On April 15, Prosser was named the official winner by 7,316 votes after all county canvassing was completed.[21] On April 20, Kloppenburg asked for a recount. The recount began on Wednesday, April 27 and must finish by May 9.[22]
At the end of May 9, all Wisconsin counties aside from Waukesha had completed their recount process. In response, a Dane County judge gave them an extension until May 26 to complete the recount process. It was reported that Waukesha County was counting only one ward at a time and, on May 9, moved to a larger area in the Waukesha County courthouse in order to count two wards at one time. This is much slower than the rest of the counties, adjacent Milwaukee County reportedly counted eight wards simultaneously. Waukesha County reportedly took extra steps to ensure all votes were counted correctly.[23]
On May 20, the recount was completed across the state with Prosser leading by 7,006 votes.[24] On May 23, the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board confirmed Prosser won the election.[25]
County results[edit]
County | Won by |
Roggensack % |
Roggensack votes |
Fallone % |
Fallone votes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adams | R | 62% | 2,207 | 38% | 1,379 |
Ashland | F | 40% | 971 | 60% | 1,487 |
Barron | R | 58% | 3,508 | 42% | 2,581 |
Bayfield | F | 41% | 1,231 | 59% | 1,808 |
Brown | R | 58% | 17,961 | 42% | 12,839 |
Buffalo | R | 58% | 1,213 | 42% | 892 |
Burnett | R | 55% | 1,202 | 45% | 989 |
Calumet | R | 62% | 4,212 | 38% | 2,555 |
Chippewa | R | 57% | 4,437 | 43% | 3,386 |
Clark | R | 58% | 4,321 | 42% | 3,063 |
Columbia | R | 45% | 7,306 | 55% | 8,963 |
Crawford | R | 41% | 1,687 | 59% | 2,431 |
Dane | F | 27% | 48,655 | 73% | 133,658 |
Dodge | R | 61% | 13,379 | 39% | 8,524 |
Door | R | 53% | 5,193 | 47% | 4,670 |
Douglas | R | 31% | 3,815 | 69% | 8,676 |
Dunn | R | 44% | 4,067 | 56% | 5,155 |
Eau Claire | F | 42% | 11,425 | 58% | 15,933 |
Florence | R | 62% | 800 | 38% | 483 |
Fond du Lac | R | 61% | 15,942 | 39% | 10,188 |
Forest | R | 56% | 1,531 | 44% | 1,198 |
Grant | R | 44% | 4,285 | 56% | 5,705 |
Green | R | 45% | 4,886 | 55% | 5,860 |
Green Lake | R | 65% | 3,786 | 35% | 2,056 |
Iowa | F | 38% | 2,455 | 62% | 3,915 |
Iron | R | 45% | 755 | 55% | 934 |
Jackson | R | 45% | 2,216 | 55% | 2,694 |
Jefferson | R | 58% | 13,261 | 42% | 9,763 |
Juneau | R | 48% | 2,539 | 52% | 2,700 |
Kenosha | R | 47% | 14,419 | 53% | 16,245 |
Kewaunee | R | 58% | 3,328 | 42% | 2,405 |
La Crosse | R | 41% | 12,135 | 59% | 17,404 |
Lafayette | R | 48% | 2,032 | 52% | 2,184 |
Langlade | R | 58% | 2,664 | 42% | 1,895 |
Lincoln | R | 50% | 3,576 | 50% | 3,545 |
Manitowoc | R | 61% | 12,197 | 39% | 7,765 |
Marathon | R | 54% | 17,126 | 46% | 14,836 |
Marinette | R | 55% | 4,985 | 45% | 4,084 |
Marquette | R | 56% | 2,219 | 44% | 1,723 |
Menominee | F | 37% | 141 | 63% | 240 |
Milwaukee | R | 43% | 99,368 | 57% | 129,108 |
Monroe | R | 49% | 4,508 | 51% | 4,692 |
Oconto | R | 57% | 5,212 | 43% | 3,879 |
Oneida | R | 52% | 5,520 | 48% | 5,138 |
Outagamie | R | 57% | 24,785 | 43% | 18,877 |
Ozaukee | R | 72% | 20,854 | 28% | 8,298 |
Pepin | R | 47% | 882 | 53% | 983 |
Pierce | R | 45% | 4,056 | 55% | 4,915 |
Polk | R | 51% | 4,661 | 49% | 4,439 |
Portage | F | 40% | 8,121 | 60% | 12,124 |
Price | R | 52% | 2,165 | 48% | 2,024 |
Racine | R | 56% | 28,248 | 44% | 22,577 |
Richland | R | 45% | 1,797 | 55% | 2,185 |
Rock | R | 40% | 14,636 | 60% | 22,196 |
Rusk | R | 53% | 2,189 | 47% | 1,941 |
Sauk | R | 44% | 7,159 | 56% | 9,187 |
Sawyer | R | 51% | 2,126 | 49% | 2,051 |
Shawano | R | 61% | 5,543 | 39% | 3,628 |
Sheboygan | R | 63% | 19,546 | 37% | 11,419 |
St. Croix | R | 51% | 8,276 | 49% | 7,960 |
Taylor | R | 61% | 3,652 | 39% | 2,292 |
Trempealeau | R | 46% | 2,878 | 54% | 3,330 |
Vernon | R | 45% | 3,578 | 55% | 4,331 |
Vilas | R | 60% | 4,210 | 40% | 2,821 |
Walworth | R | 61% | 14,245 | 39% | 8,936 |
Washburn | R | 48% | 2,268 | 52% | 2,451 |
Washington | R | 76% | 30,797 | 24% | 9,909 |
Waukesha | R | 74% | 92,331 | 26% | 32,777 |
Waupaca | R | 59% | 7,204 | 41% | 5,029 |
Waushara | R | 60% | 3,402 | 40% | 2,301 |
Winnebago | R | 52% | 20,719 | 48% | 18,908 |
Wood | R | 49% | 8,865 | 51% | 9,287 |
References[edit]
- ^ Patrick Marley (2010-12-09). "First dust-up emerges in race for Supreme Court". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ "Kloppenburg, Prosser Spar Over Impartiality". WTMJ4 (AP). 2011-03-22. Archived from the original on 2011-03-29. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
- ^ Abe Sauer (2011-03-24). "Wisconsin's Nasty Spring Election: Impartiality with Its Sleeves Rolled". The Awl. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ "Kloppenburg says Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Prosser "has prejudged matters that are likely to come before the court"". PolitiFact Wisconsin. Politifact.com. 2011-03-27. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
Barely true
- ^ Sandler, Larry (2011-02-10). "Prosser tops Milwaukee bar ratings for state high court". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Archived from the original on 2013-02-21. Retrieved 2011-04-04.
- ^ Wausau Daily Herald Editorial Board (2011-02-07). "In The Primary Elections We endorse". Wausau Daily Herald. Retrieved 2011-04-02. [dead link]
- ^ Sun Prairie Star Editorial Board (2011-02-04). "Our View: We Endorse ... Prosser, Bruskewitz get our nods". Sun Prairie Star. Sun Prairie, WI. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Editorial Board (2011-02-11). "We back Prosser - David Prosser is a hard-working, experienced justice. He is not the primary cause of the Supreme Court's squabbling". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ "Spring 2011 Primary Election Results". Retrieved 5 April 2011.
- ^ "Wisconsin Law Journal Blog Archive: Crooks still Supreme Court's swing vote". Wislawjournal.com. 2007-08-20. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ "Supreme Court Candidates Unhappy With Partisan Aspect in Race - WTAQ News Talk 97.5FM and 1360AM". Wtaq.com. 2011-03-15. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ "TODAY'S TMJ4 Election". Elections.todaystmj4.com. 2011-04-07. Archived from the original on 2011-04-24. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ http://elections.wispolitics.com Archived 2011-10-29 at the Wayback Machine Vote updates being posted.
- ^ "Corrected Brookfield tally puts Prosser ahead after 7,500-vote gain". JSOnline. 2011-04-07. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ "Prosser's huge gain comes after Waukesha County flub is caught". JSOnline. 2011-04-07. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ "WisPolitics Election Blog: Turnout high in Appleton". Elections.wispolitics.com. 2011-04-05. Archived from the original on 2011-04-11. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ Millard, Sarah (2011-04-05). "Voter Turnout Could be 35% at Some Waukesha Polling Locations". Waukesha.patch.com. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ Silver, Nate (2011-04-08). "Vote-Counting Error In Wisconsin Points to Incompetence, Not Conspiracy". The New York Times.
- ^ G.A.B. Releases Report of Independent Investigation into Waukesha County Clerk Kathy Nickolaus
- ^ "Prosser camp open to Waukesha County-only recount". JSOnline. 2011-04-09. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ "Ballots are now totaled: Prosser wins by 7,316". JSOnline. 2011-04-16. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
- ^ "May 9 deadline set for Supreme Court recount". JSOnline. 2011-04-25. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
- ^ Craig Gilbert, Patrick Marley and Laurel Walker (2011-05-09). "Recount cuts little from Prosser lead". JSOnline. Retrieved 2011-10-28.
- ^ Patrick Marley, Larry Sandler and Mike Johnson (2011-05-20). "Prosser wins recount in Wisconsin Supreme Court race". JSOnline. Retrieved 2011-10-28.
- ^ State board declares Prosser winner
US House What-if Delegations from South Carolina[edit]
Pre-Civil War[edit]
US Congressional What-if delegations from Indiana[edit]
US Senate[edit]
Class 1Class 1 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 2000, 2006, 2012, and 2018. The next election will be in 2024. | C | Class 3Class 3 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 2004, 2010, 2016, and 2022. The next election will be in 2028. | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Senator | Party | Dates in office | Electoral history | T | T | Electoral history | Dates in office | Party | Senator | # | |
1 | James Noble |
Democratic- Republican |
Dec 11, 1816 – Feb 26, 1831 |
Elected in 1816. | 1 | 14th | 1 | Elected in 1816. | Dec 11, 1816 – Mar 3, 1825 |
Democratic- Republican |
Waller Taylor |
1 |
15th | ||||||||||||
16th | 2 | Re-elected in 1818.Retired. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1820. | 2 | 17th | ||||||||||
18th | ||||||||||||
National Republican |
19th | 3 | Elected in 1824. | Mar 4, 1825 – Mar 3, 1837 |
National Republican |
William Hendricks |
2 | |||||
Re-elected in 1826.Died. | 3 | 20th | ||||||||||
21st | ||||||||||||
Vacant | Feb 26, 1831 – Aug 19, 1831 |
|||||||||||
22nd | 4 | Re-elected in 1830.Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
2 | Robert Hanna |
National Republican |
Aug 19, 1831 – Mar 3, 1833 |
Appointed to finish Noble's term.Retired. | ||||||||
3 | John Tipton |
Jacksonian | Mar 4, 1833 – Mar 3, 1839 |
Re-elected in 1832.Retired. | 4 | 23rd | ||||||
24th | ||||||||||||
Democratic | 25th | 5 | Elected in 1836. | Mar 4, 1837 – Mar 3, 1849 |
Democratic | Ned Hannegan |
3 | |||||
4 | Albert Smith White |
Whig | Mar 4, 1839 – Mar 3, 1845 |
Elected in 1838.Retired. | 5 | 26th | ||||||
27th | ||||||||||||
28th | 6 | Re-elected in 1842.Lost renomination. | ||||||||||
5 | Jesse D. Bright |
Democratic | Mar 4, 1845 – Feb 5, 1862 |
Elected in 1844. | 6 | 29th | ||||||
30th | ||||||||||||
31st | 7 | Elected in 1848.Lost re-election. | Mar 4, 1849 – Mar 3, 1855 |
Democratic | John Pettit |
7 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1850. | 7 | 32nd
| ||||||||||
33rd | ||||||||||||
34th | 8 | Elected in 1854.Retired. | Mar 4, 1855 – Mar 3, 1861 |
Democratic | Graham N. Fitch |
8 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1856.Expelled for sympathizing with the Confederacy. | 8 | 35th | ||||||||||
36th | ||||||||||||
37th | 9 | Elected in 1860.Unknown if retired or lost re-election. | Mar 4, 1861 – Mar 3, 1867 |
Republican | Henry Smith Lane |
9 | ||||||
Vacant | Feb 5, 1862 – Feb 24, 1862 |
|||||||||||
8 | Thomas A. Hendricks |
Democratic | Feb 24, 1862 – Mar 3, 1869 |
Appointed to finish Bright's term. | ||||||||
Elected to a full term 1862.Retired. | 9 | 38th | ||||||||||
39th | ||||||||||||
40th | 10 | Elected in 1866. | Mar 4, 1867 – Nov 1, 1877 |
Republican | Oliver P. Morton |
10 | ||||||
9 | Daniel D. Pratt |
Republican | Mar 4, 1869 – Mar 3, 1875 |
Elected in 1868.Retired. | 10 | 41st | ||||||
42nd | ||||||||||||
43rd | 11 | Re-elected in 1872.Died. | ||||||||||
10 | Joseph E. McDonald |
Democratic | Mar 4, 1875 – Mar 3, 1881 |
Elected in 1874 or 1875Lost re-election. | 11 | 44th | ||||||
45th | ||||||||||||
Nov 1, 1877 – Nov 6, 1877 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to finish Morton's term. | Nov 6, 1877 – Mar 3, 1897 |
Democratic | Daniel W. Voorhees |
11 | ||||||||
46th | 12 | Elected to a full term in 1878. | ||||||||||
11 | Benjamin Harrison |
Republican | Mar 4, 1881 – Mar 3, 1887 |
Elected in 1880.Lost re-election. | 12 | 47th | ||||||
48th | ||||||||||||
49th | 13 | Re-elected in 1884. | ||||||||||
12 | David Turpie |
Democratic | Mar 4, 1887 – Mar 3, 1899 |
Elected in 1886. | 13 | 50th | ||||||
51st | ||||||||||||
52nd | 14 | Re-elected in 1890.Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1892.Lost re-election. | 14 | 53rd | ||||||||||
54th | ||||||||||||
55th | 15 | Elected in 1896.[1] | Mar 4, 1897 – Mar 3, 1905 |
Republican | Charles W. Fairbanks |
12 | ||||||
13 | Albert J. Beveridge |
Republican | Mar 4, 1899 – Mar 3, 1911 |
Elected in 1898. | 15 | 56th | ||||||
57th | ||||||||||||
58th | 16 | Re-elected in 1902.Resigned to become U.S. Vice President. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1904.Lost re-election. | 16 | 59th | Elected to finish Fairbanks's term.Lost re-election. | Mar 4, 1905 – Mar 3, 1909 |
Republican | James A. Hemenway |
13 | |||||
60th | ||||||||||||
61st | 17 | Elected in 1908. | Mar 4, 1909 – Mar 14, 1916 |
Democratic | Benjamin F. Shively |
14 | ||||||
14 | John W. Kern |
Democratic | Mar 4, 1911 – Mar 3, 1917 |
Elected in 1910.Lost re-election. | 17 | 62nd | ||||||
63rd | ||||||||||||
64th | 18 | Re-elected in 1914.Died. | ||||||||||
Mar 14, 1916 – Mar 20, 1916 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Shiveley's term.Lost election to finish Shiveley's term. | Mar 20, 1916 – Nov 7, 1916 |
Democratic | Thomas Taggart |
15 | ||||||||
Elected to finish Shiveley's term. | Nov 8, 1916 – Mar 3, 1933 |
Republican | James Eli Watson |
16 | ||||||||
15 | Harry Stewart New |
Republican | Mar 4, 1917 – Mar 3, 1923 |
Elected in 1916.Lost renomination. | 18 | 65th | ||||||
66th | ||||||||||||
67th | 19 | Re-elected in 1920. | ||||||||||
16 | Samuel M. Ralston |
Democratic | Mar 4, 1923 – Oct 14, 1925 |
Elected in 1922.Died. | 19 | 68th | ||||||
69th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | Oct 14, 1925 – Oct 20, 1925 |
|||||||||||
17 | Arthur Raymond Robinson |
Republican | Oct 20, 1925 – Jan 3, 1935 |
Appointed to continue Ralston's term.Elected in 1926 to finish Ralston's term.[2] | ||||||||
70th | 20 | Re-elected in 1926.Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1928.Lost re-election. | 20 | 71st | ||||||||||
72nd | ||||||||||||
73rd | 21 | Elected in 1932. | Mar 4, 1933 – Jan 25, 1944 |
Democratic | Frederick Van Nuys |
17 | ||||||
18 | Sherman Minton |
Democratic | Jan 3, 1935 – Jan 3, 1941 |
Elected in 1934.Lost re-election. | 21 | 74th | ||||||
75th | ||||||||||||
76th | 22 | Re-elected in 1938.Died. | ||||||||||
19 | Raymond E. Willis |
Republican | Jan 3, 1941 – Jan 3, 1947 |
Elected in 1940.Retired. | 22 | 77th | ||||||
78th | ||||||||||||
Jan 25, 1944 – Jan 28, 1944 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Van Nuys's term.Retired. | Jan 28, 1944 – Jan 3, 1945 |
Democratic | Samuel D. Jackson |
18 | ||||||||
79th | 23 | Elected in 1944. | Jan 3, 1945 – Jan 3, 1963 |
Republican | Homer E. Capehart |
20 | ||||||
20 | William E. Jenner |
Republican | Jan 3, 1947 – Jan 3, 1959 |
Elected in 1946. | 23 | 80th | ||||||
81st | ||||||||||||
82nd | 24 | Re-elected in 1950. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1952.Retired. | 24 | 83rd | ||||||||||
84th | ||||||||||||
85th | 25 | Re-elected in 1956.Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
21 | Vance Hartke |
Democratic | Jan 3, 1959 – Jan 3, 1977 |
Elected in 1958. | 25 | 86th | ||||||
87th | ||||||||||||
88th | 26 | Elected in 1962. | Jan 3, 1963 – Jan 3, 1981 |
Democratic | Birch Bayh |
21 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1964. | 26 | 89th | ||||||||||
90th | ||||||||||||
91st | 27 | Re-elected in 1968. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1970.Lost re-election. | 27 | 92nd | ||||||||||
93rd | ||||||||||||
94th | 28 | Re-elected in 1974.Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
22 | Richard Lugar |
Republican | Jan 3, 1977 – Jan 3, 2013 |
Elected in 1976. | 28 | 95th | ||||||
96th | ||||||||||||
97th | 29 | Elected in 1980. | Jan 3, 1981 – Jan 3, 1989 |
Republican | Dan Quayle |
22 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1982. | 29 | 98th | ||||||||||
99th | ||||||||||||
100th | 30 | Re-elected in 1986.Resigned to become U.S. Vice President. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1988. | 30 | 101st | Appointed to continue Quayle's term.Elected in 1990 to finish Quayle's term. | Jan 3, 1989 – Jan 3, 1999 |
Republican | Dan Coats |
23 | |||||
102nd | ||||||||||||
103rd | 31 | Re-elected in 1992.Retired. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1994. | 31 | 104th | ||||||||||
105th | ||||||||||||
106th | 32 | Elected in 1998. | Jan 3, 1999 – Jan 3, 2011 |
Democratic | Evan Bayh |
24 | ||||||
Re-elected in 2000. | 32 | 107th | ||||||||||
108th | ||||||||||||
109th | 33 | Re-elected in 2004.Retired. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 2006.Lost renomination. | 33 | 110th | ||||||||||
111th | ||||||||||||
112th | 34 | Elected in 2010.Retired. | Jan 3, 2011 – Jan 3, 2017 |
Republican | John Hostettler |
25 | ||||||
23 | Joe Donnelly |
Democratic | Jan 3, 2013 – Jan 3, 2019 |
Elected in 2012.Lost re-election. | 34 | 113th | ||||||
114th | ||||||||||||
115th | 35 | Elected in 2016. | Jan 3, 2017 – Present |
Republican | Todd Young |
26 | ||||||
24 | Mike Braun |
Republican | Jan 3, 2019 – Present |
Elected in 2018.Retiring at end of term to run for Governor of Indiana. | 35 | 116th | ||||||
117th | ||||||||||||
118th | 36 | Re-elected in 2022. | ||||||||||
To be determined in the 2024 election. | 36 | 119th | ||||||||||
120th | ||||||||||||
121st | 37 | To be determined in the 2028 election. | ||||||||||
# | Senator | Party | Years in office | Electoral history | T | C | T | Electoral history | Years in office | Party | Senator | # |
Class 1 | Class 3 |
US House[edit]
Indiana's At-Large District only[edit]
All Districts[edit]
US What-if Delegations from California[edit]
US Congressional What-if Delegations from Alabama[edit]
US House[edit]
US Congressional What-if Delegations from Missouri[edit]
At-Large only[edit]
Cong ress |
Years | Seat A | Seat B | Seat C | Seat D | Seat E | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Member | Party | Electoral history | Member | Party | Electoral history | Member | Party | Electoral history | Member | Party | Electoral history | Member | Party | Electoral history | |||||||
17th | August 10, 1821 – March 3, 1823 |
John Scott |
Democratic-Republican[b] | Elected early in 1820. Re-elected in 1822. Lost re-election. |
Second seat apportioned in 1833. | Third seat apportioned in 1843. | Fourth seat apportioned in 1843. | Fifth seat apportioned in 1843. | |||||||||||||
18th | March 4, 1823 – March 3, 1825 | ||||||||||||||||||||
19th | March 4, 1825 – March 3, 1827 |
Edward Bates |
Anti-Jacksonian | Elected in 1824. Re-elected in 1826. Lost re-election. | |||||||||||||||||
20th | March 4, 1827 – March 3, 1829 | ||||||||||||||||||||
21st | March 4, 1829 – March 3, 1831 |
Spencer D. Pettis | Jacksonian | Elected in 1828. Re-elected in 1831. Died. | |||||||||||||||||
22nd | March 4, 1831 – August 28, 1831 | ||||||||||||||||||||
August 28. 1831 – October 31, 1831 |
Vacant | ||||||||||||||||||||
October 31, 1831 – March 3, 1833 |
John Bull | Anti-Jacksonian | Elected October 31, 1831 to finish Pettis's term and seated December 5, 1831. Re-elected in 1832. Retired. | ||||||||||||||||||
23rd | March 4, 1833 – March 3, 1835 |
William H. Ashley | Jacksonian | Elected in 1832. Re-elected in 1835. Retired to run for governor. | |||||||||||||||||
24th | March 4, 1835 – March 3, 1837 |
Albert G. Harrison | Jacksonian | Elected in 1835. Re-elected in 1836. Re-elected in 1838. Died. | |||||||||||||||||
25th | March 4, 1837 – March 3, 1839 |
Democratic | John Miller |
Democratic | Elected in 1836. Re-elected in 1838. Retired. | ||||||||||||||||
26th | March 4, 1839 – September 7, 1839 | ||||||||||||||||||||
September 7, 1839 – October 28, 1839 |
Vacant | ||||||||||||||||||||
October 28, 1839 – March 3, 1841 |
John Jameson |
Democratic | Elected to finish Harrison's term and seated December 5, 1839. Re-elected in 1840. Re-elected in 1842. Retired. | ||||||||||||||||||
27th | March 4, 1841 – March 3, 1843 |
John C. Edwards |
Democratic | Elected in 1840. Retired. | |||||||||||||||||
28th | March 4, 1843 – March 3, 1845 |
James B. Bowlin |
Democratic | Elected in 1842. Re-elected in 1844. Re-elected in 1846. Re-elected in 1848. Lost re-election. |
James Hugh Relfe | Democratic | Elected in 1842. Re-elected in 1844. Retired. |
Gustavus Miller Bower | Democratic | Elected in 1842. Retired. |
James Madison Hughes | Democratic | Elected in 1842. Retired. | ||||||||
29th | March 4, 1845 – August 12, 1846 |
Sterling Price |
Democratic | Elected in 1844. Resigned to serve in the Mexican–American War. |
Leonard H. Sims | Democratic | Elected in 1844. Retired. |
John S. Phelps |
Democratic | Elected in 1844. Re-elected in 1846. Re-elected in 1848. Re-elected in 1850. | |||||||||||
August 12, 1846 – December 7, 1846 |
Vacant | ||||||||||||||||||||
December 7, 1846 – March 3, 1847 |
William McDaniel | Democratic | Elected to finish Price's term and seated December 7, 1846. Re-elected in 1846. Retired. | ||||||||||||||||||
30th | March 4, 1847 – March 3, 1849 |
James S. Green | Democratic | Elected in 1846. Re-elected in 1848. Retired. |
Willard Preble Hall | Democratic | Elected in 1846. Re-elected in 1848. Re-elected in 1850. Retired. | ||||||||||||||
31st | March 4, 1849 – March 3, 1851 |
William Van Ness Bay | Democratic | Elected in 1848. Lost re-election. |
US House of Missouri[edit]
US Congressional What-if delegations from Louisiana[edit]
US Congressional What-if Delegations from Georgia[edit]
Georgia's At-Large only[edit]
All together[edit]
US Congressional What-if Delegations from Texas (Three versions)[edit]
US Senators from Texas[edit]
Class 1Class 1 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 2000, 2006, 2012, and 2018. The next election will be in 2024. | C | Class 2Class 2 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 2002, 2008, 2014, and 2020. The next election will be in 2026. | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Senator | Party | Dates in office | Electoral history | T | T | Electoral history | Dates in office | Party | Senator | # | |
Vacant | December 29, 1845 – February 21, 1846 |
Texas did not elect its senators until two months after statehood. | 1 | 29th | 1 | Texas did not elect its senators until two months after statehood. | December 29, 1845 – February 21, 1846 |
Vacant | ||||
1 | Thomas Jefferson Rusk |
Democratic | February 21, 1846 – July 29, 1857 |
Elected in 1846. | Elected in 1846. | February 21, 1846 – March 3, 1859 |
Democratic | Sam Houston |
1 | |||
30th | 2 | Re-elected in 1847. | ||||||||||
31st | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1851. | 2 | 32nd | ||||||||||
33rd | 3 | Re-elected in 1853. Retired. | ||||||||||
34th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1857. Died. |
3 | 35th | ||||||||||
Vacant | July 29, 1857 – November 9, 1857 |
|||||||||||
2 | James Pinckney Henderson |
Democratic | November 9, 1857 – June 4, 1858 |
Appointed to finish Rusk's term. Died. | ||||||||
Vacant | June 4, 1858 – September 27, 1858 |
|||||||||||
3 | Matthias Ward |
Democratic | September 27, 1858 – December 5, 1859 |
Appointed to continue Rusk's term. Lost nomination to finish Rusk's term. | ||||||||
36th | 4 | Elected in 1859. Expelled following Texas's secession from the Union. |
March 4, 1859 – July 11, 1861 |
Democratic | John Hemphill |
2 | ||||||
4 | Louis Wigfall |
Democratic | December 5, 1859 – March 23, 1861 |
Elected to finish Rusk's term. Withdrew. | ||||||||
37th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | March 23, 1861 – March 30, 1870 |
U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction. | ||||||||||
U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction. | July 11, 1861 – March 31, 1870 |
Vacant | ||||||||||
4 | 38th | |||||||||||
39th | 5 | |||||||||||
40th | ||||||||||||
5 | 41st | |||||||||||
5 | James W. Flanagan |
Republican | March 30, 1870 – March 3, 1875 |
Elected upon readmission. | ||||||||
Elected upon readmission. | March 31, 1870 – March 3, 1877 |
Republican | Morgan C. Hamilton |
3 | ||||||||
42nd | 6 | Re-elected in 1870. Retired. | ||||||||||
43rd | Liberal Republican | |||||||||||
6 | Samuel B. Maxey |
Democratic | March 4, 1875 – March 3, 1887 |
Elected in 1874. | 6 | 44th | Republican | |||||
45th | 7 | Elected in 1876. | March 4, 1877 – March 3, 1895 |
Democratic | Richard Coke |
4 | ||||||
46th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1880. Lost re-election. |
7 | 47th | ||||||||||
48th | 8 | Re-elected in 1882. | ||||||||||
49th | ||||||||||||
7 | John Henninger Reagan |
Democratic | March 4, 1887 – June 10, 1891 |
Elected in 1886. Resigned to become chairman of the Railroad Commission of Texas. |
8 | 50th | ||||||
51st | 9 | Re-elected in 1888. Retired. | ||||||||||
52nd | ||||||||||||
8 | Roger Q. Mills |
Democratic | June 10, 1891 – March 3, 1899 |
Appointed to continue Reagan's term. Elected to finish Reagan's term. | ||||||||
Re-elected in 1892. Retired. |
9 | 53rd | ||||||||||
54th | 10 | Elected in 1894. Retired. |
March 4, 1895 – March 3, 1901 |
Democratic | Horace Chilton |
5 | ||||||
55th | ||||||||||||
9 | Charles Allen Culberson |
Democratic | March 4, 1899 – March 3, 1923 |
Elected in 1898. | 10 | 56th | ||||||
57th | 11 | Elected in 1900. | March 4, 1901 – March 3, 1913 |
Democratic | Joseph Weldon Bailey |
6 | ||||||
58th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1904. | 11 | 59th | ||||||||||
60th | 12 | Re-elected in 1906. Retired. | ||||||||||
61st | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1910. | 12 | 62nd | ||||||||||
63rd | 13 | Elected in 1912. | February 3, 1913 – April 9, 1941 |
Democratic | Morris Sheppard |
7 | ||||||
64th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1916. Lost re-election. |
13 | 65th | ||||||||||
66th | 14 | Re-elected in 1918. | ||||||||||
67th | ||||||||||||
10 | Earle B. Mayfield |
Democratic | March 4, 1923 – March 3, 1929 |
Elected in 1922. Lost renomination. |
14 | 68th | ||||||
69th | 15 | Re-elected in 1924. | ||||||||||
70th | ||||||||||||
11 | Tom Connally |
Democratic | March 4, 1929 – January 3, 1953 |
Elected in 1928. | 15 | 71st | ||||||
72nd | 16 | Re-elected in 1930. | ||||||||||
73rd | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1934. | 16 | 74th | ||||||||||
75th | 17 | Re-elected in 1936. Died. | ||||||||||
76th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1940. | 17 | 77th | ||||||||||
April 9, 1941 – April 21, 1941 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Sheppard's term. Died. |
April 21, 1941 – June 26, 1941 |
Democratic | Andrew Jackson Houston |
8 | ||||||||
June 26, 1941 – August 4, 1941 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected to finish Sheppard's term. | August 4, 1941 – January 3, 1949 |
Democratic | W. Lee O'Daniel |
9 | ||||||||
78th | 18 | Re-elected in 1942. Retired. | ||||||||||
79th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1946. Retired. |
18 | 80th | ||||||||||
81st | 19 | Elected in 1948. | January 3, 1949 – January 3, 1961 |
Democratic | Lyndon B. Johnson |
10 | ||||||
82nd | ||||||||||||
12 | Price Daniel |
Democratic | January 3, 1953 – January 14, 1957 |
Elected in 1952. Resigned. |
19 | 83rd | ||||||
84th | 20 | Re-elected in 1954. Re-elected in 1960, but resigned to become Vice President of the United States. | ||||||||||
85th | ||||||||||||
13 | William A. Blakley |
Democratic | January 15, 1957 – April 28, 1957 |
Appointed to continue Daniel's term. Retired when his successor was elected. | ||||||||
14 | Lloyd Bentsen |
Democratic | April 29, 1957 – January 3, 1989 |
Elected to finish Daniel's term. | ||||||||
Re-elected in 1958. | 20 | 86th | ||||||||||
87th | 21 | Elected in 1960 | January 3, 1961 – January 3, 1985 |
Republican | John Tower |
11 | ||||||
88th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1964. | 21 | 89th | ||||||||||
90th | 22 | Re-elected in 1966. | ||||||||||
91st | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1970. | 22 | 92nd | ||||||||||
93rd | 23 | Re-elected in 1972. | ||||||||||
94th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1976. | 23 | 95th | ||||||||||
96th | 24 | Re-elected in 1978. Retired. | ||||||||||
97th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1982. Retired to run for Vice President of the United States. |
24 | 98th | ||||||||||
99th | 25 | Elected in 1984. | January 3, 1985 – January 3, 2003 |
Republican | Phil Gramm |
12 | ||||||
100th | ||||||||||||
15 | Beau Boulter |
Republican | January 3, 1989 – January 3, 2013 |
Elected in 1988. | 25 | 101st | ||||||
102nd | 26 | Re-elected in 1990. | ||||||||||
103rd | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1994. | 26 | 104th | ||||||||||
105th | 27 | Re-elected in 1996. | ||||||||||
106th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2000. | 27 | 107th | ||||||||||
108th | 28 | Elected in 2002. | January 3, 2003 – present |
Republican | John Cornyn |
13 | ||||||
109th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2006. Retired. |
28 | 110th | ||||||||||
111th | 29 | Re-elected in 2008. | ||||||||||
112th | ||||||||||||
16 | Ted Cruz |
Republican | January 3, 2013 – present |
Elected in 2012. | 29 | 113th | ||||||
114th | 30 | Re-elected in 2014. | ||||||||||
115th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2018. | 30 | 116th | ||||||||||
117th | 31 | Re-elected in 2020. | ||||||||||
118th | ||||||||||||
To be determined in the 2024 election. | 31 | 119th | ||||||||||
120th | 32 | To be determined in the 2026 election. | ||||||||||
# | Senator | Party | Years in office | Electoral history | T | C | T | Electoral history | Years in office | Party | Senator | # |
Class 1 | Class 2 |
US House (but with At-Large until 1875 and from 1913 to 1967)[edit]
With Plural Districts (since 1963)[edit]
1963 to 1973[edit]
1973 to 1983[edit]
Congress | District | |||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | 11th | 12th | 13th | 14th | 15th | 16th | 17th | 18th | 19th | 20th | 21st | 22nd | |||
2 seats | 2 seats | |||||||||||||||||||||||
93rd (1973–1975) |
Wright Patman (D) |
Charlie Wilson (D) |
Jim Collins (R) |
Ray Roberts (D) |
Alan Steelman (R) |
Dale Milford (D) |
Olin E. Teague (D) |
Bill Archer (R) |
Bob Eckhardt (D) |
Jack Brooks (D) |
J. J. Pickle (D) |
William R. Poage (D) |
Jim Wright (D) |
Bob Price (R) |
John Young (D) |
Kika de la Garza (D) |
Abraham Kazen (D) |
Richard Crawford White (D) |
Omar Burleson (D) |
Barbara Jordan (D) |
George H. Mahon (D) |
Henry B. González (D) |
O. C. Fisher (D) |
Robert R. Casey (D) |
94th (1975–1977) |
Jack Hightower (D) |
Bob Krueger (D) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sam B. Hall Jr. (D) |
Ron Paul (R) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
95th (1977–1979) |
Jim Mattox (D) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
96th (1979–1981) |
Phil Gramm (D) |
Marvin Leath (D) |
Martin Frost (D) |
Joseph Wyatt (D) |
Charles Stenholm (D) |
Mickey Leland (D) |
Kent Hance (D) |
Tom Loeffler (R) | ||||||||||||||||
97th (1981–1983) |
Ralph Hall (D) |
Jack Fields (R) |
Bill Patman (D) |
1983 to 1993[edit]
Congress | District | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | 11th | 12th | 13th | 14th | 15th | 16th | 17th | 18th | 19th | 20th | 21st | 22nd | ||||||
2 seats | 2 seats | 2 seats | 3 seats | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
98th (1983–1985) |
Sam B. Hall Jr. (D) |
Charlie Wilson (D) |
Steve Bartlett (R) |
Tom Vander- griff (D) |
Ralph Hall (D) |
John Wiley Bryant (D) |
Martin Frost (D) |
Phil Gramm (R) |
Bill Archer (R) |
Jack Fields (R) |
Jack Brooks (D) |
Michael A. Andrews (D) |
J. J. Pickle (D) |
Marvin Leath (D) |
Jim Wright (D) |
Jack High- tower (D) |
Bill Patman (D) |
Kika de la Garza (D) |
Abraham Kazen (D) | Solomon P. Ortiz (D) |
Ronald D. Coleman (D) |
Charles Stenholm (D) |
Mickey Leland (D) |
Kent Hance (D) |
Henry B. González (D) |
Tom Loeffler (R) |
Ron Paul (R) |
99th (1985–1987) |
Dick Armey (R) |
Joe Barton (R) |
Beau Boulter (R) |
Mac Sweeney (R) |
Albert Bustamante (D) |
Larry Combest (R) |
Tom DeLay (R) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Jim Chapman (D) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
100th (1987–1989) |
Lamar Smith (R) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
101st (1989–1991) |
Bill Sarpalius (D) |
Greg Laughlin (D) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pete Geren (D) |
Craig Washington (D) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
102nd (1991–1993) |
Chet Edwards (D) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sam Johnson (R) |
1993 to 2003[edit]
2003 to 2013[edit]
2013 to the present[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from Virginia (since 1863)[edit]
US House What-if delegations from Nebraska[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from Iowa[edit]
US Congressional What-if delegations from New York[edit]
US House from New York[edit]
1789 to 1813[edit]
1813 to 1823[edit]
1823 to 1833[edit]
1833 to 1843[edit]
1843 to 1863[edit]
1863 to the present[edit]
US Congressional What-if Delegations from Pennsylvania[edit]
US Senators from Pennsylvania[edit]
Class 1Class 1 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 2000, 2006, 2012, 2018. The next election will be in 2024. | C | Class 3Class 3 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 1998, 2004, 2010, and 2016. The next election will be in 2022. | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Senator | Party | Dates in office | Electoral history | T | T | Electoral history | Dates in office | Party | Senator | # | |
1 | William Maclay |
Anti-Admin. | March 4, 1789 – March 3, 1791 |
Elected in 1788. Lost re-election. |
1 | 1st | 1 | Elected in 1788. Retired. |
March 4, 1789 – March 3, 1795 |
Pro- Admin. |
Robert Morris |
1 |
Vacant | March 4, 1791 – December 1, 1793 |
Legislature failed to elect. | 2 | 2nd | ||||||||
2 | Albert Gallatin |
Anti-Admin. | December 2, 1793 – February 28, 1794 |
Elected to finish the vacant term. Election voided for failure to meet the residency requirements for eligibility to the office. | ||||||||
3rd | ||||||||||||
Vacant | March 1, 1794 – April 23, 1794 |
|||||||||||
3 | James Ross |
Pro- Admin. |
April 24, 1794 – March 3, 1803 |
Elected to finish Gallatin's term. | ||||||||
Federalist | 4th | 2 | Elected in 1795. Retired. |
March 4, 1795 – March 3, 1801 |
Federalist | William Bingham |
2 | |||||
Re-elected in 1797. Retired. |
3 | 5th | ||||||||||
6th | ||||||||||||
7th | 3 | Elected in 1801. Resigned to become Supervisor of Revenue of Pennsylvania. |
March 4, 1801 – June 30, 1801 |
Democratic- Republican |
J. Peter G. Muhlenberg |
3 | ||||||
June 30, 1801 – December 17, 1801 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected to finish Muhlenberg's term. Retired. |
December 17, 1801 – March 3, 1807 |
Democratic- Republican |
George Logan |
4 | ||||||||
4 | Samuel Maclay | Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1803 – January 4, 1809 |
Elected in 1802. Resigned, believing he would lose re-election. |
4 | 8th | ||||||
9th | ||||||||||||
10th | 4 | Elected in 1806. Retired. |
March 4, 1807 – March 3, 1813 |
Democratic- Republican |
Andrew Gregg |
5 | ||||||
Vacant | January 4, 1809 – January 9, 1809 |
Vacant | ||||||||||
5 | Michael Leib |
Democratic- Republican |
January 9, 1809 – February 14, 1814 |
Elected January 9, 1809 to finish Maclay's term, having already won election to the next term.[4] | ||||||||
Elected on December 13, 1808.[5] Resigned to become Postmaster of Philadelphia. |
5 | 11th | ||||||||||
12th | ||||||||||||
13th | 5 | Elected on December 8, 1812.[6] Retired. |
March 4, 1813 – March 3, 1819 |
Democratic- Republican |
Abner Lacock |
6 | ||||||
Vacant | February 14, 1814 – February 24, 1814 |
|||||||||||
6 | Jonathan Roberts |
Democratic- Republican |
February 24, 1814 – March 3, 1821 |
Elected to finish Leib's term. | ||||||||
Re-elected in late 1814. | 6 | 14th | ||||||||||
15th | ||||||||||||
16th | 6 | Elected in 1818. Retired. |
March 4, 1819 – March 3, 1825 |
Democratic- Republican |
Walter Lowrie |
7 | ||||||
7 | William Findlay |
Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1821 – March 3, 1827 |
Elected in 1821. Retired. |
7 | 17th | ||||||
18th | ||||||||||||
Jacksonian | 19th | 7 | Elected in 1825. Lost re-election. |
March 4, 1825 – March 3, 1831 |
Anti-Jacksonian | William Marks |
8 | |||||
8 | Joseph Hemphill |
Jacksonian | March 4, 1827 – March 3, 1833 |
Elected in 1826. Retired. |
8 | 20th | ||||||
21st | ||||||||||||
22nd | 8 | Elected in 1830. Resigned to become U.S. Minister to Russia. |
March 4, 1831 – June 30, 1834 |
Jacksonian | William Wilkins |
9 | ||||||
9 | Samuel McKean |
Jacksonian | March 4, 1833 – March 3, 1839 |
Elected in 1832. | 9 | 23rd | ||||||
June 30, 1834 – December 6, 1834 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected to finish Wilkins's term. | December 6, 1834 – March 5, 1845 |
Jacksonian | James Buchanan |
10 | ||||||||
24th | ||||||||||||
Democratic | 25th | 9 | Re-elected in 1836. | Democratic | ||||||||
11 | Daniel Sturgeon |
Democratic | March 4, 1839 – March 3, 1851 |
Elected in 1838. | 10 | 26th | ||||||
27th | ||||||||||||
28th | 10 | Re-elected in 1843. Resigned to become U.S. Secretary of State. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1845. Retired. |
11 | 29th | ||||||||||
March 5, 1845 – March 13, 1845 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected in 1845. Retired. |
March 13, 1845 – March 3, 1849 |
Democratic | Richard Brodhead |
11 | ||||||||
30th | ||||||||||||
31st | 11 | Elected in 1849. | March 4, 1849 – March 3, 1855 |
Whig | James Cooper |
12 | ||||||
12 | Simon Cameron |
Democratic | March 4, 1851 – March 3, 1861 |
Elected in 1850. | 12 | 32nd | ||||||
33rd | ||||||||||||
34th | 12 | Elected in 1854. Retired. |
March 4, 1855 – March 3, 1861 |
Democratic | William Bigler |
13 | ||||||
Republican | Re-elected as a Republican in 1856. Resigned to become U.S. Secretary of War. |
13 | 35th | |||||||||
36th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | March 4, 1861 – March 14, 1861 |
37th | 13 | Elected in 1860. | March 4, 1861 – March 3, 1873 |
Republican | Edgar Cowan |
14 | ||||
13 | David Wilmot |
Republican | March 14, 1861 – March 3, 1863 |
Elected in 1861 to finish Cameron's term. Retired. | ||||||||
14 | Charles R. Buckalew |
Democratic | March 4, 1863 – March 3, 1869 |
Elected in 1863. | 14 | 38th | ||||||
39th | ||||||||||||
40th | 14 | Re-elected in 1866. Retired. | ||||||||||
15 | John Scott |
Republican | March 4, 1869 – March 3, 1875 |
Elected in 1869. Retired. |
15 | 41st | ||||||
42nd | ||||||||||||
43rd | 15 | Elected in 1872. | March 4, 1873 – March 3, 1897 |
Republican | J. Donald Cameron |
15 | ||||||
16 | William A. Wallace |
Democratic | March 4, 1875 – March 3, 1881 |
Elected in 1874. Lost re-election. |
16 | 44th | ||||||
45th | ||||||||||||
46th | 16 | Re-elected in 1878. | ||||||||||
17 | John I. Mitchell |
Republican | March 4, 1881 – March 3, 1887 |
Elected in 1880. | 17 | 47th | ||||||
48th | ||||||||||||
49th | 17 | Re-elected in 1885. | ||||||||||
18 | Matthew S. Quay |
Republican | March 4, 1887 – May 28, 1904 |
Elected in 1886. | 18 | 50th | ||||||
51st | ||||||||||||
52nd | 18 | Re-elected in 1890. Retired. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1892. | 19 | 53rd | ||||||||||
54th | ||||||||||||
55th | 19 | Elected in 1896. | March 4, 1897 – December 31, 1921 |
Republican | Boies Penrose |
17 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1898. Died. |
20 | 56th | ||||||||||
57th | ||||||||||||
58th | 20 | Re-elected in 1902. | ||||||||||
19 | Philander C. Knox |
Republican | June 10, 1904 – March 3, 1909 |
Appointed to finish Quay's term. | ||||||||
Elected to a full term in 1904. Resigned to become U.S. Secretary of State. |
21 | 59th | ||||||||||
60th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | March 4, 1909 – March 17, 1909 |
61st | 21 | Re-elected in 1908. | ||||||||
20 | George T. Oliver |
Republican | March 17, 1909 – March 3, 1917 |
Elected to finish Knox's term | ||||||||
Re-elected in 1910. Retired. |
22 | 62nd | ||||||||||
63rd | ||||||||||||
64th | 22 | Re-elected in 1914. | ||||||||||
21 | William E. Crow |
Republican | March 4, 1917 – August 8, 1922 |
Elected in 1916. Died. |
23 | 65th | ||||||
66th | ||||||||||||
67th | 23 | Re-elected in 1920. Died. | ||||||||||
December 31, 1921 – January 9, 1922 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Penrose's term. Elected to finish Penrose's term. Lost renomination. |
January 9, 1922 – March 3, 1927 |
Republican | George Wharton Pepper |
18 | ||||||||
Vacant | August 2, 1922 – August 8, 1922 |
|||||||||||
22 | David A. Reed |
Republican | August 8, 1922 – January 3, 1935 |
Appointed to finish Crow's term. | ||||||||
Elected to a full term in 1922. | 24 | 68th | ||||||||||
69th | ||||||||||||
70th | 24 | Elected in 1926 Unseated December 9, 1929. |
March 4, 1927 – December 9, 1929 |
Republican | William S. Vare |
19 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1928. Lost re-election. |
25 | 71st | ||||||||||
Appointed to continue Vare's term. Elected November 4, 1930 to finish Vare's term. |
December 9, 1929 – January 3, 1945 |
Republican | Joseph R. Grundy |
20 | ||||||||
72nd | ||||||||||||
73rd | 25 | Re-elected in 1932. | ||||||||||
23 | Joseph F. Guffey |
Democratic | January 3, 1935 – January 3, 1947 |
Elected in 1934. | 26 | 74th | ||||||
75th | ||||||||||||
76th | 26 | Re-elected in 1938. Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1940. Lost re-election. |
27 | 77th | ||||||||||
78th | ||||||||||||
79th | 27 | Elected in 1944. Lost re-election. |
January 3, 1945 – January 3, 1951 |
Democratic | Francis J. Myers |
21 | ||||||
24 | Edward Martin |
Republican | January 3, 1947 – January 3, 1959 |
Elected in 1946. | 28 | 80th | ||||||
81st | ||||||||||||
82nd | 28 | Elected in 1950. Lost re-election. |
January 3, 1951 – January 3, 1957 |
Republican | James H. Duff |
22 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1952. Retired. |
29 | 83rd | ||||||||||
84th | ||||||||||||
85th | 29 | Elected in 1956. | January 3, 1957 – January 3, 1969 |
Democratic | Joseph S. Clark |
23 | ||||||
25 | Hugh Scott |
Republican | January 3, 1959 – January 3, 1977 |
Elected in 1958. | 30 | 86th | ||||||
87th | ||||||||||||
88th | 30 | Re-elected in 1962. Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1964. | 31 | 89th | ||||||||||
90th | ||||||||||||
91st | 31 | Elected in 1968. | January 3, 1969 – January 3, 1981 |
Republican | Richard S. Schweiker |
24 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1970. Retired. |
32 | 92nd | ||||||||||
93rd | ||||||||||||
94th | 32 | Re-elected in 1974. Retired. | ||||||||||
26 | John Heinz |
Republican | January 3, 1977 – April 4, 1991 |
Elected in 1976. | 33 | 95th | ||||||
96th | ||||||||||||
97th | 33 | Elected in 1980. | January 3, 1981 – January 3, 2005 |
Republican | Arlen Specter |
25 | ||||||
Re-elected in 1982. | 34 | 98th | ||||||||||
99th | ||||||||||||
100th | 34 | Re-elected in 1986. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 1988. Died. |
35 | 101st | ||||||||||
102nd | ||||||||||||
Vacant | April 4, 1991 – May 9, 1991 |
|||||||||||
27 | Harris Wofford |
Democratic | May 9, 1991 – January 3, 1995 |
Appointed to continue Heinz's term. Elected to finish Heinz's term. Lost re-election. | ||||||||
103rd | 35 | Re-elected in 1992. | ||||||||||
28 | Rick Santorum |
Republican | January 3, 1995 – January 3, 2007 |
Elected in 1994. | 36 | 104th | ||||||
105th | ||||||||||||
106th | 36 | Re-elected in 1998. Lost renomination. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 2000. Lost re-election. |
37 | 107th | ||||||||||
108th | ||||||||||||
109th | 37 | Elected in 2004. | January 3, 2005 – Present |
Republican | Pat Toomey |
26 | ||||||
29 | Bob Casey Jr. |
Democratic | January 3, 2007 – Present |
Elected in 2006. | 38 | 110th | ||||||
111th | ||||||||||||
112th | 38 | Re-elected in 2010. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 2012. | 39 | 113th | ||||||||||
114th | ||||||||||||
115th | 39 | Re-elected in 2016. Retiring at end of term. | ||||||||||
Re-elected in 2018. | 40 | 116th | ||||||||||
117th | ||||||||||||
118th | 41 | To be determined in the 2022 election. | ||||||||||
To be determinied in the 2024 election. | 41 | 119th | ||||||||||
# | Senator | Party | Years in office | Electoral history | T | C | T | Electoral history | Years in office | Party | Senator | # |
Class 1 | Class 3 |
US House from Pennsylvania[edit]
1789 to 1803[edit]
1803 to 1813[edit]
Congress | District | |||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st (3 seats) | 2nd (3 seats) | 3rd (3 seats) | 4th (2 seats) | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | 11th | ||||||||
8th (1803–1805) |
Joseph Clay (DR) |
Jacob Richards (DR) |
Michael Leib (DR) |
Robert Brown (DR) |
Frederick Conrad (DR) |
Isaac Van Horne (DR) |
Isaac Anderson (DR) |
Joseph Hiester (DR) |
John Whitehill (DR) |
John A. Hanna (DR) |
David Bard (DR) |
Andrew Gregg (DR) |
John Stewart (DR) |
John Rea (DR) |
William Findley (DR) |
John Smilie (DR) |
William Hoge (DR) |
Jean B. C. Lucas (DR) |
John Hoge (DR) | ||||||||||||||||||
9th (1805–1807) |
John Pugh (DR) |
Christian Lower (DR) |
James Kelly (F) |
John Hamilton (DR) |
Samuel Smith (DR) | |||||||||||||
John Porter (DR) |
Robert Whitehill (DR) | |||||||||||||||||
10th (1807–1809) |
William Milnor (F) |
Robert Jenkins (F) |
Matthias Richards (DR) |
John Hiester (DR) |
Daniel Montgomery (DR) | |||||||||||||
Benjamin Say (DR) | ||||||||||||||||||
11th (1809–1811) |
William Anderson (DR) |
John Ross (DR) |
Daniel Hiester (DR) |
George Smith (DR) |
William Crawford (DR) |
Aaron Lyle (DR) | ||||||||||||
Adam Seybert (DR) | ||||||||||||||||||
12th (1811–1813) |
James Milnor (F) |
Jonathan Roberts (DR) |
Roger Davis (DR) |
John M. Hyneman (DR) |
Joseph Lefever (DR) |
William Piper (DR) |
Abner Lacock (DR) | |||||||||||
Isaac Griffin (DR) |
1813 to 1823[edit]
1823 to 1833[edit]
1833 to 1843[edit]
1843 to 1863[edit]
1863 to 1903[edit]
1903 to the present[edit]
US What-if Delegations from Kentucky[edit]
US Senate from Kentucky[edit]
Class 2Class 2 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 2002, 2008, 2014, and 2020. The next election will be in 2026. | C | Class 3Class 3 U.S. senators belong to the electoral cycle that has recently been contested in 1998, 2004, 2010, and 2016. The next election will be in 2022. | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Senator | Party | Dates in office | Electoral history | T | T | Electoral history | Dates in office | Party | Senator | # | |
Vacant | June 1, 1792 – June 18, 1792 |
Kentucky elected its senators a couple weeks after statehood. | 1 | 2nd | 1 | Kentucky elected its senators a couple weeks after statehood. | June 1, 1792 – June 18, 1792 |
Vacant | ||||
1 | John Brown |
Anti- Admin. |
June 18, 1792 – March 3, 1805 |
Elected June 18, 1792. | Elected June 18, 1792. | June 18, 1792 – March 3, 1795 |
Anti- Admin. |
John Edwards |
1 | |||
Re-elected December 11, 1792. | 2 | 3rd | ||||||||||
Democratic- Republican |
4th | 2 | Elected in 1794. Lost re-election. |
March 4, 1795 – March 3, 1801 |
Federalist | Humphrey Marshall |
2 | |||||
5th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected November 30, 1798. Lost re-election |
3 | 6th | ||||||||||
7th | 3 | Elected November 20, 1800. Resigned to become U.S. Attorney General. |
March 4, 1801 – August 7, 1805 |
Democratic-Republican | John Breckinridge |
3 | ||||||
8th | ||||||||||||
2 | Buckner Thruston |
Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1805 – December 18, 1809 |
Elected in 1804. Resigned to become judge of the U.S. Circuit Court. |
4 | 9th | ||||||
August 7, 1805 – November 8, 1805 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected to finish Breckinridge's term. Lost re-election. |
November 8, 1805 – March 3, 1807 |
Democratic-Republican | John Adair |
4 | ||||||||
10th | 4 | Elected November 13, 1806. Retired. |
March 4, 1807 – March 3, 1813 |
Democratic-Republican | John Pope |
5 | ||||||
11th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | December 18, 1809 – January 10, 1810 |
|||||||||||
3 | George M. Bibb |
Democratic- Republican |
January 10, 1810 – August 23, 1814 |
Appointed to finish Thruston's term. Elected in 1811. Resigned to return to private practice. | ||||||||
5 | 12th | |||||||||||
13th | 5 | January 12, 1813. Resigned. |
March 4, 1813 – December 24, 1814 |
Democratic-Republican | Jesse Bledsoe |
6 | ||||||
Vacant | August 23, 1814 – August 30, 1814 |
|||||||||||
4 | George Walker | Democratic- Republican |
August 30, 1814 – February 2, 1815 |
Appointed to continue Bibb's term. Successor qualified. | ||||||||
5 | William T. Barry |
Democratic- Republican |
February 2, 1815 – May 1, 1816 |
Elected to finish Bibb's term. Resigned to become judge of the Kentucky Circuit Court. | ||||||||
December 24, 1814 – February 2, 1815 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected January 3, 1815, to finish Bledsoe's term. | February 2, 1815 – March 3, 1825 |
Democratic-Republican | Isham Talbot |
7 | ||||||||
14th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | May 1, 1816 – November 3, 1816 |
|||||||||||
6 | Martin D. Hardin |
Democratic-Republican | November 3, 1816 – March 3, 1817 |
Appointed to continue Barry's term. Elected December 5, 1816, to finish Barry's term | ||||||||
Re-elected December 10, 1816. Resigned. |
6 | 15th | ||||||||||
7 | Richard M. Johnson |
Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1819 – March 3, 1835 |
Elected to finish Hardin's term. | 16th | 6 | Re-elected to a full term in 1818. Either retired or lost re-election. | |||||
17th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1823. | 7 | 18th | ||||||||||
Jacksonian | 19th | 7 | Election year unknown. Either retired or lost re-election. |
March 4, 1825 – March 3, 1831 |
Jacksonian | John Rowan |
8 | |||||
20th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1829. Lost re-election. |
8 | 21st | ||||||||||
22nd | 8 | Elected in 1830. | March 4, 1831 – June 24, 1852 |
National Republican |
Henry Clay |
9 | ||||||
23rd | ||||||||||||
8 | John J. Crittenden |
National Republican |
March 4, 1835 – March 3, 1841 |
Elected in 1835. Retired. |
9 | 24th | ||||||
Whig | 25th | 9 | Re-elected in 1836. Resigned. |
Whig | ||||||||
26th | ||||||||||||
9 | James T. Morehead |
Whig | March 4, 1841 – March 3, 1847 |
Elected in 1841. Either retired or lost re-election. |
10 | 27th | ||||||
28th | 10 | Re-elected in 1843. | ||||||||||
29th | ||||||||||||
10 | Joseph R. Underwood |
Whig | March 4, 1847 – March 3, 1853 |
Election year unknown. Retired. |
11 | 30th | ||||||
31st | 11 | Re-elected in 1848. Resigned December 17, 1851, to be effective September 6, 1852, but died June 24, 1852. | ||||||||||
32nd | ||||||||||||
June 24, 1852 – July 6, 1852 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Clay's term. Lost election to finish Clay's term. |
July 6, 1852 – August 31, 1852 |
Democratic | David Meriwether |
10 | ||||||||
Elected December 31, 1851 to finish Clay's term, in anticipation of Clay's resignation. Retired. |
September 1, 1852 – March 3, 1861 |
Whig | Archibald Dixon |
11 | ||||||||
11 | John B. Thompson |
Know Nothing | March 4, 1853 – March 3, 1859 |
Elected early in 1851, far in advance of the term. Either retired or lost re-election. |
12 | 33rd | ||||||
34th | 12 | Re-elected to a full in 1854. Retired. |
Know Nothing | |||||||||
35th | ||||||||||||
12 | Lazarus W. Powell |
Democratic | March 4, 1859 – March 3, 1865 |
Elected in 1858. Either retired or lost renomination. |
13 | 36th | ||||||
37th | 13 | Elected in 1859, far in advance of the term. Expelled for supporting the Confederacy. |
March 4, 1861 – December 4, 1861 |
Democratic | John C. Breckinridge |
12 | ||||||
December 4, 1861 – December 10, 1861 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Elected to finish Breckinridge's term. | December 10, 1861 – September 22, 1872 |
Unionist | Garrett Davis |
13 | ||||||||
38th | ||||||||||||
13 | James Guthrie |
Democratic | March 4, 1865 – February 7, 1868 |
Elected in 1865. Resigned due to ill health. |
14 | 39th | ||||||
40th | 14 | Re-elected in 1867. Died. |
Democratic | |||||||||
Vacant | February 7, 1868 – February 19, 1868 |
|||||||||||
14 | Thomas C. McCreery |
Democratic | February 19, 1868 – March 3, 1871 |
Elected to finish Guthrie's term. Lost re-election. | ||||||||
41st | ||||||||||||
15 | John W. Stevenson |
Democratic | March 4, 1871 – March 3, 1877 |
Elected in 1871. Retired. |
15 | 42nd | ||||||
September 22, 1872 – September 27, 1872 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Davis's term. Elected January 21, 1873, to finish Davis's term. |
September 27, 1872 – March 3, 1879 |
Democratic | Willis B. Machen |
14 | ||||||||
43rd | 15 | Elected in 1872. Retired. | ||||||||||
44th | ||||||||||||
16 | James B. Beck |
Democratic | March 4, 1877 – May 3, 1890 |
Elected in 1876. | 16 | 45th | ||||||
46th | 16 | Elected in 1879. Lost re-election. |
March 4, 1879 – March 3, 1885 |
Democratic | John Stuart Williams |
15 | ||||||
47th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1882. | 17 | 48th | ||||||||||
49th | 17 | Elected in 1884. | March 4, 1885 – March 3, 1897 |
Democratic | Joseph Blackburn |
16 | ||||||
50th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1888. Died. |
18 | 51st | ||||||||||
Vacant | May 3, 1890 – May 26, 1890 |
|||||||||||
17 | John G. Carlisle |
Democratic | May 26, 1890 – February 4, 1893 |
Elected to finish Beck's term. Resigned. | ||||||||
52nd | 18 | Re-elected in 1890. Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
Vacant | February 4, 1893 – February 15, 1893 |
|||||||||||
18 | William Lindsay |
Democratic | February 15, 1893 – March 3, 1901 |
Elected to finish Carlisle's term. | ||||||||
53rd | ||||||||||||
Re-elected January 17, 1894.[8] Retired. |
19 | 54th | ||||||||||
55th | 19 | Elected in 1896. Retired. |
March 4, 1897 – March 3, 1903 |
Republican | William J. Deboe |
17 | ||||||
56th | ||||||||||||
19 | Thomas H. Paynter |
Democratic | March 4, 1901 – March 3, 1913 |
Elected January 16, 1900. Lost re-election. |
20 | 57th | ||||||
58th | 20 | Elected January 15, 1902.[9] Lost renomination. |
March 4, 1903 – March 3, 1909 |
Democratic | James B. McCreary |
18 | ||||||
59th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1906. Retired. |
21 | 60th | ||||||||||
61st | 21 | Elected February 28, 1908.[10] Died. |
March 4, 1909 – May 23, 1914 |
Republican | William O'Connell Bradley |
19 | ||||||
62nd | ||||||||||||
20 | Ollie Murray James |
Democratic | March 4, 1913 – August 28, 1918 |
Elected January 16, 1912. Died. |
22 | 63rd | ||||||
May 23, 1914 – June 16, 1914 |
Vacant | |||||||||||
Appointed to continue Bradley's term. Elected November 3, 1914, to finish Bradley's term.[11] Retired. |
June 16, 1914 – March 3, 1915 |
Democratic | Johnson N. Camden II |
20 | ||||||||
64th | 22 | Elected in 1914. Lost re-election. |
March 4, 1915 – March 3, 1921 |
Democratic | John C. W. Beckham |
21 | ||||||
65th | ||||||||||||
Vacant | August 28, 1918 – September 7, 1918 |
|||||||||||
21 | George B. Martin |
Democratic | September 7, 1918 – March 3, 1919 |
Appointed to finish James's term. Retired. | ||||||||
22 | Augustus Stanley |
Democratic | March 4, 1919 – March 3, 1925 |
Elected in 1918. Didn't take seat until May 19, 1919, as he wanted to remain Governor of Kentucky. However, he was still elected and qualified as senator. Lost re-election. |
23 | 66th | ||||||
67th | 23 | Elected in 1920. Lost re-election. |
March 4, 1921 – March 3, 1927 |
Republican | Richard P. Ernst |
23 | ||||||
68th | ||||||||||||
23 | Fred M. Sackett |
Republican | March 4, 1925 – January 9, 1930 |
Elected in 1924. Resigned to become U.S. Ambassador to Germany. |
24 | 69th | ||||||
70th | 31 | Elected in 1926. | March 4, 1927 – January 19, 1949 |
Democratic | Alben W. Barkley |
23 | ||||||
71st | ||||||||||||
Vacant | January 9, 1930 – January 11, 1930 |
|||||||||||
24 | John M. Robsion |
Republican | January 11, 1930 – March 3, 1931 |
Appointed to finish Sackett's term. Lost election to next term. | ||||||||
25 | M. M. Logan |
Democratic | March 4, 1931 – October 3, 1939 |
Elected in 1930. | 25 | 72nd | ||||||
73rd | 25 | Re-elected in 1932. | ||||||||||
74th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1936. Died. |
26 | 75th | ||||||||||
76th | 26 | Re-elected in 1938. | ||||||||||
Vacant | October 3, 1939 – October 10, 1939 |
|||||||||||
26 | A. B. "Happy" Chandler |
Democratic | October 10, 1939 – November 1, 1945 |
Appointed to continue Logan's term. Elected November 5, 1940, to finish Logan's term. | ||||||||
77th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1942. Resigned to become Commissioner of Baseball. |
27 | 78th | ||||||||||
79th | 27 | Re-elected in 1944. Resigned to become U.S. Vice President. | ||||||||||
Vacant | November 1, 1945 – November 19, 1945 |
|||||||||||
27 | William A. Stanfill |
Republican | November 19, 1945 – November 5, 1946 |
Appointed to continue Chandler's term. Elected to finish Chandler's term. Lost re-election. | ||||||||
80th | ||||||||||||
28 | Virgil Chapman |
Democratic | January 3, 1949 – March 8, 1951 |
Elected in 1948. Died. |
28 | 81st | ||||||
Appointed to continue Barkley's term. Resigned to trigger special election. |
January 20, 1949 – November 26, 1950 |
Democratic | Garrett L. Withers |
24 | ||||||||
Elected to finish Barkley's term, having been elected to the next term. | November 27, 1950 – January 3, 1957 |
Democratic | Earle C. Clements |
25 | ||||||||
82nd | 28 | Elected to full term in 1950. Lost re-election. | ||||||||||
Vacant | March 8, 1951 – March 19, 1951 |
|||||||||||
29 | Thomas R. Underwood |
Democratic | March 19, 1951 – November 4, 1952 |
Appointed to continue Chapman's term. Lost election to finish Chapman's term. | ||||||||
30 | John Sherman Cooper |
Republican | November 5, 1952 – January 3, 1973 |
Elected to finish Chapman's term. | ||||||||
83rd | ||||||||||||
Re-elected to a full term in 1954. | 29 | 84th | ||||||||||
85th | 29 | Elected in 1956. | January 3, 1957 – December 16, 1968 |
Republican | Thruston Morton |
26 | ||||||
86th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1960. | 30 | 87th | ||||||||||
88th | 30 | Re-elected in 1962. Retired, and resigned early to give successor preferential seniority. | ||||||||||
89th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1966. Retired. |
31 | 90th | ||||||||||
Appointed to finish Morton's term, having already been elected to the next term. | December 17, 1968 – December 27, 1974 |
Republican | Marlow Cook |
27 | ||||||||
91st | 31 | Elected in 1968. Lost re-election, and resigned early to give successor preferential seniority. | ||||||||||
92nd | ||||||||||||
31 | Walter Dee Huddleston |
Democratic | January 3, 1973 – January 3, 1985 |
Elected in 1972. | 32 | 93rd | ||||||
Appointed to finish Cook's term, having already been elected to the next term. | December 28, 1974 – January 3, 1999 |
Democratic | Wendell H. Ford |
28 | ||||||||
94th | 32 | Elected in 1974. | ||||||||||
95th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1978. Lost re-election. |
33 | 96th | ||||||||||
97th | 33 | Re-elected in 1980. | ||||||||||
98th | ||||||||||||
32 | Mitch McConnell |
Republican | January 3, 1985 – Present |
Elected in 1984. | 34 | 99th | ||||||
100th | 34 | Re-elected in 1986. | ||||||||||
101st | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1990. | 35 | 102nd | ||||||||||
103rd | 35 | Re-elected in 1992. Retired. | ||||||||||
104th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 1996. | 36 | 105th | ||||||||||
106th | 36 | Elected in 1998. | January 3, 1999 – January 3, 2011 |
Republican | Jim Bunning |
29 | ||||||
107th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2002. | 37 | 108th | ||||||||||
109th | 37 | Re-elected in 2004. Retired. | ||||||||||
110th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2008. | 38 | 111th | ||||||||||
112th | 38 | Elected in 2010. | January 3, 2011 – Present |
Republican | Rand Paul |
30 | ||||||
113th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2014. | 39 | 114th | ||||||||||
115th | 39 | Re-elected in 2016. | ||||||||||
116th | ||||||||||||
Re-elected in 2020. | 40 | 117th | ||||||||||
118th | 40 | To be determined in the 2022 election. | ||||||||||
119th | ||||||||||||
To be determined in the 2026 election. | 41 | 120th | ||||||||||
# | Senator | Party | Years in office | Electoral history | T | C | T | Electoral history | Years in office | Party | Senator | # |
Class 2 | Class 3 |
US House from Kentucky[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from Oklahoma[edit]
Congress | District | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Oklahoma's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|1st]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Oklahoma's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|2nd]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Oklahoma's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|3rd]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Oklahoma's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|4th]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Oklahoma's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|5th]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">Seat A | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">Seat B | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">Seat C | ||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1907–1909) | Bird Segle McGuire (R) |
Elmer L. Fulton (D) | James S. Davenport (D) | Charles D. Carter (D) |
Scott Ferris (D) | ||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1909–1911) | Dick Thompson Morgan (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1911–1913) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1913–1915) | William H. Murray (D) |
Joseph Bryan Thompson (D) |
Claude Weaver (D) | ||||||
Congress | District | ||||||||
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[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1915–1917) | William Wirt Hastings (D) |
Dick Thompson Morgan (R) |
James S. Davenport (D) |
Charles D. Carter (D) |
Scott Ferris (D) | William H. Murray (D) |
James V. McClintic (D) |
Joseph Bryan Thompson (D) | |
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1917–1919) | Thomas Alberter Chandler (R) |
Tom D. McKeown (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1919–1921) | |||||||||
Charles Swindall (R) | John W. Harreld (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1921–1923) | Alice Mary Robertson (R) |
Manuel Herrick (R) | L. M. Gensman (R) | Joseph C. Pringley (R) |
Fletcher B. Swank (D) | ||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1923–1925) | William Wirt Hastings (D) |
Milton C. Garber (R) | Everette B. Howard (D) | Elmer Thomas (D) | Tom D. McKeown (D) | ||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1925–1927) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1927–1929) | Wilburn Cartwright (D) |
Jed Johnson (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1929–1931) | Charles O'Connor (R) | Ulysses S. Stone (R) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1931–1933) | Wesley E. Disney (D) |
Joshua B. Lee (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1933–1935) | E. W. Marland (D) |
Will Rogers (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1935–1937) | John Conover Nichols (D) |
Phil Ferguson (D) |
Percy Lee Gassaway (D) |
Sam C. Massingale (D) | |||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1937–1939) | Lyle Boren (D) | Gomer G. Smith (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1939–1941) | Mike Monroney (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1941–1943) | Ross Rizley (R) | ||||||||
Victor Wickersham (D) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1943–1945) | Paul Stewart (D) | ||||||||
William G. Stigler (D) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1945–1947) | George B. Schwabe (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1947–1949) | Carl Albert (D) |
Toby Morris (D) |
Glen D. Johnson (D) | ||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1949–1951) | George H. Wilson (D) | Dixie Gilmer (D) | Tom Steed (D) | ||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1951–1953) | Page Belcher (R) | John Jarman (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1953–1955) | Ed Edmondson (D) | John Jarman (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1955–1957) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1957–1959) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1959–1961) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1961–1963) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1963–1965) | Victor Wickersham (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1965–1967) | Jed Johnson Jr. (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1967–1969) | James V. Smith (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1969–1971) | John Newbold Camp (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1971–1973) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1973–1975) | Clem McSpadden (D) | James R. Jones (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1975–1977) | Ted Risenhoover (D) | John Jarman (R) | Glenn English (D) | ||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1977–1979) | Mickey Edwards (R) | Wes Watkins (D) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1979–1981) | Mike Synar (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1981–1983) | Dave McCurdy (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1983–1985) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1985–1987) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1987–1989) | Jim Inhofe (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1989–1991) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1991–1993) | Bill Brewster (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1993–1995) | Ernest Istook (R) | ||||||||
Steve Largent (R) | Frank Lucas (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1995–1997) | Tom Coburn (R) | J. C. Watts (R) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1997–1999) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1999–2001) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2001–2003) | Brad Carson (D) | ||||||||
John Sullivan (R) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2003–2005) | Tom Cole (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2005–2007) | Dan Boren (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2007–2009) | Mary Fallin (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2009–2011) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2011–2013) | James Lankford (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2013–2015) | Markwayne Mullin (R) |
Jim Bridenstine (R) | |||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2015–2017) | Steve Russell (R) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2017–2019) | |||||||||
Kevin Hern (R) | |||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2019–2021) | Kendra Horn (D) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (2021–2023) | Stephanie Bice (R) |
US House What-if Delegations from Massachusetts (since 1823)[edit]
Congress | District | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | <span data-sort-value="The time allocated for running scripts has expired.">[[Massachusetts's The time allocated for running scripts has expired. congressional district|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] | |
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1823–1825) |
Benjamin Gorham (DR)[b] | Benjamin W. Crowninshield (DR)[b] |
Jeremiah Nelson (F)[b] | Timothy Fuller (DR)[b] | Jonas Sibley (DR)[b] | John Locke (DR)[b] | Samuel Clesson Allen (F)[b] |
Samuel Lathrop (F)[b] | Henry W. Dwight (F)[b] | John Bailey (DR)[b] | Aaron Hobart (DR)[b] | Francis Baylies (F)[e] | John Reed Jr. (F)[b] |
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1825–1827) |
Benjamin Gorham (NR) | Benjamin W. Crowninshield (NR) |
Jeremiah Nelson (NR) | Edward Everett (NR) | John Davis (NR) | John Locke (NR) | Samuel Clesson Allen (NR) |
Samuel Lathrop (NR) | Henry W. Dwight (NR) | John Bailey (NR) | Aaron Hobart (NR) | Francis Baylies (J) | John Reed Jr. (NR) |
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1827–1829) |
Isaac C. Bates (NR) | Joseph Richardson (NR) |
James L. Hodges (NR) | ||||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1829–1831) |
Joseph G. Kendall (NR) | George Grennell Jr. (NR) | |||||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1831–1833) |
Nathan Appleton (NR) | Rufus Choate (NR) | George N. Briggs (NR) | Henry A. S. Dearborn (NR) |
John Quincy Adams (NR) | ||||||||
[[The time allocated for running scripts has expired. United States Congress|The time allocated for running scripts has expired.]] (1833–1835) |
Gayton P. Osgood (J) |
William Jackson (A-M) |
William Baylies (NR) |
John Quincy Adams (A-M) |
John Reed Jr. (NR) | ||||||||
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Stephen Philips (NR) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Levi Lincoln Jr. (NR) | ||||||||||||
#if: (1835–1837) |
Template:Party cell | Abbott Lawrence (NR) |
Template:Party cell | Caleb Cushing (NR) |
Template:Party cell | Samuel Hoar (NR) |
Template:Party cell | William B. Calhoun (NR) |
Template:Party cell | Nathaniel B. Borden (J) |
Template:Party cell | John Reed Jr. (Template:Nowrap) | |||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1837–1839) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Abbott Lawrence (W) | Template:Party cell | Stephen Phillips (W) | rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | Caleb Cushing (W) |
rowspan=8 Template:Party cell | William Parmenter (D) |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | Levi Lincoln Jr. (W) |
rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | William Soden Hastings (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | George Grennell Jr. (W) |
rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | William B. Calhoun (W) |
rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | George N. Briggs (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Nathaniel B. Borden (D) |
rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | John Quincy Adams (W) |
rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | John Reed Jr. (W) | |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | Leverett Saltonstall I (W) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1839–1841) |
Template:Party cell | James Alvord (W) | rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | Henry Williams (D) | |||||||||||
rowspan=9 Template:Party cell | Robert Charles Winthrop (W) |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | Osmyn Baker (W) | ||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1841–1843) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Barker Burnell (W) | ||||||||||||
rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | Charles Hudson (W) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal Template:Nowrap |
rowspan=7 Template:Party cell | Daniel P. King (W) |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | Amos Abbott (W) |
rowspan=7 Template:Party cell | Julius Rockwell (W) |
rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | John Quincy Adams (W) |
Template:Party cell | Barker Burnell (W) | ||||||||
rowspan=6 Template:Party cell | Joseph Grinnell (W) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1845–1847) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | John G. Palfrey (W) |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | George Ashmun (W) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Artemas Hale (W) | ||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1847–1849) | |||||||||||||
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | Horace Mann (W) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1849–1851) |
rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | James H. Duncan (W) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Benjamin Thompson (W) | rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | Charles Allen (FS) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Orin Fowler (W) | |||||||||
Template:Party cell | Samuel A. Eliot (W) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1851–1853) |
rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | William Appleton (W) |
Template:Party cell | Robert Rantoul (D) | rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | George T. Davis (W) |
rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | John Z. Goodrich (W) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Zeno Scudder (W) | ||||||||
Template:Party cell | Francis B. Fay (W) | Template:Party cell | Lorenzo Sabine (W) | Template:Party cell | Edward P. Little (D) | |||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal Template:Nowrap |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Samuel L. Crocker (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Samuel H. Walley (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Edward Dickinson (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Charles Wentworth Upham (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Nathaniel P. Banks (D) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Tappan Wentworth (W) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Alexander De Witt (FS) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | J. Wiley Edmands (W) | |||||
Template:Party cell | Robert Bernard Hall (W) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1855–1857) |
Template:Party cell | Anson Burlingame (KN) |
Template:Party cell | James Buffington (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Linus B. Comins (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Calvin C. Chaffee (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Timothy Davis (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Nathaniel P. Banks (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Mark Trafton (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Chauncey L. Knapp (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Robert Bernard Hall (KN) |
Template:Party cell | Alexander De Witt (KN) |
Template:Party cell | William S. Damrell (KN) | ||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1857–1859) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Anson Burlingame (R) |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | James Buffington (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Linus B Comins (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Calvin C. Chaffee (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Timothy Davis (R) |
Template:Party cell | Nathaniel P. Banks (R) |
rowspan=5 Template:Party cell | Henry L. Dawes (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Chauncey L. Knapp (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Robert Bernard Hall (R) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Eli Thayer (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | William S. Damrell (R) | ||
rowspan=4 Template:Party cell | Daniel W. Gooch (R) | |||||||||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1859–1861) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Alexander H. Rice (R) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Charles Delano (R) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | John B. Alley (R) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Charles R. Train (R) |
rowspan=3 Template:Party cell | Thomas D. Eliot (R) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Charles Francis Adams Sr. (R) | |||||||
Template:USCongressOrdinal (1861–1863) |
rowspan=2 Template:Party cell | Samuel Hooper (U) | Template:Party cell | Goldsmith Bailey (R) | |||||||||||
Template:Party cell | Amasa Walker (R) | Template:Party cell | Benjamin Thomas (U) |
US House What-if Delegations from Michigan[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from Florida[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from Kansas[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from Illinois (two versions)[edit]
No Plural Districts[edit]
Plural Districts (with 9 districts)[edit]
1903 until 1953[edit]
1953 until 1963[edit]
1963 until 1973[edit]
1973 until 1983[edit]
1983 until 1993[edit]
1993 until 2003[edit]
2003 until 2013[edit]
2013 until 2023[edit]
Plural Districts (with 13 districts)[edit]
1983 to 1993[edit]
1993 to 2003[edit]
2003 to 2013[edit]
2013 to 2023[edit]
US House What-if Delegations from New Jersey[edit]
1789 to 1843: At-Large only[edit]
Since 1843: Districts[edit]
US What-if Delegations from Ohio (since 1863)[edit]
My Proposed Gubernatorial Lines of Succession[edit]
Alabama[edit]
Alaska[edit]
# | Office | Current officeholder |
---|---|---|
Governor of Alaska | Template:Party shading/Republican|Mike Dunleavy (R) | |
1 | Lieutenant Governor of Alaska | Template:Party shading/Republican|Kevin Meyer (R) |
2 | President of the Senate | Template:Party shading/Republican|Peter Micciche (R) |
Arizona[edit]
# | Office | Current officeholder |
---|---|---|
Governor of Arizona | Template:Party shading/Republican|Doug Ducey (R) | |
1 | Secretary of State | Template:Party shading/Democratic|Katie Hobbs (D) |
2 | Attorney General | Template:Party shading/Republican|Mark Brnovich (R) |
3 | Treasurer | Template:Party shading/Republican|Kimberly Yee (R) |
4 | President of the Senate | Template:Party shading/Republican|Karen Fann (R) |
5 | Speaker of the House of Representatives | Template:Party shading/Republican|Rusty Bowers (R) |
6 | Superintendent of Public Instruction | Template:Party shading/Democratic|Kathy Hoffman (D) |
Arkansas[edit]
# | Office | Current officeholder |
---|---|---|
Governor of Arkansas | Template:Party shading/Republican|Asa Hutchinson (R) | |
1 | Lieutenant Governor | Template:Party shading/Republican|Tim Griffin (R) |
2 | President pro tempore of the Senate | Template:Party shading/Republican|Jimmy Hickey Jr. (R) |
3 | Speaker of the House of Representatives | Template:Party shading/Republican|Matthew Shepherd (R) |
Eligible to serve as emergency interim Governor if 1–3 are vacant | ||
4 | Attorney General | Template:Party shading/Republican|Leslie Rutledge (R) |
5 | Treasurer | Template:Party shading/Republican|Dennis Milligan (R) |
6 | Auditor | Template:Party shading/Republican|Andrea Lea (R) |
7 | Secretary of State | Template:Party shading/Republican|John Thurston (R) |
Georgia[edit]
Wisconsin[edit]
# | Office | Current officeholder |
---|---|---|
Governor of Wisconsin | Template:Party shading/Democratic|Tony Evers (D) | |
1 | Lieutenant Governor | Template:Party shading/Democratic|Mandela Barnes (D) |
2 | President of the Senate | Template:Party shading/Republican|Chris Kapenga (R) |
3 | Speaker of the Assembly | Template:Party shading/Republican|Robin Vos (R) |
4 | Secretary of State | Template:Party shading/Democratic|Doug La Follette (D) |
Party leaders in the US House (with Speaker Pro Tempore candidates excluded)[edit]
No Assistant Leaders/Whips (1865–1981)[edit]
Assistant Leaders/Whip offices established in 1981 (since 1981)[edit]
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ Byrd, p. 104
- ^ Template:Broken ref
- ^ Template:Cite web, citing Journal of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 1808. 174-176.
- ^ Template:Cite web
- ^ Template:Cite web, citing Journal of the Pennsylvania State Senate, 1812. 41-43.
- ^ Anti-Lecompton Democrat
- ^ Template:Cite book
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ Tribune Almanac (1909), p. 315.
- ^ Byrd, p. 112.
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