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Virginia House of Delegates elections, 2011
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Elections for the office of Virginia State Delegate were held on November 8, 2011. Each of the state's 100 delegates were up for election. Members are elected to two-year terms.
The 2011 election was the state's first election under its new legislative maps. Following the 2010 census, the state redrew its legislative boundaries to account for growth and shifts in the state's population. The Virginia General Assembly was responsible for the redistricting process. Virginia's 100 house seats are comprised of 100 single-member legislative districts.
Virginia is just one of four states that held state house elections in 2011. The other three states that hold their state house elections in odd-numbered years are New Jersey, Mississippi and Louisiana.
Virginia's primary was rescheduled from its usual date of June 14 to August 23 in order to allow time for legislative redistricting.[1] Candidates wishing to run for the Virginia House of Delegates were required to file their petitions or candidate filing fees by June 15. As they become available, candidate information and election results will be reflected on this page.
- See also: Virginia State Senate elections, 2011
General election results
The following candidates won election on November 8, 2011:
- Alfonso Lopez
- Algie Howell
- Anne B. Crockett-Stark
- Barbara Comstock
- Barry Knight
- Ben Cline
- Betsy Carr
- Beverly Sherwood
- Bill Howell
- Bob Brink
- Bob Marshall, Virginia Representative
- Bob Purkey
- Bob Tata
- Bobby Orrock
- Brenda Pogge
- C. Todd Gilbert
- Charles Poindexter
- Charniele Herring
- Chris Head
- Chris Jones
- Chris Peace
- Christopher Stolle
- Danny Marshall, III
- Dave Albo
- David Bulova
- David Englin
- David Ramadan
- David Toscano
- David Yancey
- Delores McQuinn
- Donald Merricks
- Ed Scott
- Eileen Filler-Corn
- Gordon Helsel
- Greg Habeeb
- Israel O'Quinn
- Jackson H. Miller
- James Edmunds, II
- James LeMunyon
- James Morefield
- Jeion Ward
- Jenn McClellan
- Jim Scott
- Jimmie Massie
- Joe Johnson
- Joe T. May
- John Cosgrove
- John Cox
- John O'Bannon
- Johnny Joannou
- Joseph Morrissey
- Joseph Yost
- Kathy Byron
- Kaye Kory
- Keith Hodges
- Ken Plum
- Kenny Alexander
- Kirk Cox
- Lacey Putney
- Larry Rush
- Lee Ware
- Lionell Spruill
- Luke Torian
- Lynwood Lewis
- Mamye BaCote
- Manoli Loupassi
- Margaret Ransone
- Mark Cole
- Mark Dudenhefer
- Mark Keam
- Mark Sickles
- Matt Fariss
- Matthew James
- Michael Watson (Virginia)
- Michael Webert
- Onzlee Ware
- Patrick Hope
- Peter Farrell
- Randall Minchew
- Richard Anderson (Virginia)
- Richard Bell, Virginia legislator
- Rick Morris
- Riley Ingram
- Rob Bell
- Ronald Villanueva
- Roxann Robinson
- Roz Dance
- Roz Tyler
- Salvatore Iaquinto
- Scott Lingamfelter
- Scott Surovell
- Steve Landes
- T. Scott Garrett
- Terry Kilgore
- Thomas Greason
- Tim Hugo
- Tom Rust
- Tommy Wright
- Tony Wilt
- Vivian Watts
Impact of redistricting
- See also: Redistricting in Virginia
Every 10 years, the Constitution requires states to redraw Congressional and state legislative districts based on updated Census information. In 2011, Virginia was the fourth state to complete its state legislative redistricting. Its 100 districts were re-drawn by the Virginia General Assembly and approved by Governor Bob McDonnell.
Partisan impact
With each chamber controlled by members of the opposite party, the Senate and House agreed to create their own maps and concur with the maps drawn by the other.[1] As a result, both houses created plans favorable to the current majority. Since Republicans control the House 59-39 with two independents, the plan is expected to benefit the GOP. Based on the 2009 gubernatorial election, 73 of the new districts would have favored the Republican candidate.
The first plan approved by the legislature was vetoed by Governor Bob McDonnell (R). In a letter accompanying his veto, McDonnell predominantly criticized the Democratically-drawn senate plan but indicated that the veto served as an opportunity for the house to further improve its plan. After making minor changes to the house plan and securing a compromise on the senate plan, the legislature passed another bill that was approved by the Governor.
Figure 1: This map shows the Virginia House districts after 2001 redistricting.
Figure 2: This map shows the Virginia House districts after 2011 redistricting.
Majority control
- See also: Partisan composition of state houses
Going into the November 2011 elections, the Republican Party was the majority party in 31 state houses, including Virginia. One chamber (Nebraska) is officially non-partisan and in one chamber (Alaska), several Republicans vote with a caucus other than the Republican caucus. In 19 states, the Democratic Party held the majority party.
In the other 3 states with state house elections in 2011 (Louisiana, Mississippi and New Jersey), the Republican Party held the majority party in Louisiana, while the Democratic Party held the majority party in Mississippi and New Jersey. The partisan composition of the Virginia House of Delegates before and after the election:
| Virginia House of Delegates | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Party | As of November 2011 | After the 2011 Election | |
| Democratic Party | 39 | 32 | |
| Republican Party | 58 | 67 | |
| Independent | 2 | 1 | |
| Vacancy | 1 | 0 | |
| Total | 100 | 100 | |
Competitiveness
Candidates unopposed by a major party
Fifty-nine incumbents (59%) face no competition in the November 8 general election and are thus, barring unforeseen circumstances, guaranteed re-election in November.
- 18 Democratic incumbents face no November challenger.
- 41 Republican incumbents face no November challenger
Primary challenges
Only one incumbent faced competition in the August 23 primary. That incumbent, Algie Howell defeated his challenger, Richard James.
- District 90: Incumbent Democrat Algie Howell
Retiring incumbents
Ten incumbent representatives did not run for re-election, while 90 (90%) ran for re-election. Of the 10 incumbents who did not run for re-election, 3 are Democrats, 6 are Republicans, and one is an independent.
Incumbents who are retiring are:
- District 5: Incumbent Republican Bill Carrico
- District 7: Incumbent Republican David Nutter
- District 12: Incumbent Democrat James Shuler
- District 17: Incumbent Republican William Cleaveland
- District 49: Incumbent Democrat Adam Ebbin
- District 56: Incumbent Republican Bill Janis
- District 59: Independent Incumbent Watkins Abbitt, Jr.
- District 94: Incumbent Republican Glenn Oder
- District 98: Incumbent Republican Harvey Morgan
- District 99: Incumbent Democrat Albert Pollard
Incumbents displaced by redistricting
Four incumbent representatives were displaced by the 2011 redistricting process. Of the 4 displaced incumbents, 3 are Democrats and 1 is a Republican.
Incumbents who were displaced by redistricting:
- District 2: Incumbent Democrat Bud Phillips now resides in district 4.
- District 10: Incumbent Democrat Ward Armstrong was moved to district 16. He decided to move to a residence in district 9, where he now seeks election.
- District 18: Incumbent Republican Clay Athey now resides in district 29.
- District 87: Incumbent Democrat Paula Miller now resides in district 100.
Primary competitiveness
The total number of contested primaries has remained low from 2009 to 2011.
| Comparing Contested Primaries in Past VA House Elections | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democrats | Republicans | Total | ||||
| 2009 | 2011 | 2009 | 2011 | 2009 | 2011 | |
| Open contested | 6 | 1 | 3 | 5 | 9 | 6 |
| Incumbent contested | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
| Total contested | 8 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 11 | 7 |
Uncontested primaries
There are a total of 100 districts in the Virginia House of Delegates, meaning that normally there would be 200 primaries. However, some districts use a caucus or convention rather than a primary to decide which candidate to send to the general election. 39 out of the 200 potential primaries decide on a candidate this way, leaving 161 which use primaries. Of these 161 primaries, only 7 are contested (4.3%).
November 8 General election candidates:
District without primaries
The following district/party combinations do not use a primary.
Democrats: Districts 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 13, 15, 16, 18, 20, 21, 25, 31, 32, 33, 50, 51, 56, 57, 59, 67, 72, 73, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 98
Republicans: Districts 1, 3, 15, 26, 47, 59, 64, 75, 88
Qualifications
In order to run for the House of Delegates, a candidate must:
- Be 21 years of age or older.
- A qualified elector in the Commonwealth in Virginia.
- Be a resident of the district they plan to run for[2].
- If a Republican or Democrat candidate, pay a filing fee equivalent to 2 percent of the current salary elected State Representatives make[3].
- If running as an independent, collecting signatures via petition[3].
Campaign contributions
This chart shows how many candidates ran for the House of Delegates in Virginia in past years and the cumulative amount of campaign contributions in state house races, including contributions in both primary and general election contests. All figures come from Follow The Money.[4]
| Year | Number of candidates | Total contributions |
|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 204 | $35,947,346 |
| 2007 | 156 | $32,931,206 |
| 2005 | 187 | $25,335,941 |
| 2003 | 158 | $13,103,722 |
The top 10 donors in 2009 were:[5]
| Donor | Amount |
|---|---|
| Democratic Party of Virginia | $2,845,707 |
| Virginia House Democratic Caucus | $1,989,631 |
| Republican Party of Virginia | $1,701,257 |
| Dominion Leadership Trust | $757,344 |
| Republican State Leadership Cmte | $571,593 |
| Virginia Association of Realtors | $488,448 |
| Virginia Dental Association | $370,978 |
| Virginia Bankers Association | $344,181 |
| Piedmont Leadership PAC | $314,544 |
| Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association | $294,662 |
Races to watch
- District 9: Incumbent Charles Poindexter faces off against redistricting displaced incumbent Ward Armstrong in a very expensive and heated race.[6]
List of candidates
District 1
- Terry Kilgore
Incumbent Kilgore was first elected in 1994.
November 8 General election candidates:
Terry Kilgore: 16,645
District 2
Note: Due to redistricting, incumbent Democrat Bud Phillips now resides in district 4.[7]
November 8 General election candidates:
Esteban Garces: 4,507
Mark Dudenhefer: 5,767
District 3
- James Morefield
Incumbent Morefield was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Russell Vern Presley II: 8,994
James Morefield: 13,316
District 4
- Joe Johnson
Incumbent Johnson was first elected in 1990.
November 8 General election candidates:
Joe Johnson: 14,487
District 5
Incumbent Republican Bill Carrico did not seek re-election.
November 8 General election candidates:
Israel O'Quinn: 12,166
Michael Osborne: 5,338
District 6
- Anne B. Crockett-Stark
Incumbent Crockett-Stark was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
Anne B. Crockett-Stark: 15,047
District 7
Incumbent Republican David Nutter did not seek re-election. He is running for election for Virginia Senate District 21.
November 8 General election candidates:
Larry Rush: 13,709
District 8
- Greg Habeeb
Incumbent Habeeb was first elected in 2011.
November 8 General election candidates:
Greg Habeeb: 14,882
District 9
- Ward Armstrong
Armstrong was first elected to the District 10 seat in 1992.
Note: Due to redistricting, Armstrong's previous residence switched from District 10 to District 16. In response to the change, Armstrong decided to move to Bassett, which lies within District 9. 40% of the newly drawn District 9 is composed of areas Armstrong previously represented in District 10.[8]
- Charles Poindexter
Incumbent Poindexter was first elected in 2008.
November 8 General election candidates:
Ward Armstrong: 11,840
Charles Poindexter: 13,189
District 10
Incumbent Democrat Ward Armstrong, whose original residence was changed to District 16 after the redistricting process, has moved to a residence in District 9 where he seeks re-election.
- Randall Minchew: 1,193
- Cara Townsend: 647
- John Whitbeck: 1,106
November 8 General election candidates:
David Butler: 5,789
Randall Minchew: 8,140
District 11
- Onzlee Ware
Incumbent Ware was first elected in 2004.
November 8 General election candidates:
Onzlee Ware: 9,885
District 12
Incumbent Democrat James Shuler did not seek re-election.
November 8 General election candidates:
Don Langrehr: 7,582
Joseph Yost: 8,104
District 13
- Bob Marshall
Incumbent Marshall was fist elected in 1992.
November 8 General election candidates:
Carl Genthner: 4,054
Bob Marshall: 6,008
District 14
- Danny Marshall, III
Incumbent Marshall was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Danny Marshall, III: 12,921
District 15
- C. Todd Gilbert
Incumbent Gilbert was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
C. Todd Gilbert: 13,617
District 16
- Donald Merricks
Incumbent Merricks was first elected in 2008.
November 8 General election candidates:
Donald Merricks: 14,343
District 17
Incumbent Republican William Cleaveland did not seek re-election.
November 8 General election candidates:
Freeda Cathcart: 6,207
Chris Head: 11,852
District 18
Note: Due to redistricting, incumbent Republican Clay Athey now resides in district 29.[7]
- Michael Webert: 2,016
- Kevin Kelly: 1,556
November 8 General election candidates:
Bob Zwick: 4,264
Michael Webert: 9,749
District 19
Independent incumbent Lacey Putney was first elected in 1962.
November 8 General election candidates:
Lewis Medlin, Jr.: 5,670
Jerry Johnson: 6,775
Lacey Putney: 8,883
District 20
- Richard Bell
Incumbent Bell was first elected in 2009.
November 8 General election candidates:
Laura Kleiner: 3,865
Richard Bell: 9,522
District 21
- Ronald Villanueva
Incumbent Villanueva was first elected in 2009.
November 8 General election candidates:
Adrianne Bennett: 4,600
Ronald Villanueva: 6,194
District 22
- Kathy Byron
Incumbent Byron was first elected in 1998.
November 8 General election candidates:
Kathy Byron: 12,922
District 23
- T. Scott Garrett
Incumbent Garrett was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
T. Scott Garrett: 11,978
District 24
- Ben Cline
Incumbent Cline was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Ben Cline: 14,250
District 25
- Steve Landes
Incumbent Landes was first elected in 1996.
November 8 General election candidates:
Steve Landes: 12,912
District 26
- Tony Wilt
Incumbent Wilt was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Tony Wilt: 8,790
District 27
- Roxann Robinson
Incumbent Robinson was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Roxann Robinson: 8,313
District 28
- Bill Howell
Incumbent Howell was first elected in 1988.
November 8 General election candidates:
Bill Howell: 9,350
District 29
- Beverly Sherwood
Incumbent Sherwood was first elected in 1994.
November 8 General election candidates:
Beverly Sherwood: 9,662
District 30
- Ed Scott
Incumbent Scott was first elected in 2004.
November 8 General election candidates:
Ed Scott: 14,914
District 31
- Scott Lingamfelter
Incumbent Lingamfelter was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Roy Coffey: 5,930
Scott Lingamfelter: 8,435
District 32
- Thomas Greason
Incumbent Greason was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Thomas Greason: 10,033
District 33
- Joe T. May
Incumbent May was first elected in 1994.
November 8 General election candidates:
Joe T. May: 13,027
District 34
- Barbara Comstock
Incumbent Comstock was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Pamela Danner: 9,573
Barbara Comstock: 11,628
District 35
- Mark Keam
Incumbent Keam was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Mark Keam: 9,636
District 36
- Ken Plum
Incumbent Plum was first elected in 1982.
November 8 General election candidates:
Ken Plum: 9,522
Hugh Cannon: 5,327
District 37
- David Bulova
Incumbent Bulova was first elected in 2006
November 8 General election candidates:
David Bulova: 7,021
Brian Schoeneman: 4,752
District 38
- Kaye Kory
Incumbent Kory was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Kaye Kory: 8,106
James Leslie: 2,402
District 39
- Vivian Watts
Incumbent Watts was first elected in 1996.
November 8 General election candidates:
Vivian Watts: 11,297
Dimitris Kolazas: 3,409
District 40
- Tim Hugo
Incumbent Hugo was first elected in 2003.
November 8 General election candidates:
Tim Hugo: 11,565
Dianne Blais: 4,021
District 41
- Eileen Filler-Corn
Incumbent Filler-Corn was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Eileen Filler-Corn: 11,959
Mike Kane: 5,509
District 42
- Dave Albo - Incumbent Albo was first elected in 1994.
November 8 General election candidates:
J.R. Dobbyn: 7,199
Dave Albo: 11,835
District 43
- Mark Sickles
Incumbent Sickles was first elected in 2004.
November 8 General election candidates:
Mark Sickles: 10,175
District 44
- Scott Surovell
Incumbent Surovell was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Scott Surovell: 8,738
John Barsa: 5,742
Joseph A. "Joe" Glean: 223
District 45
- David Englin
Incumbent Englin was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
David Englin: 11,555
District 46
- Charniele Herring
Incumbent Herring was first elected in 2009.
November 8 General election candidates:
Charniele Herring: 7,664
District 47
- Patrick Hope
Incumbent Hope was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Patrick Hope: 12,101
District 48
- Bob Brink
Incumbent Brink was first elected in 1998.
November 8 General election candidates:
Bob Brink: 11,492
Janet Murphy: 1,153
Kathy Gillette-Mallard: 4,081
District 49
Incumbent Democrat Adam Ebbin did not seek re-election. He is running for election for Virginia Senate District 30.
- Alfonso Lopez: 2,143
- Stephanie Clifford: 1,107
November 8 General election candidates:
Alfonso Lopez: 7,005
District 50
- Jackson H. Miller
Incumbent Miller was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
Jackson H. Miller: 8,003
District 51
- Richard Anderson
Incumbent Anderson was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Richard Anderson: 11,296
District 52
- Luke Torian
Incumbent Torian was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Luke Torian: 5,156
Cleveland Anderson: 3,327
District 53
- Jim Scott
Incumbent Scott was first elected in 1992.
November 8 General election candidates:
Jim Scott: 8,670
District 54
- Bobby Orrock
Incumbent Orrock was first elected in 1990.
November 8 General election candidates:
Bobby Orrock: 11,338
Matthew Simpson: 3,874
District 55
- John Cox
Incumbent Cox was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
John Cox: 12,783
District 56
Incumbent Republican Bill Janis did not seek re-election.
November 8 General election candidates:
Peter Farrell: 14,520
District 57
- David Toscano
Incumbent Toscano was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
David Toscano: 10,949
Robert Brandon Smith III: 2,600
District 58
- Rob Bell
Incumbent Bell was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Rob Bell: 17,227
District 59
Independent incumbent Watkins Abbitt, Jr. did not seek re-election.
November 8 General election candidates:
Connie Brennan: 9,069
Matt Fariss: 11,651
Linda Wall: 1,228
District 60
- James Edmunds, II
Incumbent Edmunds was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
James Edmunds, II: 13,201
District 61
- Tommy Wright
Incumbent Wright was first elected in 2001.
November 8 General election candidates:
Tommy Wright: 15,578
District 62
- Riley Ingram
Incumbent Ingram was first elected in 1992.
November 8 General election candidates:
Riley Ingram: 8,911
District 63
- Roz Dance
Incumbent Dance was first elected in 2005.
November 8 General election candidates:
Roz Dance: 10,775
District 64
- Bill Barlow
Incumbent Barlow was first elected in 1992.
November 8 General election candidates:
Bill Barlow: 10,467
Rick Morris: 12,960
District 65
- Lee Ware
Incumbent Ware was first elected in 1998.
November 8 General election candidates:
Lee Ware: 14,991
District 66
- Kirk Cox
Incumbent Cox was first elected in 1990.
November 8 General election candidates:
Kirk Cox: 10,681
District 67
- James LeMunyon
Incumbent LeMunyon was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Eric Clingan: 6,320
James LeMunyon: 9,172
District 68
- Manoli Loupassi
Incumbent Loupassi was first elected in 2008.
November 8 General election candidates:
Manoli Loupassi: 10,602
District 69
- Betsy Carr
Incumbent Carr was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Betsy Carr: 7,923
District 70
- Delores McQuinn
Incumbent McQuinn was first elected in 2009.
November 8 General election candidates:
Delores McQuinn: 10,293
District 71
- Jenn McClellan
Incumbent McClellan was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
Jenn McClellan: 7,859
District 72
- Jimmie Massie
Incumbent Massie was first elected in 2008.
November 8 General election candidates:
Jimmie Massie: 11,327
District 73
- John O'Bannon
Incumbent O'Bannon was first elected in 2001.
November 8 General election candidates:
John O'Bannon: 10,235
District 74
- Joseph Morrissey
Incumbent Morrissey was first elected in 2008.
November 8 General election candidates:
Joseph Morrissey: 11,717
Dwayne Whitehead: 4,299
District 75
- Roz Tyler
Incumbent Tyler was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
Roz Tyler: 12,613
Alvin Peschke: 6,460
District 76
- Chris Jones
Incumbent Jones was first elected in 1998.
November 8 General election candidates:
Chris Jones: 5,000
District 77
- Lionell Spruill
Incumbent Spruill was first elected in 1994.
November 8 General election candidates:
Lionell Spruill: 4,536
District 78
- John Cosgrove
Incumbent Cosgrove was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
John Cosgrove: 3,966
District 79
- Johnny Joannou
Incumbent Joannou was first elected in 1998.
November 8 General election candidates:
Johnny Joannou: 4,883
District 80
- Matthew James
Incumbent James was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Matthew James: 7,675
District 81
- Barry Knight
Incumbent Knight was first elected in 2009.
November 8 General election candidates:
Barry Knight: 4,455
District 82
- Bob Purkey
Incumbent Purkey was first elected in 1986.
November 8 General election candidates:
Bob Purkey: 7,538
District 83
- Christopher Stolle
Incumbent Stolle was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Christopher Stolle: 7,150
District 84
- Salvatore Iaquinto
Incumbent Iaquinto was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
Salvatore Iaquinto: 5,170
District 85
- Bob Tata
Incumbent Tata was first elected in 1984.
November 8 General election candidates:
Bob Tata: 6,612
District 86
- Tom Rust
Incumbent Rust was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Tom Rust: 9,215
District 87
Note: Due to redistricting, incumbent Democrat Paula Miller now resides in district 100.[7]
- David Ramadan: 1,368
- Jo-Ann Chase: 1,085
November 8 General election candidates:
Mike Kondratick: 5,384
David Ramadan: 5,435
District 88
- Mark Cole
Incumbent Cole was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Mark Cole: 11,372
District 89
- Kenny Alexander
Incumbent Alexander was first elected in 2002.
November 8 General election candidates:
Kenny Alexander: 5,821
District 90
- Algie Howell: 1,313
- Incumbent Howell was first elected in 2004.
- Richard James: 884
November 8 General election candidates:
Algie Howell: 4,193
District 91
- Gordon Helsel
Incumbent Helsel was first elected in 2011.
November 8 General election candidates:
Gordon Helsel: 8,983
District 92
- Jeion Ward
Incumbent Ward was first elected in 2004.
November 8 General election candidates:
Jeion Ward: 8,800
District 93
- Robin Abbott
Abbott was first elected in 2010.
November 8 General election candidates:
Robin Abbott: 7,615
Michael Watson: 8,188
District 94
Incumbent Glenn Oder did not seek re-election.
November 8 General election candidates:
Gary West: 6,165
David Yancey: 9,251
District 95
- Mamye BaCote
Incumbent BaCote was first elected in 2004.
November 8 General election candidates:
Mamye BaCote: 7,142
Glenn McGuire: 2,114
District 96
- Brenda Pogge
Incumbent Pogge was first elected in 2008.
November 8 General election candidates:
Brenda Pogge: 12,644
District 97
- Chris Peace
Incumbent Peace was first elected in 2006.
November 8 General election candidates:
Chris Peace: 15,573
District 98
Incumbent Republican Harvey Morgan did not seek re-election.
- Catesby Baytop Jones: 1,461
- Ken Gibson: 1,396
- Keith Hodges: 3,647
- Sherwood Bowditch: 2,408
November 8 General election candidates:
Andy Shoukas: 4,556
Keith Hodges: 16,647
District 99
Incumbent Democrat Albert Pollard did not seek re-election.
- John Lampmann: 1,133
- Margaret Rasone: 3,912
- Dean Sumner: 1,341
November 8 General election candidates:
Nicholas Smith: 6,364
Margaret Rasone: 14,330
District 100
- Lynwood Lewis
Incumbent Lewis was first elected in 2004.
November 8 General election candidates:
Lynwood Lewis: 12,512
See also
- Virginia House of Delegates
- Virginia State Legislature
- Virginia State Senate elections, 2011
- State legislative elections, 2011
External links
- Official Democratic Primary Results
- Official Republican Primary Results
- Official General Election Results
References
- ↑ Daily Press, "Redistricting begins in earnest," March 9, 2011
- ↑ Virginia General Assembly "Constitution of Virginia"(Referenced Section, Article IV, Section 4)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 [Confirmed via phone with VA State Board of Elections on November 17, 2010]
- ↑ Follow the Money, Virginia
- ↑ Follow the Money: "Virginia House 2009 Campaign Contributions"
- ↑ The Washington Post, "Va. House of Delegates race between Armstrong, Poindexter turns heated and costly", October 22, 2011
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 2011 Methods Of Nomination, Virginia House of Delegates
- ↑ www2.timesdispatch.com GOP targets Democratic veteran Armstrong, September 11, 2011