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Election results, 2022: New members elected to Congress

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Updated 2:30 pm EST, December 15, 2022

Eighty-four new members won election to the 118th Congress, including seven new U.S. senators and 77 new U.S. representatives. A new member is defined here as a member-elect of either the U.S. Senate or the U.S. House of Representatives serving in that chamber for the first time. All 435 U.S. House seats and 35 of the U.S. Senate’s 100 seats were up for election on November 8, 2022.

For historical comparison, 71 new members were elected to the 117th Congress in the 2020 election and subsequent runoffs, including nine U.S. senators and 62 U.S. representatives. One hundred and two new members were elected to the 116th Congress in the 2018 election and subsequent runoffs, including nine U.S. senators and 93 U.S. representatives.

This page focuses on new members elected to the 118th Congress. For more in-depth information on 2022 election results or new members elected to previous congresses, see the following pages:

U.S. Senate

New U.S. senators

Seven new members—including two Democrats and five Republicans—joined the U.S. Senate to replace one Democrat and six Republicans who announced they would not seek re-election in 2022. The Democratic Party gained one seat in the U.S. Senate due to retirements.

New U.S. senators, 2022
State New senator Incumbent
Alabama Republican Party Katie Britt Republican Party Richard Shelby
Missouri Republican Party Eric Schmitt Republican Party Roy Blunt
North Carolina Republican Party Ted Budd Republican Party Richard Burr
Ohio Republican Party J.D. Vance Republican Party Rob Portman
Oklahoma Republican Party Markwayne Mullin Republican Party Jim Inhofe
Pennsylvania Democratic Party John Fetterman Republican Party Pat Toomey
Vermont Democratic Party Peter Welch Democratic Party Patrick Leahy


U.S. House

New U.S. representatives replacing retiring incumbents

Twenty-three new members—including 11 Democrats and 12 Republicans—joined the U.S. House to replace 16 Democrats and seven Republicans who either announced they would not seek re-election in 2022, withdrew from their races, or passed away while in office. The Republican Party gained five seats in the U.S. House for these reasons.

New U.S. representatives replacing retiring incumbents, 2022
District New representative Incumbent
Arizona's 2nd Congressional District Republican Party Eli Crane Democratic Party Ann Kirkpatrick
Colorado's 7th Congressional District Democratic Party Brittany Pettersen Democratic Party Ed Perlmutter
Florida's 7th Congressional District Republican Party Cory Mills Democratic Party Stephanie Murphy
Illinois' 1st Congressional District Democratic Party Jonathan Jackson Democratic Party Bobby Rush
Illinois' 17th Congressional District Democratic Party Eric Sorensen Democratic Party Cheri Bustos
Indiana's 2nd Congressional District Republican Party Rudy Yakym Republican Party Jackie Walorski[1]
Indiana's 9th Congressional District Republican Party Erin Houchin Republican Party Trey Hollingsworth
Kentucky's 3rd Congressional District Democratic Party Morgan McGarvey Democratic Party John A. Yarmuth
Minnesota's 1st Congressional District Republican Party Brad Finstad Republican Party Jim Hagedorn[2]
New Jersey's 8th Congressional District Democratic Party Rob Menendez, Jr. Democratic Party Albio Sires
New York's 4th Congressional District Democratic Party Anthony D'Esposito Democratic Party Kathleen Rice
New York's 23rd Congressional District Republican Party Nicholas A. Langworthy Republican Party Tom Reed
North Carolina's 1st Congressional District Democratic Party Donald Davis Democratic Party G.K. Butterfield
North Carolina's 4th Congressional District Democratic Party Valerie Foushee Democratic Party David Price
Ohio's 7th Congressional District Republican Party Max Miller Republican Party Bob Gibbs[3]
Oregon's 4th Congressional District Democratic Party Val Hoyle Democratic Party Peter DeFazio
Pennsylvania's 12th Congressional District Democratic Party Summer Lee Republican Party Fred Keller
Rhode Island's 2nd Congressional District Democratic Party Seth Magaziner Democratic Party Jim Langevin
Tennessee's 5th Congressional District Republican Party Andy Ogles Democratic Party Jim Cooper
Texas' 3rd Congressional District Republican Party Keith Self Republican Party Van Taylor[4]
Texas' 8th Congressional District Republican Party Morgan Luttrell Republican Party Kevin Brady
Texas' 30th Congressional District Democratic Party Jasmine Crockett Democratic Party Eddie Bernice Johnson
Wisconsin's 3rd Congressional District Republican Party Derrick Van Orden Democratic Party Ron Kind


New U.S. representatives replacing incumbents seeking other offices

Eighteen new members—including eight Democrats and ten Republicans—joined the U.S. House to replace ten Democrats and eight Republicans who ran for other offices instead of seeking re-election in 2022. The Republican Party gained two seats in the U.S. House due to incumbents seeking other offices.

New U.S. representatives replacing incumbents seeking other offices, 2022
District New representative Incumbent New office sought
Alabama's 5th Congressional District Republican Party Dale Strong Republican Party Mo Brooks U.S. Senate
California's 37th Congressional District Democratic Party Sydney Kamlager Democratic Party Karen Bass Mayor of Los Angeles
Florida's 10th Congressional District Democratic Party Maxwell Alejandro Frost Democratic Party Val Demings U.S. Senate
Florida's 13th Congressional District Republican Party Anna Paulina Luna Democratic Party Charlie Crist Florida Governor
Georgia's 10th Congressional District Republican Party Mike Collins Republican Party Jody Hice Georgia Secretary of State
Hawaii's 2nd Congressional District Democratic Party Jill Tokuda Democratic Party Kaiali'i Kahele Hawaii Governor
Maryland's 4th Congressional District Democratic Party Glenn Ivey Democratic Party Anthony G. Brown Maryland Attorney General
Missouri's 4th Congressional District Republican Party Mark Alford Republican Party Vicky Hartzler U.S. Senate
Missouri's 7th Congressional District Republican Party Eric Burlison Republican Party Billy Long U.S. Senate
North Carolina's 13th Congressional District Democratic Party Wiley Nickel Republican Party Ted Budd U.S. Senate
New York's 1st Congressional District Republican Party Nicholas J. LaLota Republican Party Lee Zeldin New York Governor
New York's 3rd Congressional District Republican Party George Devolder-Santos Democratic Party Tom Suozzi New York Governor
New York's 19th Congressional District Republican Party Marc Molinaro Democratic Party Antonio Delgado New York Lt. Governor
Ohio's 13th Congressional District Democratic Party Emilia Sykes Democratic Party Tim Ryan U.S. Senate
Oklahoma's 2nd Congressional District Republican Party Josh Brecheen Republican Party Markwayne Mullin U.S. Senate
Pennsylvania's 17th Congressional District Democratic Party Christopher Deluzio Democratic Party Conor Lamb U.S. Senate
Texas' 1st Congressional District Republican Party Nathaniel Moran Republican Party Louie Gohmert Texas Attorney General
Vermont's At-Large Congressional District Democratic Party Becca Balint Democratic Party Peter Welch U.S. Senate


New U.S. representatives elected due to redistricting

Twenty new members—including ten Democrats and ten Republicans—joined the U.S. House due to redistricting. They replaced eight Democrats and seven Republicans who sought re-election in different congressional districts in 2022 than they represented in 2020. They also represent five of the seven new congressional districts created by the reapportionment process after the 2020 U.S. Census. The Republican Party gained four seats due to redistricting, and the Democratic Party gained two.

New U.S. representatives elected due to redistricting, 2022
Original district New representative Incumbent (New district)
Arizona's 6th Congressional District Republican Party Juan Ciscomani Republican Party David Schweikert (AZ-01)
California's 3rd Congressional District Republican Party Kevin Kiley Democratic Party John Garamendi (CA-08)
California's 13th Congressional District Republican Party John Duarte Democratic Party Barbara Lee (CA-12)
California's 15th Congressional District Democratic Party Kevin Mullin Democratic Party Eric Swalwell (CA-14)
California's 42nd Congressional District Democratic Party Robert Garcia Republican Party Ken Calvert (CA-41)
Colorado's 8th Congressional District Democratic Party Yadira Caraveo Grey.png New district
Florida's 4th Congressional District Republican Party Aaron Bean Republican Party John Rutherford (FL-05)
Florida's 15th Congressional District Republican Party Laurel Lee Republican Party Scott Franklin (FL-18)
Florida's 23rd Congressional District Democratic Party Jared Evan Moskowitz Democratic Party Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (FL-25)
Georgia's 6th Congressional District Republican Party Rich McCormick Democratic Party Lucy McBath (GA-07)
Michigan's 10th Congressional District Republican Party John James Republican Party Lisa McClain (MI-09)
Michigan's 13th Congressional District Democratic Party Shri Thanedar Democratic Party Rashida Tlaib (MI-12)
Montana's 1st Congressional District Republican Party Ryan Zinke Grey.png New district
New York's 10th Congressional District Democratic Party Daniel Goldman Democratic Party Jerrold Nadler (NY-12)
New York's 22nd Congressional District Republican Party Brandon Williams Republican Party Claudia Tenney (NY-24)
North Carolina's 14th Congressional District Democratic Party Jeff Jackson Grey.png New district
Oregon's 6th Congressional District Democratic Party Andrea Salinas Grey.png New district
Texas' 15th Congressional District Republican Party Monica De La Cruz Democratic Party Vicente Gonzalez, Jr. (TX-34)
Texas' 35th Congressional District Democratic Party Greg Casar Democratic Party Lloyd Doggett (TX-37)
Texas' 38th Congressional District Republican Party Wesley Hunt Grey.png New district


New U.S. representatives who defeated incumbents

Sixteen new members—including six Democrats and ten Republicans—joined the U.S. House to replace six Democrats and ten Republicans who lost their races for re-election in 2022. Neither party gained seats in the U.S. House by defeating incumbents.

New U.S. representatives who defeated incumbents, 2022
District New representative Incumbent
Iowa's 3rd Congressional District Republican Party Zach Nunn Democratic Party Cindy Axne
Illinois' 3rd Congressional District Democratic Party Delia Ramirez Democratic Party Marie Newman
Illinois' 13th Congressional District Republican Party Nikki Budzinski Republican Party Rodney Davis
Michigan's 3rd Congressional District Democratic Party Hillary Scholten Republican Party Peter Meijer
Mississippi's 4th Congressional District Republican Party Mike Ezell Republican Party Steven Palazzo
New Jersey's 7th Congressional District Republican Party Tom Kean, Jr. Democratic Party Tom Malinowski
New Mexico's 2nd Congressional District Democratic Party Gabriel Vasquez Republican Party Yvette Herrell
New York's 17th Congressional District Republican Party Michael Lawler Democratic Party Mondaire Jones
New York's 18th Congressional District Democratic Party Pat Ryan Democratic Party Sean Maloney
North Carolina's 11th Congressional District Republican Party Chuck Edwards Republican Party Madison Cawthorn
Ohio's 1st Congressional District Democratic Party Greg Landsman Republican Party Steve Chabot
Oregon's 5th Congressional District Republican Party Lori Chavez-DeRemer Republican Party Kurt Schrader
South Carolina's 7th Congressional District Republican Party Russell Fry Republican Party Tom Rice
Virginia's 2nd Congressional District Republican Party Jennifer Kiggans Democratic Party Elaine Luria
Washington's 3rd Congressional District Democratic Party Marie Gluesenkamp Perez Republican Party Jaime Herrera Beutler
Wyoming's At-Large Congressional District Republican Party Harriet Hageman Republican Party Liz Cheney

Historical comparison of number of new members of U.S. Congress

The following chart compares the number of new U.S. senators and U.S. representatives elected in 2022 with those elected in 2018 and 2020.


The following table compares the number of new U.S. representatives and senators elected in the 111th through 118th Congresses, using data provided by the Congressional Research Service for years prior to 2016.

Historical comparison of number of new members of U.S. Congress, 2010-2022
Election year Congress New U.S. representatives New U.S. senators Total new members
2022 118th 77 7 84
2020 117th 62 9 71
2018 116th 93 9 102
2016 115th 55 7 62
2014 114th 59 13 72[5]
2012 113th 75 14 89[6]
2010 112th 91 15 106[7]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Walorski passed away on August 3, 2022.
  2. Hagedorn passed away on February 17, 2022.
  3. Gibbs withdrew from the May 3, 2022, Republican primary.
  4. Taylor withdrew from the May 24, 2022, Republican primary runoff.
  5. CRS Reports, "Membership of the 114th Congress: A Profile," accessed December 5, 2018
  6. CRS Reports, "Membership of the 113th Congress: A Profile," accessed December 5, 2018
  7. CRS Reports, "Membership of the 112th Congress: A Profile," accessed December 5, 2018