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Illinois House of Representatives elections, 2024

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2026
2022
2024 Illinois
House Elections
Flag of Illinois.png
PrimaryMarch 19, 2024
GeneralNovember 5, 2024
Past Election Results
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2024 Elections
Choose a chamber below:

Elections for the Illinois House of Representatives took place in 2024. The general election was on November 5, 2024. The primary was March 19, 2024. The filing deadline was December 4, 2023.

In the 2024 election, the partisan breakdown did not change. Democrats maintained their majority of 78-40.


Illinois House of Representatives
Party As of November 5, 2024 After November 6, 2024
     Democratic Party 78 78
     Republican Party 40 40
Total 118 118

Following the election, Democrats maintained a 78-40 veto-proof majority.

The Illinois House of Representatives was one of 85 state legislative chambers with elections in 2024. There are 99 chambers throughout the country.

Party control

See also: Partisan composition of state houses and State government trifectas
Illinois House of Representatives
Party As of November 5, 2024 After November 6, 2024
     Democratic Party 78 78
     Republican Party 40 40
Total 118 118

Candidates

General election

Illinois House of Representatives general election 2024

  • Incumbents are marked with an (i) after their name.
  • Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
Office Democratic Party Democratic Republican Party Republican Other
District 1

Green check mark transparent.pngAaron Ortiz (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Camaxtle Olivo 

District 2

Green check mark transparent.pngElizabeth Hernandez (i)

Laura Hruska

District 3

Green check mark transparent.pngEva Dina Delgado (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Juvandy Rivera 

District 4

Green check mark transparent.pngLilian Jiménez (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Nancy Rodriguez 

District 5

Green check mark transparent.pngKimberly du Buclet (i)

Alan Rasho

District 6

Green check mark transparent.pngSonya Harper (i)

Sean Dwyer

District 7

Green check mark transparent.pngEmanuel Welch (i)

District 8

Green check mark transparent.pngLa Shawn Ford (i)

Leslie Collazo

District 9

Green check mark transparent.pngYolonda Morris (i)

District 10

Green check mark transparent.pngJawaharial Williams (i)

District 11

Green check mark transparent.pngAnn M. Williams (i)

District 12

Green check mark transparent.pngMargaret Croke (i)

District 13

Green check mark transparent.pngHoan Huynh (i)

Terry Le  Candidate Connection

District 14

Green check mark transparent.pngKelly Cassidy (i)

District 15

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Kelly (i)

Mark Albers

District 16

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Olickal (i)

District 17

Green check mark transparent.pngJennifer Gong-Gershowitz (i)

Jim Geldermann  Candidate Connection

District 18

Green check mark transparent.pngRobyn Gabel (i)

Charles Hutchinson

District 19

Green check mark transparent.pngLindsey LaPointe (i)

John Zimmers

District 20

Green check mark transparent.pngBrad Stephens (i)

District 21

Green check mark transparent.pngAbdelnasser Rashid (i)

District 22

Green check mark transparent.pngAngelica Guerrero-Cuellar (i)

District 23

Green check mark transparent.pngEdgar Gonzalez Jr. (i)

District 24

Green check mark transparent.pngTheresa Mah (i)

Natalian Bolton

District 25

Green check mark transparent.pngCurtis Tarver II (i)

District 26

Green check mark transparent.pngKambium Buckner (i)

Audrey Barrett

District 27

Green check mark transparent.pngJustin Slaughter (i)

District 28

Green check mark transparent.pngRobert Rita (i)

District 29

Green check mark transparent.pngThaddeus Jones (i)

Marketa Franklin (Independent) (Write-in)

District 30

Green check mark transparent.pngWilliam Davis (i)

Patricia Bonk

District 31

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Crawford

Carl Kunz

District 32

Green check mark transparent.pngLisa Davis

District 33

Green check mark transparent.pngMarcus Evans (i)

District 34

Green check mark transparent.pngNicholas Smith (i)

Frederick Walls

District 35

Green check mark transparent.pngMary Gill (i)

Herbert Hebein

District 36

Green check mark transparent.pngRick Ryan

Christine Shanahan McGovern

District 37

Green check mark transparent.pngPatrick Sheehan (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Tim Ozinga (i)

District 38

Green check mark transparent.pngDebbie Meyers-Martin (i)

District 39

Green check mark transparent.pngWill Guzzardi (i)

Anthony Curran

District 40

Green check mark transparent.pngJaime Andrade (i)

Patrycja Karlin

District 41

Green check mark transparent.pngJanet Yang Rohr (i)

District 42

Green check mark transparent.pngTerra Costa Howard (i)

District 43

Green check mark transparent.pngAnna Moeller (i)

Donald Puckett

District 44

Green check mark transparent.pngFred Crespo (i)

District 45

Green check mark transparent.pngMartha Deuter  Candidate Connection

Dennis Reboletti

District 46

Green check mark transparent.pngDiane Blair-Sherlock (i)

Robert Stevens  Candidate Connection

District 47

Jackie Williamson

Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Grant (i)

District 48

Maria Vesey

Green check mark transparent.pngJennifer Sanalitro (i)

District 49

Green check mark transparent.pngMaura Hirschauer (i)

Hannah Billingsley  Candidate Connection

District 50

Green check mark transparent.pngBarbara Hernandez (i)

Teresa Alexander  Candidate Connection

District 51

Green check mark transparent.pngNabeela Syed (i)

Tosi Ufodike

District 52

Maria Peterson  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngMartin McLaughlin (i)

District 53

Green check mark transparent.pngNicolle Grasse (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Mark Walker (i)

Ronald Andermann

District 54

Green check mark transparent.pngMary Beth Canty (i)

Michele Hunter

District 55

Green check mark transparent.pngMartin J. Moylan (i)

District 56

Green check mark transparent.pngMichelle Mussman (i)

District 57

Green check mark transparent.pngTracy Katz Muhl (i)

Daniel Behr  Candidate Connection

District 58

Green check mark transparent.pngBob Morgan (i)

Carl Lambrecht

District 59

Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Didech (i)

Chris Henning

District 60

Green check mark transparent.pngRita Mayfield (i)

District 61

Green check mark transparent.pngJoyce Mason (i)

James Creighton Mitchell Jr.  Candidate Connection

District 62

Green check mark transparent.pngLaura Dias (i)

District 63

Mary Mahady  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngSteven Reick (i)

District 64

Green check mark transparent.pngTom Weber (i)

District 65

Linda Robertson  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Ugaste (i)

District 66

Green check mark transparent.pngSuzanne Ness (i)

Laurie Parman  Candidate Connection

District 67

Green check mark transparent.pngMaurice West II (i)

Glen Oland

District 68

Green check mark transparent.pngDave Vella (i)

District 69

Peter Janko  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJoe Sosnowski (i)

District 70

Randi Olson

Green check mark transparent.pngJeff Keicher (i)

District 71

Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Swanson (i)

District 72

Green check mark transparent.pngGregg Johnson (i)

Charlie Helmick  Candidate Connection

District 73

Green check mark transparent.pngRyan Spain (i)

District 74

David Simpson

Green check mark transparent.pngBrad Fritts (i)

District 75

Heidi Henry  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJed Davis (i)

District 76

Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Murri Briel

Liz Bishop  Candidate Connection

District 77

Green check mark transparent.pngNorma Hernandez (i)

Anthony Airdo

District 78

Green check mark transparent.pngCamille Y. Lilly (i)

District 79

William Morgan  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJackie Haas (i)

District 80

Green check mark transparent.pngAnthony DeLuca (i)

Adam Beaty  Candidate Connection

District 81

Green check mark transparent.pngAnne Stava-Murray (i)

Aaron Porter

District 82

Suzanne Akhras

Green check mark transparent.pngNicole La Ha (i)

District 83

Green check mark transparent.pngMatt Hanson (i)

District 84

Green check mark transparent.pngStephanie Kifowit (i)

District 85

Green check mark transparent.pngDagmara Avelar (i)

Chris Metcalfe

District 86

Green check mark transparent.pngLawrence Walsh, Jr. (i)

James Lanham

District 87

Green check mark transparent.pngBill Hauter (i)

David Gill (Independent)

District 88

Green check mark transparent.pngRegan Deering  Candidate Connection

District 89

Green check mark transparent.pngTony McCombie (i)

District 90

Green check mark transparent.pngJohn M. Cabello (i)

District 91

Green check mark transparent.pngSharon Chung (i)

Desi Anderson

District 92

Green check mark transparent.pngJehan Gordon-Booth (i)

District 93

Green check mark transparent.pngTravis Weaver (i)

District 94

Green check mark transparent.pngNorine Hammond (i)

District 95

Kristen Chiaro  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngMike Coffey (i)

District 96

Green check mark transparent.pngSue Scherer (i)

Lisa Smith

District 97

Green check mark transparent.pngHarry Benton (i)

Gabby Shanahan

District 98

Green check mark transparent.pngNatalie Manley (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Timothy Szymankowski 

District 99

Green check mark transparent.pngKyle Moore

District 100

Green check mark transparent.pngC.D. Davidsmeyer (i)

District 101

Green check mark transparent.pngChris Miller (i)

District 102

Green check mark transparent.pngAdam Niemerg (i)

District 103

Green check mark transparent.pngCarol Ammons (i)

District 104

Jarrett Clem

Green check mark transparent.pngBrandun Schweizer (i)

District 105

Morgan Phillips  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDennis Tipsword Jr. (i)

District 106

Green check mark transparent.pngJason Bunting (i)

District 107

Green check mark transparent.pngBrad Halbrook (i)

District 108

Green check mark transparent.pngWayne Arthur Rosenthal (i)

District 109

Green check mark transparent.pngCharles E. Meier (i)

District 110

Green check mark transparent.pngBlaine Wilhour (i)

District 111

Nick Raftopoulos  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Elik (i)

District 112

Green check mark transparent.pngKatie Stuart (i)

Jay Keeven

District 113

Green check mark transparent.pngJay C. Hoffman (i)

District 114

LaToya Greenwood

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Schmidt (i)

District 115

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Friess (i)

District 116

Green check mark transparent.pngDave Severin (i)

District 117

Green check mark transparent.pngPatrick Windhorst (i)

District 118

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Jacobs (i)

Note: The 37th Republican Representative District Committee chose Patrick Sheehan as the party's nominee to replace Tim Ozinga in the general election. Ozinga resigned from his seat in the state legislature and withdrew from the 2024 race, and Sheehan was appointed to replace him in the chamber and the race.[1]

Primary

Illinois House of Representatives primary 2024

  • Incumbents are marked with an (i) after their name.
  • Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
Office Democratic Party Democratic Republican Party Republican Other
District 1

Green check mark transparent.pngAaron Ortiz (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 2

Green check mark transparent.pngElizabeth Hernandez (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngLaura Hruska

District 3

Green check mark transparent.pngEva Dina Delgado (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 4

Green check mark transparent.pngLilian Jiménez (i)
Kirk Ortiz

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 5

Green check mark transparent.pngKimberly du Buclet (i)
Andre Smith

Green check mark transparent.pngAlan Rasho

District 6

Green check mark transparent.pngSonya Harper (i)
Joseph G. Williams

Green check mark transparent.pngSean Dwyer

District 7

Green check mark transparent.pngEmanuel Welch (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 8

Green check mark transparent.pngLa Shawn Ford (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 9

Green check mark transparent.pngYolonda Morris (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 10

Green check mark transparent.pngJawaharial Williams (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 11

Green check mark transparent.pngAnn M. Williams (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 12

Green check mark transparent.pngMargaret Croke (i)

No candidates filed for the Republican primary


District 13

Green check mark transparent.pngHoan Huynh (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 14

Green check mark transparent.pngKelly Cassidy (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 15

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Kelly (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Albers

District 16

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Olickal (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Faye Abushaban 

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 17

Green check mark transparent.pngJennifer Gong-Gershowitz (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngJim Geldermann  Candidate Connection

District 18

Green check mark transparent.pngRobyn Gabel (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngCharles Hutchinson

District 19

Green check mark transparent.pngLindsey LaPointe (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 20

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngBrad Stephens (i)

District 21

Green check mark transparent.pngAbdelnasser Rashid (i)
Vidal Vasquez

Did not make the ballot:
Matthew Synowiecki 

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 22

Green check mark transparent.pngAngelica Guerrero-Cuellar (i)
Joshua Hernandez
John Topps  Candidate Connection

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 23

Green check mark transparent.pngEdgar Gonzalez Jr. (i)
Joseph Mercado

No candidates filed for the Republican primary


Did not make the ballot:
Lupe Castillo 

District 24

Green check mark transparent.pngTheresa Mah (i)
Lai Ching Ng

Green check mark transparent.pngNatalian Bolton

District 25

Green check mark transparent.pngCurtis Tarver II (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 26

Green check mark transparent.pngKambium Buckner (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngAudrey Barrett

District 27

Green check mark transparent.pngJustin Slaughter (i)
Tawana Robinson

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 28

Green check mark transparent.pngRobert Rita (i)
Paris Walker-Thomas (Write-in)  Candidate Connection

Did not make the ballot:
Paris Walker-Thomas  Candidate Connection

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 29

Green check mark transparent.pngThaddeus Jones (i)
Gloria White  Candidate Connection

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 30

Green check mark transparent.pngWilliam Davis (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngPatricia Bonk

District 31

Mary E. Flowers (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Crawford

Did not make the ballot:
Mark Hamberlin 

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 32

Green check mark transparent.pngLisa Davis

Did not make the ballot:
Cyril Nichols (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 33

Green check mark transparent.pngMarcus Evans (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 34

Green check mark transparent.pngNicholas Smith (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngFrederick Walls

District 35

Green check mark transparent.pngMary Gill (i)
David Dewar

Green check mark transparent.pngHerbert Hebein

District 36

Sonia Anne Khalil
Green check mark transparent.pngRick Ryan

Green check mark transparent.pngChristine Shanahan McGovern

District 37

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngTim Ozinga (i)

Did not make the ballot:
August Deuser 

District 38

Green check mark transparent.pngDebbie Meyers-Martin (i)

No candidates filed for the Republican primary


Did not make the ballot:
Jensen Venskus  Candidate Connection

District 39

Green check mark transparent.pngWill Guzzardi (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngAnthony Curran

District 40

Green check mark transparent.pngJaime Andrade (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngPatrycja Karlin

District 41

Green check mark transparent.pngJanet Yang Rohr (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 42

Green check mark transparent.pngTerra Costa Howard (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 43

Green check mark transparent.pngAnna Moeller (i)

No candidates filed for the Republican primary


Did not make the ballot:
Donald Puckett 

District 44

Green check mark transparent.pngFred Crespo (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 45

Green check mark transparent.pngMartha Deuter  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDennis Reboletti

District 46

Green check mark transparent.pngDiane Blair-Sherlock (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngRobert Stevens  Candidate Connection

District 47

Green check mark transparent.pngJackie Williamson

Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Grant (i)

District 48

Green check mark transparent.pngMaria Vesey

Green check mark transparent.pngJennifer Sanalitro (i)

District 49

Green check mark transparent.pngMaura Hirschauer (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngHannah Billingsley  Candidate Connection
Aris Garcia  Candidate Connection

District 50

Green check mark transparent.pngBarbara Hernandez (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 51

Green check mark transparent.pngNabeela Syed (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngTosi Ufodike

District 52

Green check mark transparent.pngMaria Peterson  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngMartin McLaughlin (i)

District 53

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Walker (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 54

Green check mark transparent.pngMary Beth Canty (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngMichele Hunter

District 55

Green check mark transparent.pngMartin J. Moylan (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 56

Green check mark transparent.pngMichelle Mussman (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 57

Green check mark transparent.pngTracy Katz Muhl (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 58

Green check mark transparent.pngBob Morgan (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Brian McCaslin 

Green check mark transparent.pngCarl Lambrecht

District 59

Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Didech (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngChris Henning

District 60

Green check mark transparent.pngRita Mayfield (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 61

Green check mark transparent.pngJoyce Mason (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngJames Creighton Mitchell Jr.  Candidate Connection

District 62

Green check mark transparent.pngLaura Dias (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 63

Green check mark transparent.pngMary Mahady  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngSteven Reick (i)

District 64

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngTom Weber (i)

District 65

Green check mark transparent.pngLinda Robertson  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Ugaste (i)

District 66

Green check mark transparent.pngSuzanne Ness (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngLaurie Parman  Candidate Connection

District 67

Green check mark transparent.pngMaurice West II (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngGlen Oland

District 68

Green check mark transparent.pngDave Vella (i)

Juan Reyes (Write-in)

District 69

Green check mark transparent.pngPeter Janko  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJoe Sosnowski (i)

District 70

Green check mark transparent.pngRandi Olson

Green check mark transparent.pngJeff Keicher (i)

District 71

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Swanson (i)

District 72

Green check mark transparent.pngGregg Johnson (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngCharlie Helmick  Candidate Connection

District 73

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngRyan Spain (i)

District 74

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Simpson

Green check mark transparent.pngBrad Fritts (i)

District 75

Green check mark transparent.pngHeidi Henry  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJed Davis (i)

District 76

Cohen Barnes
Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Murri Briel
Carolyn Zasada  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngLiz Bishop  Candidate Connection
Crystal Loughran  Candidate Connection

District 77

Green check mark transparent.pngNorma Hernandez (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngAnthony Airdo

District 78

Green check mark transparent.pngCamille Y. Lilly (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 79

Robert Ellington-Snipes
Dylan Mill
Green check mark transparent.pngWilliam Morgan  Candidate Connection
Genevra Walters  Candidate Connection

Did not make the ballot:
Larry Kerkstra 

Green check mark transparent.pngJackie Haas (i)

District 80

Green check mark transparent.pngAnthony DeLuca (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngAdam Beaty  Candidate Connection

District 81

Green check mark transparent.pngAnne Stava-Murray (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngAaron Porter

District 82

Green check mark transparent.pngSuzanne Akhras

Green check mark transparent.pngNicole La Ha (i)

District 83

Green check mark transparent.pngMatt Hanson (i)
Arad Boxenbaum

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 84

Green check mark transparent.pngStephanie Kifowit (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 85

Green check mark transparent.pngDagmara Avelar (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngChris Metcalfe

District 86

Green check mark transparent.pngLawrence Walsh, Jr. (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngJames Lanham

District 87

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngBill Hauter (i)

District 88

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngRegan Deering  Candidate Connection
Chuck Erickson

District 89

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngTony McCombie (i)

District 90

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngJohn M. Cabello (i)

District 91

Green check mark transparent.pngSharon Chung (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngDesi Anderson

District 92

Green check mark transparent.pngJehan Gordon-Booth (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 93

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngTravis Weaver (i)

District 94

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngNorine Hammond (i)

District 95

Green check mark transparent.pngKristen Chiaro  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngMike Coffey (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Kelvin Coburn 

District 96

Green check mark transparent.pngSue Scherer (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngLisa Smith

District 97

Green check mark transparent.pngHarry Benton (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngGabby Shanahan

District 98

Green check mark transparent.pngNatalie Manley (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 99

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngKyle Moore
Eric Snellgrove

District 100

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngC.D. Davidsmeyer (i)

District 101

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngChris Miller (i)

District 102

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngAdam Niemerg (i) (Write-in)
James Acklin (Write-in)
Edward Blade (Write-in)

Did not make the ballot:
Adam Niemerg (i)

District 103

Green check mark transparent.pngCarol Ammons (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 104

Green check mark transparent.pngJarrett Clem

Green check mark transparent.pngBrandun Schweizer (i)

District 105

Green check mark transparent.pngMorgan Phillips  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDennis Tipsword Jr. (i)
Donald Rients

District 106

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngJason Bunting (i)

District 107

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngBrad Halbrook (i)
Marsha Webb  Candidate Connection

District 108

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngWayne Arthur Rosenthal (i)

District 109

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngCharles E. Meier (i)

District 110

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngBlaine Wilhour (i)
Matthew Hall

District 111

Green check mark transparent.pngNick Raftopoulos  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Elik (i)

District 112

Green check mark transparent.pngKatie Stuart (i)

The Republican primary was canceled.


District 113

Green check mark transparent.pngJay C. Hoffman (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Jamil Mckinney 

Jamil Mckinney (Write-in)

District 114

Green check mark transparent.pngLaToya Greenwood

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Schmidt (i)

District 115

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Friess (i)

District 116

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngDave Severin (i)
Angela Evans

District 117

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngPatrick Windhorst (i)

District 118

The Democratic primary was canceled.


Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Jacobs (i)

Voting information

See also: Voting in Illinois

Election information in Illinois: Nov. 5, 2024, election.

What was the voter registration deadline?

  • In-person: Nov. 5, 2024
  • By mail: Postmarked by Oct. 8, 2024
  • Online: Oct. 20, 2024

Was absentee/mail-in voting available to all voters?

Yes

What was the absentee/mail-in ballot request deadline?

  • In-person: Nov. 4, 2024
  • By mail: Received by Oct. 31, 2024
  • Online: Oct. 31, 2024

What was the absentee/mail-in ballot return deadline?

  • In-person: Nov. 5, 2024
  • By mail: Postmarked by Nov. 5, 2024

Was early voting available to all voters?

Yes

What were the early voting start and end dates?

Sep. 26, 2024 to Nov. 4, 2024

Were all voters required to present ID at the polls? If so, was a photo or non-photo ID required?

N/A

When were polls open on Election Day?

6:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. (CST)


General election race ratings

The table below displays race ratings for each race in this chamber from CNalysis.

Campaign finance

See also: Campaign finance

The section and tables below contain data from financial reports submitted to state agencies. Districts and elections are grouped in sections of 10. To view data for a district, click on the appropriate bar below to expand it. The data is gathered and made available by Transparency USA.

Incumbents who were not re-elected

See also: Annual State Legislative Competitiveness Report: Vol. 14, 2024

No incumbents lost in general elections. The last time no incumbents were defeated in the general election was in 2014. Between 2010 and 2022, the average number of incumbents defeated in the general election was 4.6.

Incumbents defeated in primaries

See also: Incumbents defeated in state legislative elections, 2024

One incumbent lost in primaries. This was less than the average of 2.4 incumbent defeats per cycle from 2010 to 2022.

Name Party Office
Mary E. Flowers Electiondot.png Democratic House District 31

Retiring incumbents

Five incumbents did not file for re-election in 2024.[2] This was the lowest number of retirements since at least 2010. Those incumbents were:

Name Party Office
Kelly M. Burke Electiondot.png Democratic House District 36
Jenn Ladisch Douglass Electiondot.png Democratic House District 45
Lance Yednock Electiondot.png Democratic House District 76
Dan Caulkins Ends.png Republican House District 88
Randy Frese Ends.png Republican House District 99

Primary election competitiveness

See also: Primary election competitiveness in state and federal government, 2024

This section contains data on state legislative primary election competitiveness in Illinois. These totals include data from all regularly-scheduled House and Senate elections. For more information about Ballotpedia's competitiveness analysis of state legislative elections, please click here.

Post-filing deadline analysis

The following analysis covers all state legislative districts up for election in Illinois in 2024. Information below was calculated on March 13, 2024, and may differ from information shown in the table above due to candidate replacements and withdrawals after that time.

Six seats in the Illinois Legislature were open, meaning no incumbents filed. This guaranteed that at least 4% of the seats up for election would be represented by newcomers in 2025, a decade low.

Twenty incumbents faced primary challenges, representing 15% of all incumbents running for re-election.

Of the 20 incumbents in contested primaries, 15 were Democrats and five were Republicans.

Illinois had 29 contested state legislative primaries in 2024, a 43% decrease from 2022 and a decade low (tied with 2014).

Of the 29 contested primaries, there were 18 for Democrats and 11 for Republicans. For Democrats, this was seven fewer than in 2022. For Republicans, the number was down 58% from 26 in 2022.

Overall, 232 major party candidates — 133 Democrats and 99 Republicans — filed to run. All 118 House and 20 of 59 Senate seats were up for election.


Open seats

The table below shows the number and percentage of open seats in the Illinois House of Representatives from 2010 to 2024.[3]

Open Seats in Illinois House of Representatives elections: 2010 - 2024
Year Total seats Open seats Seats with incumbents running for re-election
2024 118 5 (4 percent) 113 (96 percent)
2022 118 14 (12 percent) 104 (88 percent)
2020 118 9 (8 percent) 109 (92 percent)
2018 118 18 (15 percent) 100 (85 percent)
2016 118 10 (8 percent) 108 (92 percent)
2014 118 12 (10 percent) 106 (90 percent)
2012 118 19 (16 percent) 99 (84 percent)
2010 118 11 (9 percent) 107 (91 percent)

Legislative referrals

See also: Legislative referral

A legislative referral, or legislatively referred ballot measure, is a ballot measure that appears on the ballot due to a vote of the state legislature. A legislative referral can be a constitutional amendment, state statute, or bond issue.

As of the 2024 election, a 60% vote was required during one legislative session for the Illinois General Assembly to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot. That amounted to a minimum of 71 votes in the Illinois House of Representatives and 36 votes in the Illinois State Senate, assuming no vacancies. Amendments did not require the governor's signature to be referred to the ballot.

At the time of the 2024 election, Democrats held a 40-19 majority in the Senate and a 78-40 majority in the House. Democrats had the minimum votes necessary to put a legislative referral on the ballot without any Republican votes. Democrats needed to lose five Senate seats and eight House seats to lose that ability. Republicans needed to win 17 Senate seats and 31 House seats to pass legislative referrals without Democratic votes.

Process to become a candidate

See also: Ballot access requirements for political candidates in Illinois

DocumentIcon.jpg See statutes: Chapter 10, Section 5, Article 7 of the Illinois Statutes

In Illinois, a candidate may run with an established political party, with a new party, as an independent candidate, or as a write-in candidate. Candidate qualification processes are detailed below.[4]

Political party candidates and independent candidates

Established political party candidates, new party candidates, and independent candidates must file nomination papers with the Illinois State Board of Elections in order to qualify for placement on the ballot. These nomination papers must be filed during the designated filing period. The filing period for established party candidates begins 127 days before the primary election and ends 120 days before the primary election. New party and independent candidates have a separate filing period. Their filing period begins 141 days before the general election and ends 134 days before the general election.[5][4]

Nomination papers include the following:[4]

  1. The statement of candidacy must indicate the candidate's address, the office being sought, and the candidate's political party designation (if applicable). This form also includes a statement affirming that the candidate is qualified for the office being sought. This form must be signed by the candidate and notarized.[6]
  2. The original statement of economic interests must be filed with the Illinois Secretary of State, which will then issue the receipt of the statement of economic interests for the candidate to file with the Illinois State Board of Elections. This form is not required from candidates seeking federal office. It is suggested that this form be filed at the same time as all other nomination papers, but it may be filed after the other papers as long as it is filed within the candidate filing period.[4]
  3. The loyalty oath form is optional. If a candidate chooses to sign it, he or she must affirm that he or she is not affiliated directly or indirectly with any organization that seeks to overthrow the government of the United States or the state of Illinois.[4]
  4. A petition containing the signatures of qualified electors. A candidate can begin circulating petitions 90 days before the last day of the filing period. Signature requirements for petitions vary according to the candidate's political party affiliation and the office being sought. Signature requirements are detailed in the table below.[4][7][4]
Petition signature requirements
Office Established party candidates New party candidates Independent candidates[8]
Statewide office (e.g., governor and lieutenant governor, attorney general, secretary of state, comptroller, treasurer) 5,000 (no more than 10,000) primary voters belonging to the candidate's party 1% of the number of voters who voted in the most recent general election or 25,000, whichever is less 1% of the number of voters who voted in the most recent general election or 25,000, whichever is less
United States Representative 0.5% of primary voters in the district belonging to the candidate's party 5% of the total number of district voters who voted in the last general election 5% of the total number of district voters who voted in the last general election
State senator 1,000 (no more than 3,000) district voters belonging to the candidate's party 5% of the total number of district voters who voted in the last general election 5% of the total number of district voters who voted in the last general election
State representative 500 (no more than 1,500) district voters belonging to the candidate's party 5% of the total number of district voters who voted in the last general election 5% of the total number of district voters who voted in the last general election

Any objections to nomination papers must be filed no later than five business days after the filing deadline.[4]

Write-in candidates

Write-in votes will not be counted unless the candidate files a declaration of intent no later than 61 days before the election in which he or she is running. This form must indicate the office being sought by the candidate.[4][9]

Qualifications

See also: State legislature candidate requirements by state

Article IV of the Illinois Constitution states: To be eligible to serve as a member of the General Assembly, a person must be a United States citizen, at least 21 years old, and for the two years preceding his election or appointment a resident of the district which he is to represent.

Salaries and per diem

See also: Comparison of state legislative salaries
State legislative salaries, 2024[10]
SalaryPer diem
$89,250/year$166/day

When sworn in

See also: When state legislators assume office after a general election

Illinois legislators assume office the second Wednesday in January.[11]

Illinois political history

Trifectas

A state government trifecta is a term that describes single-party government, when one political party holds the governor's office and has majorities in both chambers of the legislature in a state government.

Illinois Party Control: 1992-2025
Nineteen years of Democratic trifectas  •  Two years of Republican trifectas
Scroll left and right on the table below to view more years.

Year 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Governor R R R R R R R R R R R D D D D D D D D D D D D R R R R D D D D D D D
Senate D R R R R R R R R R R D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D
House D D D R R D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D

Presidential politics in Illinois

2020

See also: Presidential election, 2020


Presidential election in Illinois, 2020
 
Candidate/Running mate
%
Popular votes
Electoral votes
Image of
Image of
Joe Biden/Kamala D. Harris (D)
 
57.6
 
3,471,915 20
Image of
Image of
Donald Trump/Mike Pence (R)
 
40.6
 
2,446,891 0
Image of
Image of
Jo Jorgensen/Spike Cohen (L)
 
1.1
 
65,544 0
Image of
Image of
Howie Hawkins/Angela Nicole Walker (G)
 
0.5
 
30,494 0
Image of
Image of
Brian T. Carroll/Amar Patel (American Solidarity Party)
 
0.2
 
9,548 0
Image of
Silhouette Placeholder Image.png
Gloria La Riva/Leonard Peltier (Party for Socialism and Liberation)
 
0.1
 
8,046 0
  Other write-in votes
 
0.0
 
306 0

Total votes: 6,032,744


2016

See also: Presidential election, 2016
U.S. presidential election, Illinois, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes Electoral votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngHillary Clinton/Tim Kaine 55.8% 3,090,729 20
     Republican Donald Trump/Mike Pence 38.8% 2,146,015 0
     Libertarian Gary Johnson/Bill Weld 3.8% 209,596 0
     Green Jill Stein/Ajamu Baraka 1.4% 76,802 0
     - Write-in votes 0.2% 13,282 0
Total Votes 5,536,424 20
Election results via: Illinois State Board of Elections


Illinois presidential election results (1900-2024)

  • 17 Democratic wins
  • 15 Republican wins
Year 1900 1904 1908 1912 1916 1920 1924 1928 1932 1936 1940 1944 1948 1952 1956 1960 1964 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020 2024
Winning Party R R R D R R R R D D D D D R R D D R R R R R R D D D D D D D D D


See also

Illinois State Legislative Elections News and Analysis
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Illinois State Executive Offices
Illinois State Legislature
Illinois Courts
State legislative elections:
202520242023202220212020201920182017201620152014
Illinois elections:
20252024202320222021202020192018201720162015
Primary elections in Illinois
Party control of state government
State government trifectas
Partisan composition of state legislatures
Partisan composition of state senates
Partisan composition of state houses

External links

Footnotes

  1. Capitol Fax, "Rep. Ozinga resigns," April 8, 2024
  2. Ballotpedia defines an incumbent as retiring if the incumbent did not file for office or filed for office but withdrew, was disqualified, or otherwise left a race in a manner other than losing the primary, primary runoff, or convention. If an incumbent runs as a write-in candidate, Ballotpedia does not consider them to be retiring. If an incumbent runs in the same chamber for a different seat, Ballotpedia does not consider them to be retiring.
  3. Ballotpedia defines a seat as open if the incumbent did not file to run for re-election or filed but withdrew and did not appear on any ballot for his or her seat. If the incumbent withdrew from or did not participate in the primary but later chose to seek re-election to his or her seat as a third party or independent candidate, the seat would not be counted as open. If the incumbent retired or ran for a different seat in the same chamber, his or her original seat would be counted as open unless another incumbent from the same chamber filed to run for that seat, in which case it would not be counted as open due to the presence of an incumbent.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 Illinois State Board of Elections, "State of Illinois Candidate's Guide 2025," accessed February 26, 2025
  5. Illinois Statutes, "Chapter 10, Section 5, Article 10, Section 12," accessed February 26, 2025
  6. Illinois Statutes, "Chapter 10, Section 5, Article 7, Section 10.1," accessed February 26, 2025
  7. Illinois Statutes, "Chapter 10, Section 5, Article 7, Section 10," accessed February 26, 2025
  8. Illinois Statutes, "Chapter 10, Section 5, Article 10, Section 3," accessed February 26, 2025
  9. Illinois Statutes, "Chapter 10, Section 5, Article 7, Section 59," accessed February 26, 2025
  10. National Conference of State Legislatures, "2024 Legislator Compensation," August 21, 2024
  11. Illinois Constitution, "Article 4, Section 5a," accessed November 1, 2021


Current members of the Illinois House of Representatives
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Emanuel Welch
Majority Leader:Robyn Gabel
Minority Leader:Tony McCombie
Representatives
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Mary Gill (D)
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Rick Ryan (D)
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Amy Grant (R)
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Tom Weber (R)
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Jed Davis (R)
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Amy Briel (D)
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Amy Elik (R)
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Democratic Party (78)
Republican Party (40)