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Maryland House of Delegates elections, 2018

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2022
2014
2018 Maryland
House elections
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GeneralNovember 6, 2018
PrimaryJune 26, 2018
Past election results
2014201020062002
2018 elections
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Democrats held their veto-proof majority in the 2018 elections for Maryland House of Delegates, winning 99 seats to Republicans' 42 seats. All 141 House seats were up for election. At the time of the election, Democrats held a 92-49 majority.

Following the 2018 election, Maryland continued to be under divided government with incumbent Gov. Larry Hogan (R) winning the governor's office and Democrats maintaining control of both chambers of the state legislature. Maryland became under divided government in 2014 after Hogan was first elected to the governor's office. Prior to the 2014 election, Democrats controlled both chambers of the state legislature and the governor's office.

Because house delegates in Maryland serve four-year terms, winning candidates in the 2018 election served through 2022 and played a role in Maryland's redistricting process—the drawing of boundary lines for congressional and state legislative districts. Prior to 2020-2022, redistricting last took place in Maryland from 2010-2012. Read more below.

The Maryland House of Delegates was one of 87 state legislative chambers with elections in 2018. There are 99 chambers throughout the country.

Maryland state delegates serve four-year terms, with all seats up for election every four years.


Post-election analysis

See also: State legislative elections, 2018

The Democratic Party maintained supermajority status in both chambers of the Maryland General Assembly in the 2018 election. In the state Senate, all 47 seats were up for election. The Democratic Maryland State Senate supermajority was reduced from 33-14 to 32-15. Four Democratic incumbents and one Republican incumbent were defeated in the primary. Two incumbents were defeated in the general election; one Democrat and one Republican.

The Maryland House of Delegates held elections for all 141 seats. The Democratic supermajority in the House of Delegates increased from 91-50 to 99-42. Eight Democratic incumbents were defeated in the primary and six Republican incumbents were defeated in the general election.

National background

On November 6, 2018, 87 of the nation's 99 state legislative chambers held regularly scheduled elections for 6,073 of 7,383 total seats, meaning that nearly 82 percent of all state legislative seats were up for election.

  • Entering the 2018 election, Democrats held 42.6 percent, Republicans held 56.8 percent, and independents and other parties held 0.6 percent of the seats up for regular election.
  • Following the 2018 election, Democrats held 47.3 percent, Republicans held 52.3 percent, and independents and other parties held 0.4 percent of the seats up for regular election.
  • A total of 469 incumbents were defeated over the course of the election cycle, with roughly one-third of them defeated in the primary.

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Candidates

See also: Statistics on state legislative candidates, 2018

General candidates

Maryland House of Delegates General Election 2018

  • 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 1A

Michael Dreisbach

Green check mark transparent.pngWendell Beitzel (i)

District 1B

Penny Walker

Green check mark transparent.pngJason C. Buckel (i)

District 1C

Green check mark transparent.pngMike McKay (i)

Dan DelMonte (Green Party)

District 2A  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngNeil Parrott (i)  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngWilliam Wivell (i)

Andrew Barnhart (Green Party)
Charlotte McBrearty (Green Party)

District 2B

Peter Perini Sr.

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Corderman (i)

District 3A  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngCarol L. Krimm (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngKaren Lewis Young (i)

Mike Bowersox  Candidate Connection
James Dvorak

Jeremy Harbaugh (Libertarian Party)

District 3B

Green check mark transparent.pngKen Kerr  Candidate Connection

William Folden (i)

District 4  (3 seats)

Ysela Bravo
Lois Jarman  Candidate Connection
Darrin Smith

Green check mark transparent.pngBarrie Ciliberti (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngDan Cox
Green check mark transparent.pngJesse Pippy

District 5  (3 seats)

Emily Shank  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngSusan Krebs (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngApril Rose (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngHaven Shoemaker (i)  Candidate Connection

District 6  (3 seats)

Nicholas D'Adamo Jr.
Diane DeCarlo
Megan Ann Mioduszewski

Green check mark transparent.pngRobin L. Grammer, Jr. (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngBob Long (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngRic Metzgar (i)

Michael Lyden (Libertarian Party)

District 7  (3 seats)

Allison Berkowitz
Gordon Koerner  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngRick Impallaria (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngKathy Szeliga (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngLauren Arikan

Ryan Sullivan (Green Party)  Candidate Connection

District 8  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngEric Bromwell (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngHarry Bhandari
Carl Jackson

Joe Cluster (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJoseph Boteler III
Joe Norman

District 9A  (2 seats)

Steven Bolen
Natalie Ziegler

Green check mark transparent.pngTrent Kittleman (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngWarren Miller (i)

District 9B

Green check mark transparent.pngCourtney Watson

Bob Flanagan (i)

District 10  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngBenjamin Brooks (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJay Jalisi (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngAdrienne Jones (i)

George Harman
Matthew Kaliszak
Brian Marcos  Candidate Connection

District 11  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngShelly Hettleman (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngDana Stein (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJon Cardin

Jonathan Porter

District 12  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngEric Ebersole (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngTerri L. Hill (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJessica Feldmark

Bob Cockey
Melanie Harris  Candidate Connection
Michael Russell

District 13  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngVanessa Atterbeary (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngShane Pendergrass (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJen Terrasa

Chris Yates

District 14  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngAnne Kaiser (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngEric Luedtke (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngPamela Queen (i)

Kevin Dorrance
Patricia Fenati
Michael Ostroff

District 15  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngKathleen Dumais (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Fraser-Hidalgo (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngLily Qi

Laurie Halverson
Harvey Jacobs
Marc King

District 16  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngAriana Kelly (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngMarc Korman (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngSara Love

Bill Day

District 17  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngKumar Barve (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJames Gilchrist (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJulie Palakovich Carr

George Hernandez

District 18  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngAlfred Carr (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngEmily Shetty
Green check mark transparent.pngJared Solomon

Linda Willard

Jon Cook (Green Party)

District 19  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngBonnie Cullison (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngCharlotte Crutchfield
Green check mark transparent.pngVaughn Stewart

Helen Domenici
Dave Pasti
Martha Schaerr

District 20  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Moon (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJheanelle Wilkins (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngLorig Charkoudian

District 21  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngBen Barnes (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJoseline Peña-Melnyk (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngMary Lehman

Chike Anyanwu
Richard Douglas

Ray Ranker (Unaffiliated)

District 22  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngTawanna Gaines (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngAnne Healey (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngAlonzo Washington (i)

Winnie Heartstrong

District 23A

Green check mark transparent.pngGeraldine Valentino-Smith (i)

Kathleen Crank  Candidate Connection

District 23B  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngMarvin Holmes, Jr. (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngRon Watson

District 24  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngErek Barron (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJazz Lewis (i)  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngAndrea Harrison

District 25  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngDarryl Barnes (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngDereck Davis (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngNick Charles

District 26  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngKris Valderrama (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJay Walker (i)  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngVeronica Turner

District 27A

Green check mark transparent.pngElizabeth Proctor (i)

District 27B

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael A. Jackson (i)

Michael Thomas

District 27C

Jason Fowler

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Fisher (i)

District 28  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngEdith J. Patterson (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngC.T. Wilson (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngDebra Davis

Dave Campbell
Jim Crawford
Maureen Woodruff

Did not make the ballot:
Bill Dotson 

District 29A

Roberta Miles Loker

Green check mark transparent.pngMatt Morgan (i)

District 29B

Green check mark transparent.pngBrian Crosby

Deb Rey (i)

District 29C

Julia Nichols  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJerry Clark (i)

District 30A  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Busch (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngAlice Cain

Chelsea Gill
Bob O'Shea

District 30B

Mike Shay

Green check mark transparent.pngSeth Howard (i)

District 31A

Green check mark transparent.pngNed Carey (i)

Brooks Bennett

District 31B  (2 seats)

Harry Freeman  Candidate Connection
Karen Simpson

Green check mark transparent.pngNicholaus Kipke (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngBrian Chisholm

District 32  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngMark S. Chang (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJ. Sandy Bartlett
Green check mark transparent.pngMike Rogers

Mark Bailey
Patty Ewing
Tim Walters

District 33  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngHeather Bagnall  Candidate Connection
Tracie Hovermale  Candidate Connection
Pam Luby  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Malone (i)
Tony McConkey (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngSid Saab (i)

Liv Romano (Green Party)

District 34A  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngMary Ann Lisanti (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngSteve C. Johnson

Glen Glass (i)
J.D. Russell  Candidate Connection

District 34B

Jeff Dinger

Green check mark transparent.pngSusan McComas (i)

District 35A

Jobeth Bowers

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Hornberger (i)

District 35B  (2 seats)

Ronnie Davis

Green check mark transparent.pngAndrew Cassilly (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngTeresa Reilly (i)

District 36  (3 seats)

Keirien Taylor  Candidate Connection
Michael Welker
Crystal Woodward

Green check mark transparent.pngSteve Arentz (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJeff Ghrist (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJay Jacobs (i)

District 37A

Green check mark transparent.pngSheree Sample-Hughes (i)

Frank Cooke  Candidate Connection

District 37B  (2 seats)

Dan O'Hare  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngChristopher T. Adams (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJohnny Mautz (i)

District 38A

Kirkland Hall Sr.

Green check mark transparent.pngCharles Otto (i)

District 38B

Green check mark transparent.pngCarl Anderton, Jr. (i)

District 38C

Green check mark transparent.pngWayne Hartman

District 39  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngKirill Reznik (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngGabriel Acevero
Green check mark transparent.pngLesley Lopez

Verelyn Gibbs Watson  Candidate Connection

District 40  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngFrank Conaway Jr. (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngNick Mosby (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngMelissa Wells

Joshua Harris (Green Party)

District 41  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngSamuel Rosenberg (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngDalya Attar
Green check mark transparent.pngTony Bridges

Drew Pate (Green Party)

District 42A

Green check mark transparent.pngStephen Lafferty (i)

Stephen McIntire

District 42B  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngMichele Guyton
Sachin Hebbar

Green check mark transparent.pngNino Mangione
Tim Robinson

District 43  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngCurt Anderson (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngMaggie McIntosh (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngRegina T. Boyce

Bonnie Lane (Green Party)

District 44A

Green check mark transparent.pngKeith Haynes (i)

District 44B  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngCharles E. Sydnor III (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngPat Young (i)

District 45  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngTalmadge Branch (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngCheryl Glenn (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngStephanie Smith

Ronald Owens-Bey
Jewel Rucker
Andy Zipay

Andy Ellis (Green Party)
Glenn Ross (Green Party)

District 46  (3 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngLuke Clippinger (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngRobbyn Lewis (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngBrooke Elizabeth Lierman (i)

Jeremy Baron
Nicholas Wentworth

District 47A  (2 seats)

Green check mark transparent.pngDiana Fennell (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngJulian Ivey

District 47B

Green check mark transparent.pngWanika Fisher


Write-in candidates

Primary candidates

Maryland House of Delegates primary candidates
District Democratic Party

Democrat

Republican Party

Republican

Other
1A Michael Dreisbach: 1,098 Approveda Wendell Beitzel: 3,340 (I) Approveda
James Virts Jr.: 1,172
1B Penny Walker: 1,580 Approveda Jason Buckel: 3,196 (I) Approveda
1C No candidate Mike McKay: 2,193 (I) Approveda
Nicole Alt-Myers: 1,198
Jordan Lysczek: 278
2A No candidate Neil Parrott: 4,607 (I) Approveda
William Wivell: 4,019 (I) Approveda
2B Peter Perini Sr.: 1,524 Approveda Paul Corderman: 1,144 (I) Approveda
3A Karen Lewis Young: 5,393 (I) Approveda
Carol Krimm: 4,460 (I) Approveda
Ryan Trout: 2,034
Mike Bowersox: 2,801 Approveda
James Dvorak: 2,533 Approveda
3B Ken Kerr: 2,873 Approveda Bill Folden: 2,448 (I) Approveda
4 Lois Jarman: 5,755 Approveda
Ysela Bravo: 5,668 Approveda
Darrin Smith: 4,860 Approveda
Dan Cox: 7,728 Approveda
Jesse Pippy: 7,052 Approveda
Barrie Ciliberti: 7,018 (I) Approveda
5 Emily Shank: 4,758 Approveda Susan Krebs: 9,566 (I) Approveda
Haven Shoemaker: 8,811 (I) Approveda
April Rose: 8,350 (I) Approveda
David Ellin: 4,176
6 Nicholas D'Adamo Jr.: 3,591 Approveda
Megan Ann Mioduszewski: 3,398 Approveda
Diane DeCarlo: 3,282 Approveda
Justin Holliday: 1,938
Jonathan Campbell: 1,692
Bob Long: 3,380 (I) Approveda
Ric Metzgar: 3,354 (I) Approveda
Robin Grammer Jr.: 2,963 (I) Approveda
Jake Mohorovic: 1,345
7 Allison Berkowitz: 5,814 Approveda
Gordon Koerner: 4,893 Approveda
Kathy Szeliga: 7,127 (I) Approveda
Rick Impallaria: 4,494 (I) Approveda
Lauren Arikan: 4,173 Approveda
Aaron Penman: 3,216
Bill Paulshock: 2,869
Michael Geppi: 2,044
Dave Seman: 1,981
Tammy Larkin: 1,934
Joshua Barlow: 1,548
Angela Sudano-Marcellino: 498
Russ English Jr.: 374
Norm Gifford: 219
Trevor Leach: 148
8 Eric Bromwell: 6,595 (I) Approveda
Harry Bhandari: 5,941 Approveda
Carl Jackson: 5,246 Approveda
Joe Werner: 3,335
Joe Cluster: 3,558 (I) Approveda
Joseph Boteler III: 3,008 Approveda
Joe Norman (Maryland): 2,609 Approveda
Norma Secoura: 1,786
Kevin Leary: 1,589
Ben Boehl: 1,244
Jared Wineberg: 401
9A Natalie Ziegler: 4,860 Approveda
Steven Bolen: 2,848 Approveda
Michael Gross: 1,696
Trent Kittleman: 5,222 (I) Approveda
Warren Miller: 4,873 (I) Approveda
9B Courtney Watson: 3,228 Approveda
Daniel Medinger: 1,689
Bob Flanagan: 1,610 (I) Approveda
10 Adrienne Jones: 11,005 (I) Approveda
Jay Jalisi: 10,790 (I) Approveda
Benjamin Brooks: 9,587 (I) Approveda
Lauren Lipscomb: 4,588
Nathaniel Costley Sr.: 1,914
Jordan Porompyae: 903
George Harman: 1,138 Approveda
Brian Marcos: 969 Approveda
Matthew Kaliszak: 900 Approveda
Michael Brown Sr.: 607
11 Shelly Hettleman: 11,158 (I) Approveda
Dana Stein: 9,893 (I) Approveda
Jon Cardin: 9,830 Approveda
Amy Blank: 6,252
Linda Dorsey-Walker: 3,325
Kate Skovron: 1,200
Jonathan Porter: 2,802 Approveda
12 Terri Hill: 9,920 (I) Approveda
Eric Ebersole: 9,326 (I) Approveda
Jessica Feldmark: 7,104 Approveda
Mark Weaver: 1,943
Dario Broccolino: 1,896
James Howard: 1,283
Malcolm Heflin: 892
Jonathan Bratt: 793
Melanie Harris: 2,724 Approveda
Bob Cockey: 2,568 Approveda
Michael Russell: 2,488 Approveda
13 Vanessa Atterbeary: 10,856 (I) Approveda
Shane Pendergrass: 10,020 (I) Approveda
Jen Terrasa: 9,169 Approveda
Larry Pretlow II: 3,110
Chris Yates: 2,515 Approveda
14 Anne Kaiser: 11,845 (I) Approveda
Pamela Queen: 11,198 (I) Approveda
Eric Luedtke: 9,498 (I) Approveda
Paul Ransom: 3,064
Patricia Fenati: 2,387 Approveda
Michael Ostroff: 2,212 Approveda
Kevin Dorrance: 2,183 Approveda
15 Kathleen Dumais: 8,207 (I) Approveda
Lily Qi: 6,568 Approveda
David Fraser-Hidalgo: 6,206 (I) Approveda
Amy Frieder: 5,289
Kevin Mack: 4,257
Anis Ahmed: 2,097
Andy Van Wye: 2,032
Hamza Khan: 1,262
Tony Puca: 776
Laurie Halverson: 2,316 Approveda
Harvey Jacobs: 2,216 Approveda
Marc King: 2,164 Approveda
16 Marc Korman: 13,593 (I) Approveda
Ariana Kelly: 12,189 (I) Approveda
Sara Love: 11,294 Approveda
Samir Paul: 11,286
Jordan Cooper: 3,613
Nuchhi Currier: 2,130
Joseph Hennessey: 1,184
Marc Lande: 563
Bill Day: 1,942 Approveda
17 Kumar Barve: 8,554 (I) Approveda
Julie Palakovich Carr: 8,143 Approveda
James Gilchrist: 6,704 (I) Approveda
Julian Haffner: 4,384
Rebecca Smondrowski: 3,551
Esam Al-Shareffi: 1,678
George Hernandez: 1,361 Approveda
18 Alfred Carr: 10,201 (I) Approveda
Emily Shetty: 9,024 Approveda
Jared Solomon: 8,067 Approveda
Leslie Milano: 6,510
Joel Rubin: 5,150
Mila Johns: 4,167
Ron Franks: 1,493
Helga Luest: 1,387
Linda Willard: 1,220 Approveda
19 Bonnie Cullison: 7,839 (I) Approveda
Charlotte Crutchfield: 6,781 Approveda
Vaughn Stewart: 6,363 Approveda
Marice Morales: 5,918 (I)
Marlin Jenkins: 4,836
Brian Crider: 3,287
Carl Ward: 1,968
Jade Wiles Jr.: 928
Dave Pasti: 1,865 Approveda
Martha Schaerr: 1,699 Approveda
Helen Domenici: 1,643 Approveda
20 David Moon: 13,974 (I) Approveda
Jheanelle Wilkins: 11,960 (I) Approveda
Lorig Charkoudian: 9,256 Approveda
Darian Unger: 7,126
Fatmata Barrie: 4,316
George Zokle: 1,751
Malik Lendzondzo: 1,196
No candidate
21 Joseline Pena-Melnyk: 8,770 (I) Approveda
Ben Barnes: 7,449 (I) Approveda
Mary Lehman: 5,538 Approveda
Matt Dernoga: 5,316
Brencis Smith: 1,169
James McDowell Jr.: 1,027
Richard Douglas: 1,492 Approveda
Chike Anyanwu: 1,274 Approveda
22 Alonzo Washington: 10,739 (I) Approveda
Tawanna Gaines: 8,615 (I) Approveda
Anne Healey: 6,853 (I) Approveda
Nicole Williams: 4,761
Ashanti Martinez: 3,486
Winnie Obike: 529 Approveda
23A Geraldine Valentino-Smith: 2,598 (I) Approveda
Shabnam Ahmed: 2,556
Kevin Samuel Thomas: 476
Kathleen Crank: 429 Approveda
23B Ron Watson: 8,869 Approveda
Marvin Holmes Jr.: 8,287 (I) Approveda
Joseph Vallario Jr.: 6,519 (I)
Denise Tyler: 3,132
Caleb Gilchrist: 1,420
Pennie Parker: 1,106
Paul Manicone: 753
No candidate
24 Erek Barron: 9,939 (I) Approveda
Jazz Lewis: 8,513 (I) Approveda
Andrea Harrison: 7,111 Approveda
LaTasha Ward: 5,685
Maurice Simpson Jr.: 3,726
Marnitta King: 3,481
Michelle Wright: 3,297
Sia Finoh: 2,405
Donjuan Williams: 1,789
Joyce Starks: 1,780
Delaneo Miller: 1,166
No candidate
25 Darryl Barnes: 13,050 (I) Approveda
Dereck Davis: 12,152 (I) Approveda
Nick Charles: 8,330 Approveda
Wala Blegay: 6,217
Kent Roberson: 3,126
Sherman Hardy: 2,200
Stanley Onye: 2,070
Maurice Culbreath: 2,041
No candidate
26 Jay Walker: 11,749 (I) Approveda
Veronica Turner: 10,197 Approveda
Kris Valderrama: 9,590 (I) Approveda
David Sloan: 4,430
Sade Oshinubi: 4,153
Leonard Moses: 3,475
Diedra Henry-Spires: 2,912
Sean Chao: 1,812
No candidate
27A Elizabeth Proctor: 3,971 (I) Approveda
Lynn Jackson: 1,408
Joe Spears Jr.: 1,302
Ronald McDaniel Jr.: 487
No candidate
27B Michael A. Jackson: 4,875 (I) Approveda Michael Thomas: 1,415 Approveda
Philip Parenti: 1,095
27C Jason Fowler: 2,508 Approveda Mark Fisher: 3,509 (I) Approveda
28 Edith Patterson: 10,346 (I) Approveda
C.T. Wilson: 10,053 (I) Approveda
Debra Davis: 8,725 Approveda
Edward Holland: 4,561
John Coller: 4,043
Bill Dotson: 2,625 Approveda
Jim Crawford: 2,166 Approveda
Dave Campbell: 1,729 Approveda
Vanessa Jones: 996
29A Roberta Miles Loker: 1,586 Approveda Matt Morgan: 2,446 (I) Approveda
29B Brian Crosby: 1,660 Approveda Deb Rey: 1,413 (I) Approveda
29C Julia Nichols: 2,052 Approveda Jerry Clark: 2,657 (I) Approveda
30A Michael Busch: 5,832 (I) Approveda
Alice Cain: 4,053 Approveda
Aron Axe: 2,773
Mary Reese: 1,841
Bob O'Shea: 2,091 Approveda
Chelsea Gill: 1,264 Approveda
B. Darren Burns: 1,064
Doug Rathell: 945
30B Mike Shay: 1,429 Approveda
Susan Cochran: 948
Carmen Skarlupka: 261
Seth Howard: 1,818 (I) Approveda
Tom Walters: 658
31A Edward Carey: 1,811 (I) Approveda Brooks Bennett: 919 Approveda
31B Karen Simpson: 3,184 Approveda
Harry Freeman: 2,894 Approveda
Nicholaus Kipke: 4,579 (I) Approveda
Brian Chisholm: 4,119 Approveda
John Leopold: 1,030
David Therrien: 863
32 Mark Chang: 4,591 (I) Approveda
J. Sandy Bartlett: 4,200 Approveda
Mike Rogers: 3,795 Approveda
Jenese Jones: 2,639
Patrick Armstrong: 1,939
Theodore Sophocleus: 1,863 (I)
Derek Kent: 1,583
Patty Ewing: 3,049 Approveda
Tim Walters: 2,701 Approveda
Mark Bailey: 2,447 Approveda
33 Heather Bagnall: 8,133 Approveda
Pam Luby: 8,078 Approveda
Tracie Hovermale: 7,938 Approveda
Sid Saab: 6,799 (I) Approveda
Michael Malone: 5,145 (I) Approveda
Tony McConkey: 4,249 (I) Approveda
Stacie MacDonald: 3,925
Jerry Walker: 3,304
Tom Angelis: 1,214
Connor McCoy: 798
34A Mary Ann Lisanti: 3,794 (I) Approveda
Steve Johnson: 2,190 Approveda
Sarahia Benn: 2,123
Glen Glass: 1,758 (I) Approveda
J.D. Russell: 1,703 Approveda
Monica Worrell: 1,658
R. Douglas Anstine: 167
34B Jeff Dinger: 2,053 Approveda Susan McComas: 1,096 (I) Approveda
Walter Tilley: 1,037
James McMahan Jr.: 736
Jan Marie Christensen: 542
35A Jobeth Bowers: 1,318 Approveda Kevin Hornberger: 1,983 (I) Approveda
35B Ronnie Davis: 2,965 Approveda Andrew Cassilly: 6,063 (I) Approveda
Teresa Reilly: 5,573 (I) Approveda
36 Crystal Woodward: 5,167 Approveda
Keirien Taylor: 5,128 Approveda
Michael Welker: 4,979 Approveda
Jay Jacobs: 6,685 (I) Approveda
Jeff Ghrist: 6,348 (I) Approveda
Steve Arentz: 5,641 (I) Approveda
Michael Smigiel Jr.: 2,936
Rick Bowers: 2,244
Wick Dudley: 2,113
37A Sheree Sample-Hughes: 1,747 (I) Approveda
Charles Cephas Sr.: 537
Frank Cooke: 604 Approveda
37B Dan O'Hare: 4,648 Approveda Johnny Mautz: 6,937 (I) Approveda
Christopher Adams: 4,102 (I) Approveda
Keith Graffius: 2,008
Mimi Gedamu: 680
38A Kirkland Hall Sr.: 1,727 Approveda Charles Otto: 3,014 (I) Approveda
38B No candidate Carl Anderton Jr.: 1,345 (I) Approveda
38C No candidate Wayne Hartman: 1,996 Approveda
Joe Schanno: 1,584
Ed Tinus: 333
Jim Shaffer: 134
39 Lesley Lopez: 5,422 Approveda
Gabriel Acevero: 5,116 Approveda
Kirill Reznik: 5,088 (I) Approveda
Shane Robinson: 4,934 (I)
Bobby Bartlett: 2,487
Andy Hoverman: 1,281
Clint Sobratti: 1,139
Verelyn Gibbs Watson: 1,414 Approveda
40 Nick Mosby: 6,306 (I) Approveda
Melissa Wells: 4,423 Approveda
Frank Conaway Jr.: 4,230 (I) Approveda
Westley West: 3,099
Gabriel Auteri: 2,905
Terrell Boston-Smith: 2,867
Sanjay Thomas: 1,646
Sarah Matthews: 1,361
Latia Hopkins: 1,231
Anees Abdul-Rahim: 1,075
Brian Murphy: 898
Timothy Mercer: 370
Blair DuCray: 240
No candidate
41 Samuel Rosenberg: 7,795 (I) Approveda
Dalya Attar: 7,773 Approveda
Tony Bridges: 5,476 Approveda
Angela Gibson: 5,308 (I)
Bilal Ali: 5,194 (I)
Richard Bruno: 2,996
Tessa Hill-Aston: 2,862
Sean Stinnett: 2,806
Joyce Smith: 2,291
George Mitchell: 2,101
Walter Horton: 773
No candidate
42A Stephen Lafferty: 4,537 (I) Approveda Stephen McIntire: 1,122 Approveda
42B Michele Guyton: 5,652 Approveda
Sachin Hebbar: 3,293 Approveda
Daniel Nemec: 2,744
Nino Mangione: 4,389 Approveda
Tim Robinson: 3,471 Approveda
Raymond Boccelli: 1,635
Justin Kinsey: 1,107
43 Maggie McIntosh: 11,273 (I) Approveda
Regina Boyce: 7,924 Approveda
Curt Anderson: 7,886 (I) Approveda
Nilesh Kalyanaraman: 7,455
Kelly Fox: 5,149
Dong Shen: 2,323
Destinee Parker: 1,953
Urcille Goddard: 1,122
No candidate
44A Keith Haynes: 3,474 (I) Approveda No candidate
44B Charles Sydnor III: 5,643 (I) Approveda
Pat Young: 5,102 (I) Approveda
Aisha Khan: 4,110
Aaron Barnett: 3,510
Bishop Chapman: 1,356
No candidate
45 Talmadge Branch: 6,394 (I) Approveda
Cheryl Glenn: 5,792 (I) Approveda
Stephanie Smith: 4,486 Approveda
Caylin Young: 3,955
Sharon McCollough: 2,886
Marques Dent: 2,705
Rita Church: 2,561
Linzy Jackson: 1,863
John Amankwah: 697
George Johnson: 686
Andy Pierre: 602
Andy Zipay: 339 Approveda
Ronald Owens-Bey: 336 Approveda
Jewel Rucker: 308 Approveda
46 Brooke Elizabeth Lierman: 8,549 (I) Approveda
Luke Clippinger: 6,904 (I) Approveda
Robbyn Lewis: 6,760 (I) Approveda
Nate Loewentheil: 4,147
Dea Thomas: 3,094
Nicholas Wentworth: 692 Approveda
Jeremy Baron: 684 Approveda
47A Diana Fennell: 5,239 (I) Approveda
Julian Ivey: 4,504 Approveda
Jimmy Tarlau: 4,104 (I)
No candidate
47B Wanika Fisher: 1,158 Approveda
Carlo Sanchez: 764 (I)
Robert Asprilla: 44
No candidate
Notes • An (I) denotes an incumbent.
• Candidate lists can change frequently throughout an election season. Ballotpedia staff update this list monthly. To suggest changes, click here to email our State Legislature Project.

Margins of victory

See also: Margin of victory analysis for the 2018 state legislative elections

A margin of victory (MOV) analysis for the 2018 Maryland House of Delegates races is presented in this section. MOV represents the percentage of total votes that separated the winner and the second-place finisher. For example, if the winner of a race received 47 percent of the vote and the second-place finisher received 45 percent of the vote, the MOV is 2 percent.

The table below presents the following figures for each party:

  • Elections won
  • Elections won by less than 10 percentage points
  • Elections won without opposition
  • Average margin of victory[1]
Maryland House of Delegates: 2018 Margin of Victory Analysis
Party Elections won[2] Elections won by less than 10% Unopposed elections Average margin of victory[1]
Democratic Party Democratic
44
9
10
16.3%
Republican Party Republican
26
10
2
16.8%
Grey.png Other
0
0
0
N/A
Total[3]
67
16
12
17.6%



The margin of victory in each race is presented below. The list is sorted from the closest MOV to the largest (including unopposed races). Red dots represent Republicans, blue dots represent Democrats, yellow dots represent Libertarians, green dots represent Green Party candidates, and grey dots represent independent candidates. Candidates are ordered from left to right based on their share of the vote. The margin of victory is the margin between the bottom-place winner and the top-place losing candidate.

Maryland House of Delegates: 2018 Margin of Victory by District
District Winning Party Losing Party Margin of Victory
Maryland House of Delegates District 33
Republican Party Republican Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Democratic Party Democratic Party Green Party
0.1%
Maryland House of Delegates District 34A
Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party
0.4%
Maryland House of Delegates District 8
Democratic Party Democratic Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Republican Party Republican Party
0.5%
Maryland House of Delegates District 9A
Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Democratic Party
0.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 42B
Republican Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Democratic Party
1.0%
Maryland House of Delegates District 2B
Republican Party
Democratic Party
4.1%
Maryland House of Delegates District 3B
Democratic Party
Republican Party
4.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 4
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
5.1%
Maryland House of Delegates District 6
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party Libertarian Party
5.3%
Maryland House of Delegates District 32
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
6.0%
Maryland House of Delegates District 29B
Democratic Party
Republican Party
6.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 36
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
8.6%
Maryland House of Delegates District 30B
Republican Party
Democratic Party
8.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 12
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
9.5%
Maryland House of Delegates District 7
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Democratic Party Green Party
9.7%
Maryland House of Delegates District 30A
Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party
9.7%
Maryland House of Delegates District 5
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party
11.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 37B
Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party
11.7%
Maryland House of Delegates District 27C
Republican Party
Democratic Party
11.7%
Maryland House of Delegates District 11
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party
12.0%
Maryland House of Delegates District 15
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
12.3%
Maryland House of Delegates District 28
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
12.3%
Maryland House of Delegates District 40
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Green Party
12.3%
Maryland House of Delegates District 14
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
12.5%
Maryland House of Delegates District 3A
Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Libertarian Party
12.7%
Maryland House of Delegates District 13
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party
13.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 31A
Democratic Party
Republican Party
13.9%
Maryland House of Delegates District 29C
Republican Party
Democratic Party
14.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 31B
Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party Democratic Party
14.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 9B
Democratic Party
Republican Party
15.0%
Maryland House of Delegates District 35B
Republican Party Republican Party
Democratic Party
15.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 19
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
15.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 39
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party
16.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 21
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Grey.png
17.5%
Maryland House of Delegates District 27B
Democratic Party
Republican Party
18.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 38A
Republican Party
Democratic Party
18.9%
Maryland House of Delegates District 43
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Green Party
18.9%
Maryland House of Delegates District 46
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party
19.0%
Maryland House of Delegates District 16
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party
19.1%
Maryland House of Delegates District 10
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
19.5%
Maryland House of Delegates District 18
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party Green Party
19.8%
Maryland House of Delegates District 17
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party
20.0%
Maryland House of Delegates District 45
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Green Party Green Party Republican Party Republican Party Republican Party
21.4%
Maryland House of Delegates District 2A
Republican Party Republican Party
Green Party Green Party
21.6%
Maryland House of Delegates District 41
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Green Party
24.7%
Maryland House of Delegates District 22
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
Republican Party
24.9%
Maryland House of Delegates District 1B
Republican Party
Democratic Party
25.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 35A
Republican Party
Democratic Party
26.6%
Maryland House of Delegates District 34B
Republican Party
Democratic Party
30.3%
Maryland House of Delegates District 37A
Democratic Party
Republican Party
37.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 29A
Republican Party
Democratic Party
38.1%
Maryland House of Delegates District 42A
Democratic Party
Republican Party
40.2%
Maryland House of Delegates District 1A
Republican Party
Democratic Party
55.5%
Maryland House of Delegates District 1C
Republican Party
Green Party
64.9%
Maryland House of Delegates District 23A
Democratic Party
Republican Party
67.4%
Maryland House of Delegates District 38B
Republican Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 44A
Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 20
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 23B
Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 24
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 25
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 26
Democratic Party Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 27A
Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 38C
Republican Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 44B
Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 47A
Democratic Party Democratic Party
None
Unopposed
Maryland House of Delegates District 47B
Democratic Party
None
Unopposed


Seats flipped

See also: State legislative seats that changed party control, 2018

The below map displays each seat in the Maryland House of Delegates which changed partisan hands as a result of the 2018 elections, shaded according to the partisan affiliation of the winner in 2018. Hover over a shaded district for more information.

State legislative seats flipped in 2018, Maryland House of Delegates
District Incumbent 2018 winner Direction of flip
Maryland House of Delegates District 29B Republican Party Deb Rey Democratic Party Brian Crosby R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 30A Republican Party Herb McMillan Democratic Party Alice Cain R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 31B Democratic Party Meagan C. Simonaire Republican Party Brian Chisholm D to R
Maryland House of Delegates District 33 Republican Party Tony McConkey Democratic Party Heather Bagnall R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 34A Republican Party Glen Glass Democratic Party Steve Johnson R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 3B Republican Party William "Bill" Folden Democratic Party Ken Kerr R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 42B Republican Party Susan Aumann Democratic Party Michele Guyton R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 8 Republican Party Christian Miele Democratic Party Harry Bhandari R to D
Maryland House of Delegates District 9B Republican Party Bob Flanagan Democratic Party Courtney Watson R to D

Incumbents retiring

Thirty incumbents did not run for re-election in 2018.[4] Those incumbents were:

Name Party Current Office
Kathy Afzali Ends.png Republican House District 4
David E. Vogt III Ends.png Republican House District 4
Pat McDonough Ends.png Republican House District 7
Christian Miele Ends.png Republican House District 8
Dan Morhaim Electiondot.png Democratic House District 11
Clarence K. Lam Electiondot.png Democratic House District 12
Frank Turner Electiondot.png Democratic House District 13
Aruna Miller Electiondot.png Democratic House District 15
C. William Frick Electiondot.png Democratic House District 16
Andrew Platt Electiondot.png Democratic House District 17
Ana Sol Gutierrez Electiondot.png Democratic House District 18
Jeff Waldstreicher Electiondot.png Democratic House District 18
Benjamin Kramer Electiondot.png Democratic House District 19
Sheila Hixson Electiondot.png Democratic House District 20
Barbara Frush Electiondot.png Democratic House District 21
Carolyn Howard Electiondot.png Democratic House District 24
Angela Angel Electiondot.png Democratic House District 25
Tony Knotts Electiondot.png Democratic House District 26
Sally Jameson Electiondot.png Democratic House District 28
Herb McMillan Ends.png Republican House District 30A
Meagan C. Simonaire Ends.png Republican House District 31B
Pamela Beidle Electiondot.png Democratic House District 32
Alice Sophocleus Electiondot.png Democratic House District 32
Mary Beth Carozza Ends.png Republican House District 38C
Charles Barkley Electiondot.png Democratic House District 39
Antonio Hayes Electiondot.png Democratic House District 40
Susan Aumann Ends.png Republican House District 42B
Chris West Ends.png Republican House District 42B
Mary Washington Electiondot.png Democratic House District 43
Cory V. McCray Electiondot.png Democratic House District 45

Process to become a candidate

See also: Ballot access requirements for political candidates in Maryland

DocumentIcon.jpg See statutes: Election Law, Title 5 of the Annotated Code of Maryland

For principal party candidates

A candidate for federal, statewide, or state legislative office seeking the nomination of a principal political party in a primary election must submit to the Maryland State Board of Elections a certificate of candidacy, which notes the office being sought, the year of the election, the name and address of the candidate, and includes a statement verifying that the candidate satisfies the legal requirements for candidacy for the office being sought. A candidate for statewide or state legislative office must also submit a financial disclosure form to the Maryland State Ethics Commission.[5][6]

A principal party candidate must pay a filing fee. Fees vary according to the office being sought and are established by statute. Fees are detailed in the table below.[7]

Filing fees for principal party candidates
Office sought Filing fee
Governor, Lieutenant Governor, United States Senator, Comptroller of the Treasury, Attorney General $290
United States Representative $100
Member of the General Assembly $50

All required paperwork and filing fees must be submitted to the appropriate office by 9 p.m. on the last Tuesday in February of the election year. It should be noted that the certificate of candidacy must be submitted in person (or by certified mail, personal messenger, or delivery service if the candidate is unable to file in person due to illness, military service, or temporary absence from the state).[5][8]

For non-principal party candidates

Non-principal party candidates file paperwork in two phases. First, a candidate must submit a declaration of intent to the Maryland State Board of Elections. This form must be filed by the last Tuesday in February of the election year. A filing fee does not have to be paid at this time.[5][9]

By 5 p.m. on the first Monday in August of the election year, the candidate must submit to the Maryland State Board of Elections a certificate of nomination signed by the officers of the candidate's party (non-principal parties may determine for themselves the methods by which they nominate candidates). The candidate must also submit at this time the same financial disclosure form as principal party candidates. Non-principal party candidates must likewise pay the same filing fees as principal party candidates.[5][9]

For independent candidates

Independent candidates file paperwork in two phases. First, a candidate must submit a declaration of intent to the Maryland State Board of Elections. This form must be filed no later than the first Monday in July.[5][10][11]

By 5 p.m. on the first Monday in August of the election year, the candidate must submit a certificate of candidacy to the Maryland State Board of Elections and a financial disclosure form to the Maryland State Ethics Commission. The candidate must also submit to the Maryland State Board of Elections a petition signed by either 10,000 registered voters, or 1 percent of the total number of voters who are eligible to vote for the office being sought by the candidate, whichever is less. Independent candidates must also pay the same filing fees as party candidates.[5][10]

For write-in candidates

A write-in candidate for either the primary or general election who intends to have his or her votes tallied must file a certificate of candidacy and a financial disclosure form. The deadline for filing these materials with the appropriate office is the earlier of the following:[8]

  • seven days after a total expenditure of at least $51 is made to promote the candidacy by the candidate's campaign finance entity
  • 5 p.m. on the Wednesday preceding the day of the election

Qualifications

See also: State legislature candidate requirements by state

Section 9 of Article 3 of the Maryland Constitution states, "A person is eligible to serve as a Senator or Delegate, who on the date of his election, (1) is a citizen of the State of Maryland, (2) has resided therein for at least one year next preceding that date, and (3) if the district which he has been chosen to represent has been established for at least six months prior to the date of his election, has resided in that district for six months next preceding that date.

If the district which the person has been chosen to represent has been established less than six months prior to the date of his election, then in addition to (1) and (2) above, he shall have resided in the district for as long as it has been established.

A person is eligible to serve as a Senator, if he has attained the age of twenty-five years, or as a Delegate, if he has attained the age of twenty-one years, on the date of his election."

Salaries and per diem

See also: Comparison of state legislative salaries
State legislative salaries, 2024[12]
SalaryPer diem
$54,437/year$115/day for lodging. $63/day for meals.

When sworn in

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

Maryland legislators assume office the second Wednesday in January after the election.[13]

Maryland political history

See also: Partisan composition of state houses and State government trifectas

Party control

2018

In the 2018 elections, Democrats increased their majority in the Maryland House of Delegates from 91-50 to 99-42.

Maryland House of Delegates
Party As of November 6, 2018 After November 7, 2018
     Democratic Party 91 99
     Republican Party 50 42
Total 141 141

2014

In the 2014 elections, Democrats maintained their majority in the Maryland House of Delegates, but Republicans gained seven seats.

Maryland House of Delegates
Party As of November 3, 2014 After November 4, 2014
     Democratic Party 98 91
     Republican Party 43 50
Total 141 141

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. Democrats in Maryland held a state government trifecta from 1992 to 2002 and 2007 to 2014.

Maryland Party Control: 1992-2025
Twenty-two years of Democratic trifectas  •  No 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 D D D D D D D D D D D R R R R D D D D D D D D R R R R R R R R D D D
Senate 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 D D D D D
House 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 D D D D D

Wave election analysis

See also: Wave elections (1918-2016)

The term wave election is frequently used to describe an election cycle in which one party makes significant electoral gains. How many seats would Republicans have had to lose for the 2018 midterm election to be considered a wave election?

Ballotpedia examined the results of the 50 election cycles that occurred between 1918 and 2016—spanning from President Woodrow Wilson's (D) second midterm in 1918 to Donald Trump's (R) first presidential election in 2016. We define wave elections as the 20 percent of elections in that period resulting in the greatest seat swings against the president's party.

Applying this definition to state legislative elections, we found that Republicans needed to lose 494 seats for 2018 to qualify as a wave election.

The chart below shows the number of seats the president's party lost in the 10 state legislative waves from 1918 to 2016. Click here to read the full report.

State legislative wave elections
Year President Party Election type State legislative seats change Elections analyzed[14]
1932 Hoover R Presidential -1,022 7,365
1922 Harding R First midterm -907 6,907
1966 Johnson D First midterm[15] -782 7,561
1938 Roosevelt D Second midterm -769 7,179
1958 Eisenhower R Second midterm -702 7,627
2010 Obama D First midterm -702 7,306
1974 Ford R Second midterm[16] -695 7,481
1920 Wilson D Presidential -654 6,835
1930 Hoover R Presidential -640 7,361
1954 Eisenhower R First midterm -494 7,513

Competitiveness

Every year, Ballotpedia uses official candidate lists from each state to examine the competitiveness of every state legislative race in the country. Nationally, there has been a steady decline in electoral competitiveness since 2010. Most notable is that the number of districts with general election competition has dropped by more than 10 percent.

Results from 2016

Click here to read the full study »


Historical context

See also: Competitiveness in State Legislative Elections: 1972-2014

Uncontested elections: In 2014, 32.8 percent of Americans lived in states with an uncontested state senate election. Similarly, 40.4 percent of Americans lived in states with uncontested house elections. Primary elections were uncontested even more frequently, with 61 percent of people living in states with no contested primaries. Uncontested elections often occur in locations that are so politically one-sided that the result of an election would be a foregone conclusion regardless of whether it was contested or not.

F5 Pop. % with uncontested state legislative races.png

Open seats: In most cases, an incumbent will run for re-election, which decreases the number of open seats available. In 2014, 83 percent of the 6,057 seats up for election saw the incumbent running for re-election. The states that impose term limits on their legislatures typically see a higher percentage of open seats in a given year because a portion of incumbents in each election are forced to leave office. Overall, the number of open seats decreased from 2012 to 2014, dropping from 21.2 percent in 2012 to 17.0 percent in 2014.

Incumbent win rates: Ballotpedia's competitiveness analysis of elections between 1972 and 2014 documented the high propensity for incumbents to win re-election in state legislative elections. In fact, since 1972, the win rate for incumbents had not dropped below 90 percent—with the exception of 1974, when 88 percent of incumbents were re-elected to their seats. Perhaps most importantly, the win rate for incumbents generally increased over time. In 2014, 96.5 percent of incumbents were able to retain their seats. Common convention holds that incumbents are able to leverage their office to maintain their seat. However, the high incumbent win rate may actually be a result of incumbents being more likely to hold seats in districts that are considered safe for their party.

Marginal primaries: Often, competitiveness is measured by examining the rate of elections that have been won by amounts that are considered marginal (5 percent or less). During the 2014 election, 90.1 percent of primary and general election races were won by margins higher than 5 percent. Interestingly, it is usually the case that only one of the two races—primary or general—will be competitive at a time. This means that if a district's general election is competitive, typically one or more of the district's primaries were won by more than 5 percent. The reverse is also true: If a district sees a competitive primary, it is unlikely that the general election for that district will be won by less than 5 percent. Primaries often see very low voter turnout in comparison to general elections. In 2014, there were only 27 million voters for state legislative primaries, but approximately 107 million voters for the state legislative general elections.

Redistricting in Maryland

See also: Redistricting in Maryland

Because house delegates in Maryland serve four-year terms, winning candidates in the 2018 election served through 2022 and played a role in Maryland's redistricting process—the drawing of boundary lines for congressional and state legislative districts. Prior to 2020-2022, redistricting last took place in Maryland from 2010-2012.

State process

In Maryland, the primary authority to adopt both congressional and state legislative district lines rests with the state legislature. The governor submits a state legislative redistricting proposal (an advisory commission appointed by the governor assists in drafting this proposal). The state legislature may pass its own plan by joint resolution, which is not subject to gubernatorial veto. If the legislature fails to approve its own plan, the governor's plan takes effect. Congressional lines are adopted solely by the legislature and may be vetoed by the governor.[17]

The Maryland Constitution requires that state legislative districts be contiguous, compact, and "give 'due regard' for political boundaries and natural features." No such requirements apply to congressional districts.[17]

Pivot Counties

See also: Pivot Counties by state

There are no Pivot Counties in Maryland. Pivot Counties are counties that voted for Barack Obama (D) in 2008 and 2012 and for Donald Trump (R) in 2016. Altogether, the nation had 206 Pivot Counties, with most being concentrated in upper midwestern and northeastern states.

In the 2016 presidential election, Hillary Clinton (D) won Maryland with 60.3 percent of the vote. Donald Trump (R) received 33.9 percent. In presidential elections between 1789 and 2016, Maryland voted Democratic 52 percent of the time and Republican 21 percent of the time. In the five presidential elections between 2000 and 2016, Maryland voted Democratic all five times.[18]

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Excludes unopposed elections
  2. Defined as the number of districts where at least one of this party's candidates won.
  3. These numbers are lower than the sum of the figures found in the above rows due to the presence of multimember districts.
  4. 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.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Annotated Code of Maryland, "Election Law, Title 5, Subtitle 3, Section 304," accessed April 29, 2025
  6. Maryland State Ethics Commission, "State Employees/Officials," accessed April 28, 2025
  7. Annotated Code of Maryland, "Election Law, Title 5, Subtitle 4, Section 401," accessed April 28, 2025
  8. 8.0 8.1 Annotated Code of Maryland, "Election Law, Title 5, Subtitle 3, Section 303," accessed May 28, 2025
  9. 9.0 9.1 Annotated Code of Maryland, "Election Law, Title 5, Subtitle 7, Section 703.1," accessed May 16, 2025
  10. 10.0 10.1 Annotated Code of Maryland, "Election Law, Title 5, Subtitle 7, Section 703," accessed April 28, 2025
  11. Ballot Access News, "Maryland Deadline Victory Confirmed," September 23, 2016
  12. National Conference of State Legislatures, "2024 Legislator Compensation," August 21, 2024
  13. Maryland Constitution, "Article III, Section 6," accessed February 11, 2021
  14. The number of state legislative seats available for analysis varied, with as many as 7,795 and as few as 6,835.
  15. Lyndon Johnson's (D) first term began in November 1963 after the death of President John F. Kennedy (D), who was first elected in 1960. Before Johnson had his first midterm in 1966, he was re-elected president in 1964.
  16. Gerald Ford's (R) first term began in August 1974 following the resignation of President Richard Nixon (R), who was first elected in 1968 and was re-elected in 1972. Because Ford only served for two full months before facing the electorate, this election is classified as Nixon's second midterm.
  17. 17.0 17.1 All About Redistricting, 'Maryland," accessed April 30, 2015
  18. 270towin.com, "Maryland," accessed June 22, 2017


Current members of the Maryland House of Delegates
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Adrienne Jones
Majority Leader:David Moon
Representatives
District 1A
District 1B
District 1C
District 2A
District 2B
District 3
Kris Fair (D)
Ken Kerr (D)
District 4
District 6
Bob Long (R)
District 7A
District 7B
District 8
Kim Ross (D)
District 9A
Chao Wu (D)
District 9B
District 11A
District 11B
District 12A
District 12B
District 13
District 15
Lily Qi (D)
District 16
District 17
Joe Vogel (D)
District 18
District 21
District 23
District 24
District 25
District 26
District 27A
District 27B
District 27C
District 28
District 29A
District 29B
District 29C
District 30A
District 30B
District 32
District 33A
District 33B
District 33C
District 34A
District 34B
District 35A
District 35B
District 36
District 37A
District 37B
District 38A
District 38B
District 38C
District 39
Greg Wims (D)
District 40
District 41
District 42A
District 42B
District 42C
District 43A
District 43B
District 44A
District 44B
District 45
District 46
District 47A
District 47B
Democratic Party (102)
Republican Party (39)