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Oregon House of Representatives elections, 2022

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2024
2020
2022 Oregon
House Elections
Flag of Oregon.png
PrimaryMay 17, 2022
GeneralNovember 8, 2022
Past Election Results
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2022 Elections
Choose a chamber below:

Elections for the Oregon House of Representatives took place in 2022. The general election was on November 8, 2022. A primary was scheduled for May 17, 2022. The filing deadline was March 8, 2022.

The chamber's Democratic majority decreased from 37-23 to 35-25.

The Oregon House of Representatives was one of 88 state legislative chambers with elections in 2022. There are 99 chambers throughout the country.

Party control

See also: Partisan composition of state houses and State government trifectas
Oregon House of Representatives
Party As of November 8, 2022 After November 9, 2022
     Democratic Party 37 35
     Republican Party 23 25
Total 60 60

Candidates

General

Oregon House of Representatives General Election 2022

  • 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

Bret Cecil  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Brock Smith (i)

District 2

Kevin Bell

Did not make the ballot:
Rainey Lambert  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngVirgle Osborne  Candidate Connection

Edward Renfroe (Constitution Party)

District 3

Brady Keister

Green check mark transparent.pngLily Morgan (i)

District 4

Green check mark transparent.pngChristine Goodwin (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngChristine Goodwin (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngChristine Goodwin (i) (Republican Party, Democratic Party)

District 5

Green check mark transparent.pngPam Marsh (i)

Sandra Abercrombie

Green check mark transparent.pngPam Marsh (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 6

Dan Davis  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngKim Wallan (i)

Dan Davis (Democratic Party, Independent Party)  Candidate Connection

District 7

Green check mark transparent.pngJohn Lively (i)

Alan Stout  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJohn Lively (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 8

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Holvey (i)

Michael Moore

District 9

Jerry Rust

Green check mark transparent.pngBoomer Wright (i)

District 10

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Gomberg (i)

Celeste McEntee

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Gomberg (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 11

Mary Cooke  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJami Cate (i)

Mary Cooke (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 12

Michelle Emmons  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngCharlie Conrad  Candidate Connection

Michelle Emmons (Democratic Party, Independent Party)  Candidate Connection

District 13

Green check mark transparent.pngNancy Nathanson (i)

Timothy Sutherland

Green check mark transparent.pngNancy Nathanson (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 14

Green check mark transparent.pngJulie Fahey (i)

Stan Stubblefield  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJulie Fahey (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)

District 15

Benjamin Watts  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngShelly Boshart Davis (i)

Benjamin Watts (Democratic Party, Independent Party)  Candidate Connection

District 16

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Rayfield (i)

Keith Lembke

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Rayfield (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)

District 17

Green check mark transparent.pngEd Diehl  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngEd Diehl  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngEd Diehl (Republican Party, Democratic Party)  Candidate Connection

District 18

Jesse Smith  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngRick Lewis (i)

District 19

Green check mark transparent.pngTom Andersen

T. J. Sullivan

Green check mark transparent.pngTom Andersen (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Progressive Party, Working Families Party)

District 20

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Evans (i)

Dan Farrington

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Evans (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)
Taylor Rickey (Libertarian Party)

District 21

Ramiro Navarro Jr.  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Mannix

Ramiro Navarro Jr. (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection
Michael Morrow (Libertarian Party)  Candidate Connection

District 22

Anthony Medina

Green check mark transparent.pngTracy Cramer

Anthony Medina (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 23

Kriss Wright  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngAnna Scharf (i)

District 24

Victoria Ernst  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngLucetta Elmer  Candidate Connection

Victoria Ernst (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 25

Green check mark transparent.pngBen Bowman  Candidate Connection

Bob Niemeyer

Green check mark transparent.pngBen Bowman (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 26

Green check mark transparent.pngCourtney Neron (i)  Candidate Connection

Jason Fields

Green check mark transparent.pngCourtney Neron (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 27

Green check mark transparent.pngKen Helm (i)

Sandra Nelson  Candidate Connection

District 28

Green check mark transparent.pngDacia Grayber (i)

Patrick Castles

Green check mark transparent.pngDacia Grayber (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 29

Green check mark transparent.pngSusan McLain (i)

Gina Munster-Moore  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngSusan McLain (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 30

Green check mark transparent.pngNathan Sosa (i)

Joe Everton  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngNathan Sosa (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)

District 31

Anthony Sorace  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngBrian Stout

Anthony Sorace (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 32

Logan Laity

Green check mark transparent.pngCyrus Javadi

Logan Laity (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Progressive Party, Working Families Party)

District 33

Green check mark transparent.pngMaxine Dexter (i)  Candidate Connection

Stan Baumhofer

Green check mark transparent.pngMaxine Dexter (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 34

Green check mark transparent.pngLisa Reynolds (i)

John Woods

Green check mark transparent.pngLisa Reynolds (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 35

Green check mark transparent.pngFarrah Chaichi  Candidate Connection

Daniel Martin

Green check mark transparent.pngFarrah Chaichi (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 36

Green check mark transparent.pngHai Pham  Candidate Connection

Greer Trice

Did not make the ballot:
Jeffrey Hindley 

Green check mark transparent.pngHai Pham (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 37

Green check mark transparent.pngJules Walters

Aeric Estep  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJules Walters (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 38

Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Nguyen

Alistair Firmin

Alistair Firmin (Republican Party, Independent Party)

District 39

Green check mark transparent.pngJanelle Bynum (i)

Kori Haynes

Green check mark transparent.pngJanelle Bynum (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 40

Green check mark transparent.pngAnnessa Hartman

Adam Baker

Green check mark transparent.pngAnnessa Hartman (Democratic Party, Independent Party)
Adam Baker (Republican Party, Libertarian Party)

District 41

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Gamba

Robert Reynolds

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Gamba (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 42

Green check mark transparent.pngRob Nosse (i)

Scott Trahan

Shira Newman (Libertarian Party)

District 43

Green check mark transparent.pngTawna Sanchez (i)

Tim LeMaster  Candidate Connection

District 44

Green check mark transparent.pngTravis Nelson (i)

Rolf Schuler

Green check mark transparent.pngTravis Nelson (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)
Morgan Hinthorne (Constitution Party)

District 45

Green check mark transparent.pngThuy Tran

George Donnerberg

Green check mark transparent.pngThuy Tran (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 46

Green check mark transparent.pngKhanh Pham (i)

Timothy Sytsma

Green check mark transparent.pngKhanh Pham (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)

District 47

Green check mark transparent.pngAndrea Valderrama (i)

Bill Stewart

District 48

Green check mark transparent.pngHoa Nguyen  Candidate Connection

John Masterman  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngHoa Nguyen (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 49

Green check mark transparent.pngZach Hudson (i)  Candidate Connection

Randy Lauer  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngZach Hudson (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)  Candidate Connection

District 50

Green check mark transparent.pngRicki Ruiz (i)

Amelia Salvador

Green check mark transparent.pngRicki Ruiz (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 51

Walt Trandum

Green check mark transparent.pngJames Hieb (i)

Walt Trandum (Democratic Party, Progressive Party)

District 52

Darcy Long

Green check mark transparent.pngJeffrey Helfrich

Darcy Long (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 53

Green check mark transparent.pngEmerson Levy  Candidate Connection

Michael Sipe  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngEmerson Levy (Democratic Party, Independent Party)  Candidate Connection

District 54

Green check mark transparent.pngJason Kropf (i)

Judy Trego

Green check mark transparent.pngJason Kropf (i) (Democratic Party, Independent Party, Working Families Party)

District 55

Brian Lepore  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngE. Werner Reschke (i)

Brian Lepore (Democratic Party, Independent Party)  Candidate Connection

District 56

Jonathan Chenjeri

Green check mark transparent.pngEmily McIntire

Jonathan Chenjeri (Democratic Party, Working Families Party)

District 57

Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith (i) (Republican Party, Democratic Party)

District 58

Green check mark transparent.pngBobby Levy (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngBobby Levy (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngBobby Levy (i) (Republican Party, Democratic Party)
Jesse Bonifer (Libertarian Party)

District 59

Lawrence Jones

Green check mark transparent.pngVikki Breese-Iverson (i)

Lawrence Jones (Democratic Party, Independent Party)

District 60

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Owens (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Owens (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Owens (i) (Republican Party, Democratic Party, Independent Party)
Antonio Sunseri (Progressive Party)  Candidate Connection

Primary

Oregon House of Representatives Primary 2022

  • 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.pngBret Cecil  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Brock Smith (i)

District 2

Green check mark transparent.pngRainey Lambert  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngVirgle Osborne  Candidate Connection

District 3

Green check mark transparent.pngBrady Keister

Green check mark transparent.pngLily Morgan (i)

District 4

Green check mark transparent.pngChristine Goodwin (i) (Write-in)

Green check mark transparent.pngChristine Goodwin (i)

District 5

Green check mark transparent.pngPam Marsh (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngSandra Abercrombie

District 6

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Davis  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngKim Wallan (i)

District 7

Green check mark transparent.pngJohn Lively (i)

Raiph Huber  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngAlan Stout  Candidate Connection

District 8

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Holvey (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Moore

District 9

Green check mark transparent.pngJerry Rust (Write-in)

Green check mark transparent.pngBoomer Wright (i)

District 10

Green check mark transparent.pngDavid Gomberg (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngCeleste McEntee

District 11

Nina Brenner  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngMary Cooke  Candidate Connection
Renee Windsor-White

Green check mark transparent.pngJami Cate (i)
Tyler Collins

Did not make the ballot:
Heather Dillon 
Luke Zedwick 

District 12

Green check mark transparent.pngMichelle Emmons  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngCharlie Conrad  Candidate Connection
Nicole De Graff
Jeff Gowing
Bill Ledford

District 13

Green check mark transparent.pngNancy Nathanson (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngTimothy Sutherland

District 14

Green check mark transparent.pngJulie Fahey (i)

Caleb Clark
Green check mark transparent.pngStan Stubblefield  Candidate Connection

District 15

Green check mark transparent.pngBenjamin Watts  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngShelly Boshart Davis (i)

District 16

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Rayfield (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngKeith Lembke

District 17

Green check mark transparent.pngEd Diehl (Write-in)  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngEd Diehl  Candidate Connection
Beth Jones

District 18

Green check mark transparent.pngJesse Smith  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngRick Lewis (i)

District 19

Bradley Witt (i)
Green check mark transparent.pngTom Andersen
Jacqueline Leung

Green check mark transparent.pngT. J. Sullivan

District 20

Green check mark transparent.pngPaul Evans (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngDan Farrington

District 21

Robert Husseman
Green check mark transparent.pngRamiro Navarro Jr.  Candidate Connection

Did not make the ballot:
Dave McCall 

Green check mark transparent.pngKevin Mannix
Kyler McNaught

District 22

Green check mark transparent.pngAnthony Medina

Did not make the ballot:
Karl Emmrich 

Green check mark transparent.pngTracy Cramer
Jim Lowder  Candidate Connection

District 23

Elise Hollamon  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngKriss Wright  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngAnna Scharf (i)

District 24

Green check mark transparent.pngVictoria Ernst  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngLucetta Elmer  Candidate Connection

District 25

Green check mark transparent.pngBen Bowman  Candidate Connection

Gabriel Buehler  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngBob Niemeyer

Did not make the ballot:
Art Witkowski 

District 26

Green check mark transparent.pngCourtney Neron (i)  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJason Fields
Glenn Lancaster

District 27

Green check mark transparent.pngKen Helm (i)
Tammy Carpenter  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngSandra Nelson  Candidate Connection

District 28

Green check mark transparent.pngDacia Grayber (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngPatrick Castles
Charles Mengis

District 29

Green check mark transparent.pngSusan McLain (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngGina Munster-Moore  Candidate Connection

District 30

Green check mark transparent.pngNathan Sosa (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngJoe Everton  Candidate Connection
Todd Morrill

District 31

Green check mark transparent.pngAnthony Sorace  Candidate Connection

Drew Layda
Green check mark transparent.pngBrian Stout

District 32

Green check mark transparent.pngLogan Laity

Glenn Gaither
Green check mark transparent.pngCyrus Javadi

District 33

Green check mark transparent.pngMaxine Dexter (i)  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngStan Baumhofer

District 34

Green check mark transparent.pngLisa Reynolds (i)
Jennifer Kinzey

Green check mark transparent.pngJohn Woods

District 35

Green check mark transparent.pngFarrah Chaichi  Candidate Connection
Zeloszelos Marchandt

Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Martin

District 36

Green check mark transparent.pngHai Pham  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJeffrey Hindley

Did not make the ballot:
Heather Welch 

District 37

Green check mark transparent.pngJules Walters

Green check mark transparent.pngAeric Estep  Candidate Connection

District 38

Neelam Gupta
Green check mark transparent.pngDaniel Nguyen

Green check mark transparent.pngAlistair Firmin

Did not make the ballot:
Korey Koch 

District 39

Green check mark transparent.pngJanelle Bynum (i)

Did not make the ballot:
Lindsey Lason 

Green check mark transparent.pngKori Haynes

District 40

James Farley
Charles Gallia  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngAnnessa Hartman

Green check mark transparent.pngAdam Baker
Daniel Tooze Sr.

District 41

Kaliko Castille
Christopher Draus
Green check mark transparent.pngMark Gamba

Elvis Clark
Rene Gomez
Green check mark transparent.pngRobert Reynolds

District 42

Green check mark transparent.pngRob Nosse (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngScott Trahan

District 43

Green check mark transparent.pngTawna Sanchez (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngTim LeMaster  Candidate Connection

District 44

Green check mark transparent.pngTravis Nelson (i)
Eric Delehoy  (unofficially withdrew)

Green check mark transparent.pngRolf Schuler (Write-in)

District 45

Catherine Thomasson  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngThuy Tran

Green check mark transparent.pngGeorge Donnerberg (Write-in)

District 46

Green check mark transparent.pngKhanh Pham (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngTimothy Sytsma

Did not make the ballot:
Angela Todd 

District 47

Green check mark transparent.pngAndrea Valderrama (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngBill Stewart (Write-in)

District 48

Green check mark transparent.pngHoa Nguyen  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngJohn Masterman  Candidate Connection

District 49

Green check mark transparent.pngZach Hudson (i)  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngRandy Lauer  Candidate Connection

District 50

Green check mark transparent.pngRicki Ruiz (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngAmelia Salvador

District 51

Green check mark transparent.pngWalt Trandum

Green check mark transparent.pngJames Hieb (i)
Lisa Davidson  Candidate Connection

District 52

Green check mark transparent.pngDarcy Long

James Born  Candidate Connection
Green check mark transparent.pngJeffrey Helfrich
Britt Storkson

District 53

Green check mark transparent.pngEmerson Levy  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngMichael Sipe  Candidate Connection

District 54

Green check mark transparent.pngJason Kropf (i)

Green check mark transparent.pngJudy Trego

District 55

Green check mark transparent.pngBrian Lepore  Candidate Connection

Green check mark transparent.pngE. Werner Reschke (i)

District 56

Green check mark transparent.pngJonathan Chenjeri

Green check mark transparent.pngEmily McIntire

District 57

Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith (i) (Write-in)

Green check mark transparent.pngGreg Smith (i)

District 58

Green check mark transparent.pngBobby Levy (i) (Write-in)

Green check mark transparent.pngBobby Levy (i)
Skye Farnam

District 59

Green check mark transparent.pngLawrence Jones

Green check mark transparent.pngVikki Breese-Iverson (i)

District 60

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Owens (i) (Write-in)

Green check mark transparent.pngMark Owens (i)

Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey responses

Candidate Connection Logo.png

Ballotpedia asks all federal, state, and local candidates to complete a survey and share what motivates them on political and personal levels. Click a link below to read survey responses from candidates in that district:

Incumbents who were not re-elected

See also: Annual State Legislative Competitiveness Report: Vol. 12, 2022

Incumbents defeated in general elections

No incumbents lost in general elections.

Incumbents defeated in primary elections

See also: Defeated state legislative incumbents, 2022

One incumbent lost in the May 17 primaries.

Name Party Office
Bradley Witt Electiondot.png Democratic House District 19

Retiring incumbents

Twenty incumbents were not on the ballot in 2022.[1] Those incumbents were:

Name Party Office Reason
Duane Stark Ends.png Republican House District 4 Retired
Cedric Hayden Ends.png Republican House District 7 Other office
Marty Wilde Electiondot.png Democratic House District 11 Retired
Raquel Moore-Green Ends.png Republican House District 19 Other office
Chris Hoy Electiondot.png Democratic House District 21 Retired
Teresa Alonso Leon Electiondot.png Democratic House District 22 Other office
Ron Noble Ends.png Republican House District 24 Other office
Jessica George Ends.png Republican House District 25 Retired
Sheri Schouten Electiondot.png Democratic House District 27 Retired
Wlnsvey Campos Electiondot.png Democratic House District 28 Other office
Suzanne Weber Ends.png Republican House District 32 Other office
Rachel Prusak Electiondot.png Democratic House District 37 Retired
Andrea Salinas Electiondot.png Democratic House District 38 Other office
Mark Meek Electiondot.png Democratic House District 40 Other office
Karin Power Electiondot.png Democratic House District 41 Retired
Barbara Smith Warner Electiondot.png Democratic House District 45 Retired
Jeff Reardon Electiondot.png Democratic House District 48 Retired
Lori Kuechler Electiondot.png Democratic House District 52 Retired[2]
Jack Zika Ends.png Republican House District 53 Retired
Daniel Bonham Ends.png Republican House District 59 Other office

Primary election competitiveness

See also: Primary election competitiveness in state and federal government, 2022

This section contains data on state legislative primary election competitiveness in Oregon. 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 Oregon in 2022. Information below was calculated on April 15, 2022, and may differ from information shown in the table above due to candidate replacements and withdrawals after that time.

Following Oregon's candidate filing deadline, voters were set to make more decisions in their state legislative primaries elections than at any point since at least 2014. Of the 150 possible primaries, 38—or 25.4%—were being contested by more than one candidate.

This was also the first time since 2014 when the contested Republican primaries outnumbers those for Democrats. This was likely driven by the fact that, for the first time since at least 2014, more Republicans filed to run for state legislative office than Democrats: 190 major party candidates filed, 90 Democrats (47%) and 100 Republicans (53%).

Additionally, 24 districts were left open, meaning no incumbents filed to run. That was the largest number of open districts since at least 2014. With 75 districts up for election, that also means 32% of districts were guaranteed to be won by newcomers. For those incumbents who filed for re-election, 18% (9) were set to face primary challengers, the largest percentage since at least 2014. Overall, 190 major party candidates filed, equaling 2.5 candidates per district, the same as in 2020 but higher than all previous cycles back to at least 2014.

Open seats

The table below shows the number and percentage of open seats in the Oregon House of Representatives from 2010 to 2022.[3]

Open Seats in Oregon House of Representatives elections: 2010 - 2022
Year Total seats Open seats Seats with incumbents running for re-election
2022 60 20 (33 percent) 40 (67 percent)
2020 60 11 (18 percent) 49 (82 percent)
2018 60 7 (12 percent) 53 (88 percent)
2016 60 14 (23 percent) 46 (77 percent)
2014 60 15 (25 percent) 45 (75 percent)
2012 60 8 (13 percent) 52 (87 percent)
2010 60 5 (8 percent) 55 (92 percent)

Incumbents running in new districts

When an incumbent files to run for re-election in the same chamber but a new district, it leaves his or her original seat open. This may happen for a variety of reasons ranging from redistricting to a change in residences. This may result in instances where multiple incumbents face each other in contested primaries or general elections if the incumbent in the new district also seeks re-election. In 2022, 11 incumbents filed to run for re-election in new districts different from those they represented before the election. Those incumbents were:

Incumbents running in new districts
Name Party Originally represented ... Filed in 2022 in ... New district open?
Christine Goodwin Ends.png Republican House District 2 House District 4 Yes
John Lively Electiondot.png Democratic House District 12 House District 7 Yes
Jami Cate Ends.png Republican House District 17 House District 11 Yes
Bradley Witt Electiondot.png Democratic House District 31 House District 19 Yes
Ken Helm Electiondot.png Democratic House District 34 House District 27 Yes
Dacia Grayber Electiondot.png Democratic House District 35 House District 28 Yes
Lisa Reynolds Electiondot.png Democratic House District 36 House District 34 Yes
Janelle Bynum Electiondot.png Democratic House District 51 House District 39 Yes
James Hieb Ends.png Republican House District 39 House District 51 Yes
E. Werner Reschke Ends.png Republican House District 56 House District 55 Yes
Vikki Breese-Iverson Ends.png Republican House District 55 House District 59 Yes

Process to become a candidate

See also: Ballot access requirements for political candidates in Oregon

For major party candidates

DocumentIcon.jpg See statutes: Chapter 249, Sections 020, 068 and 056 of the Oregon Revised Statutes

A major party candidate can gain access to the ballot via one of two methods: by paying a filing fee or by filing a nominating petition.

Filing fee

A candidate of a major party can have his or her name printed on the ballot by filing a declaration of candidacy with the Oregon Secretary of State and paying the requisite filing fees. Filing fees are as follows:[4][5][6]

Filing fees for major party candidates in Oregon
Office sought Fee
United States Senator $150
Governor, secretary of state, treasurer, attorney general, labor and industries commissioner, United States Representative $100
State senator and state representative $25

Nominating petition

A candidate of a major party can have his or her name printed on the ballot by filing a nominating petition with the Oregon Secretary of State. Signature requirements are as follows:[7]

Petition signature requirements for major party candidates in Oregon
Office sought Required signatures
United States Representative
The lesser of 1,000 signatures
or 2 % of the number of votes cast in the district for president by members of the candidate’s party
Governor, Secretary of State, Treasurer, Attorney General, United States Senator
The lesser of 1,000 signatures
or 2 % of the number of votes cast for president by members of the candidate’s party
State Senator & State Representative
The lesser of 500 signatures
or 2 % of the number of votes cast in the district for president by members of the candidate’s party

For minor party candidates

Recognized minor parties (as defined in this article) are not permitted to participate in primary elections and instead must select candidates by nominating convention.

For unaffiliated candidates

An unaffiliated candidate can gain access to the ballot via one of two methods: nomination by individual electors or nomination by an assembly of electors.

Nomination by individual electors

DocumentIcon.jpg See statutes: Chapter 249, Section 740 of the Oregon Revised Statutes

An unaffiliated candidate must submit the appropriate filing form with the Oregon Secretary of State and obtain approval to circulate the nominating petition prior to collecting signatures. Once approval has been obtained, circulators must gather signatures equal to at least 1 percent of the total votes cast for all candidates for presidential electors in the most recent general election within the electoral district for which the nomination is being sought.[8]

Nomination by assembly of electors

DocumentIcon.jpg See statutes: Chapter 249, Section 735 of the Oregon Revised Statutes

The process for nomination by assembly of electors is described below:[9][10]

  • File Preliminary Certificate: Submit a draft certificate (minus signatures) to the Secretary of State, including a statement on paid circulators.
  • Announce Assembly: Not later than 10 days before a single‑day, 12‑hour meeting, publish notice once in three local newspapers; include date/time, office(s), and 25 or more petitioning electors.[11]
  • Hold Assembly: Convene at the published time and place with the statutory minimum voters (250 for local/state legislative; 500 for U.S. House; 1,000 for statewide/U.S. Senate), record each elector’s name/address and votes in the minutes.
  • Finalize Nomination: File the certified minutes and publication affidavit with the Secretary of State (or county clerk); signatures in the minutes are then verified and the nomination is accepted.[12][13]

Signature requirements for nomination by an assembly of electors are described in the table below.

Signature requirements for nomination by an assembly of electors in Oregon
Office sought Required signatures
United States Representative 500 signatures obtained at the assembly
Governor, secretary of state, treasurer, attorney general, United States Senator 1,000 signatures obtained at the assembly
State senator and state representative 250 signatures obtained at the assembly

For write-in candidates

Write-in candidates are not required to submit candidate filing forms in advance. In the event that a write-in candidate is nominated or elected, the election official will notify the candidate by sending a write-in acceptance form.[14] To accept the nomination or office, the candidate must complete, sign, and return the form to the election official.

Qualifications

See also: State legislature candidate requirements by state

Article 4, Section 8 of the Oregon Constitution states:

  • No person shall be a Senator or Representative who at the time of election is not a citizen of the United States; nor anyone who has not been for one year next preceding the election an inhabitant of the district from which the Senator or Representative may be chosen. However, for purposes of the general election next following the operative date of an apportionment under section 6 of this Article, the person must have been an inhabitant of the district from January 1 of the year following the reapportionment to the date of the election.
  • Senators and Representatives shall be at least twenty one years of age.
  • No person shall be a Senator or Representative who has been convicted of a felony during:
    • The term of office of the person as a Senator or Representative; or
    • The period beginning on the date of the election at which the person was elected to the office of Senator or Representative and ending on the first day of the term of office to which the person was elected.
  • No person is eligible to be elected as a Senator or Representative if that person has been convicted of a felony and has not completed the sentence received for the conviction prior to the date that person would take office if elected. As used in this subsection, “sentence received for the conviction” includes a term of imprisonment, any period of probation or post-prison supervision and payment of a monetary obligation imposed as all or part of a sentence.
  • Notwithstanding sections 11 and 15, Article IV of this Constitution:
    • The office of a Senator or Representative convicted of a felony during the term to which the Senator or Representative was elected or appointed shall become vacant on the date the Senator or Representative is convicted.
    • A person elected to the office of Senator or Representative and convicted of a felony during the period beginning on the date of the election and ending on the first day of the term of office to which the person was elected shall be ineligible to take office and the office shall become vacant on the first day of the next term of office.
  • Subject to subsection (4) of this section, a person who is ineligible to be a Senator or Representative under subsection (3) of this section may:
    • Be a Senator or Representative after the expiration of the term of office during which the person is ineligible; and
    • Be a candidate for the office of Senator or Representative prior to the expiration of the term of office during which the person is ineligible.
  • No person shall be a Senator or Representative who at all times during the term of office of the person as a Senator or Representative is not an inhabitant of the district from which the Senator or Representative may be chosen or has been appointed to represent. A person shall not lose status as an inhabitant of a district if the person is absent from the district for purposes of business of the Legislative Assembly. Following the operative date of an apportionment under section 6 of this Article, until the expiration of the term of office of the person, a person may be an inhabitant of any district.

Salaries and per diem

See also: Comparison of state legislative salaries
State legislative salaries, 2024[15]
SalaryPer diem
$35,052/year$157/day

When sworn in

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

Oregon legislators assume office the second Monday in January following the election.[16]

Oregon 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.

Oregon Party Control: 1992-2025
Seventeen 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 D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D
Senate D D D R R R R R R R R S S D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D
House R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R D D D D S S D D D D D D D D D D D D D

Presidential politics in Oregon

2020

See also: Presidential election, 2020


Presidential election in Oregon, 2020
 
Candidate/Running mate
%
Popular votes
Electoral votes
Image of
Image of
Joe Biden/Kamala D. Harris (D)
 
56.5
 
1,340,383 7
Image of
Image of
Donald Trump/Mike Pence (R)
 
40.4
 
958,448 0
Image of
Image of
Jo Jorgensen/Spike Cohen (L)
 
1.8
 
41,582 0
Image of
Image of
Howie Hawkins/Angela Nicole Walker (G)
 
0.5
 
11,831 0
Image of
Image of
Dario David Hunter/Dawn Neptune Adams (Progressive Party)
 
0.2
 
4,988 0
  Other write-in votes
 
0.7
 
17,089 0

Total votes: 2,374,321


2016

See also: Presidential election, 2016
U.S. presidential election, Oregon, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes Electoral votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngHillary Clinton/Tim Kaine 50.1% 1,002,106 7
     Republican Donald Trump/Mike Pence 39.1% 782,403 0
     Libertarian Gary Johnson/Bill Weld 4.7% 94,231 0
     Green Jill Stein/Ajamu Baraka 2.5% 50,002 0
     - Write-in votes 3.6% 72,594 0
Total Votes 2,001,336 7
Election results via: Oregon Secretary of State


Oregon presidential election results (1900-2024)

  • 16 Democratic wins
  • 16 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 R R R R D R R R R R D D D D D D D D D D


Voting information

See also: Voting in Oregon

Election information in Oregon: Nov. 8, 2022, election.

What was the voter registration deadline?

  • In-person: Oct. 18, 2022
  • By mail: Postmarked by Oct. 18, 2022
  • Online: Oct. 18, 2022

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

N/A

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

  • In-person: N/A
  • By mail: N/A by N/A
  • Online: N/A

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

  • In-person: Nov. 8, 2022
  • By mail: Postmarked by Nov. 8, 2022

Was early voting available to all voters?

Yes

What were the early voting start and end dates?

N/A to N/A

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?

N/A


Redistricting following the 2020 census

Gov. Kate Brown (D) signed new state legislative maps into law on September 27, 2021. The maps were approved by the Oregon House of Representatives, 31-18, and approved in the Oregon State Senate 18-11.[17] These maps took effect for Oregon’s 2022 legislative elections.

Below is the state House map in effect before and after the 2020 redistricting cycle.

Oregon State House Districts
until January 8, 2023

Click a district to compare boundaries.

Oregon State House Districts
starting January 9, 2023

Click a district to compare boundaries.


See also

Oregon State Legislative Elections News and Analysis
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Oregon State Executive Offices
Oregon State Legislature
Oregon Courts
State legislative elections:
202520242023202220212020201920182017201620152014
Oregon elections:
20252024202320222021202020192018201720162015
Primary elections in Oregon
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. 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.
  2. Kuechler was appointed to fill a vacancy left by Rep. Anna Williams, who resigned after the primary.
  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. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 020," accessed April 24, 2025
  5. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 035," accessed April 24, 2025
  6. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 056," accessed January 10, 2014
  7. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 068," accessed April 24, 2025
  8. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 740," accessed April 24, 2025
  9. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 735," accessed April 24, 2025
  10. Oregon Secretary of State, "2020 State Candidate Manual," April 24, 2025
  11. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 737," accessed April 24, 2025
  12. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 720," accessed April 24, 2025
  13. Oregon Revised Statutes, "Chapter 249, Section 008," accessed April 24, 2025
  14. Oregon Secretary of State, "Candidate Filing - Write-in Acceptance Form (SEL 141)," accessed April 24, 2025
  15. National Conference of State Legislatures, "2024 Legislator Compensation," August 21, 2024
  16. Oregon Constitution, "Article IV, Section 4," accessed February 17, 2021
  17. Oregon State Legislature, "SB 882 Enrolled," accessed September 28, 2021


Current members of the Oregon House of Representatives
Leadership
Speaker of the House:Julie Fahey
Majority Leader:Ben Bowman
Representatives
District 1
District 2
District 3
District 4
District 5
Pam Marsh (D)
District 6
District 7
District 8
District 9
District 10
District 11
Jami Cate (R)
District 12
District 13
District 14
District 15
District 16
District 17
Ed Diehl (R)
District 18
District 19
District 20
District 21
District 22
District 23
District 24
District 25
District 26
District 27
Ken Helm (D)
District 28
District 29
District 30
District 31
District 32
District 33
District 34
District 35
District 36
Hai Pham (D)
District 37
District 38
District 39
District 40
District 41
District 42
Rob Nosse (D)
District 43
District 44
District 45
Thuy Tran (D)
District 46
District 47
District 48
District 49
District 50
District 51
District 52
District 53
District 54
District 55
District 56
District 57
District 58
District 59
District 60
Democratic Party (37)
Republican Party (23)