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Statewide elections, 2012
2012 elections
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Elections |
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Elections calendar |
State Poll Opening and Closing Times |
Voter identification laws by state |
More elections coverage on Ballotpedia |
Officials on the ballot:
State Executive Officials: Governors, Lt. Governors, Secretaries of State, Attorneys General, State Treasurers, Auditors, Superintendents of Schools, Public Service Commissioners, Commissioners of Insurance, Commissioner of Agriculture, Natural Resources Commissioner, Labor Commissioner
State Legislators: State Senators and State Representatives
Topics on the ballot:
Election dates:
- → See 2012 election dates
A total of 103 statewide elections were scheduled for 2012. (Note: this does not include special elections or local ballot measure elections).
Signature requirements and deadlines:
Click on a state for details.
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Congress
A total of 468 seats in the U.S. Congress were up for election on November 6, 2012.
Heading into the election, Democrats control the U.S. Senate while Republicans were the majority in the U.S. House. During this presidential election season, partisan dominance of both chambers of the U.S. Congress were at stake.
U.S. Senate
- See also: United States Senate elections, 2012
The 33 Class 1 U.S. Senate seats were up for election. Of those 33 seats, 23 were held by Democrats and 10 by Republican senators. Democrats needed to win 21 seats to retain their majority while the GOP needed to win 14 seats to win back the chamber.
U.S. Senate Partisan Breakdown | |||
---|---|---|---|
Party | As of November 2012 | After the 2012 Election | |
Democratic Party | 51 | 53 | |
Republican Party | 47 | 45 | |
Independent | 2 | 2 | |
Total | 100 | 100 |
Defeated incumbents
One incumbent was defeated in the general election on November 6, 2012. Republican Scott Brown of Massachusetts lost to Elizabeth Warren (D).
US Senate Margin of victory
There were a total of 33 seats up for election in 2012. The following table shows the margin of victory for each race winner, which is calculated by examining the percentage difference between the top-two vote getters. If the race was uncontested, the margin of victory is listed as 100%. Some general facts:
- The fewest votes were in Wyoming, with only 244,445 total votes.
- The most votes were in California, with 12,578,511
- The average margin of victory was 20 percent.
- The smallest margin of victory, where Democrat Heidi Heitkamp defeated Rick Berg (R) by 0.9 percent.
- The largest margin of victory was in Wyoming, where Republican John Barrasso defeated Tim Chesnut (D) by 54.1%
- 11 races had a margin of victory of less than 10 percent. Of those 11 races, 9 were Democratic winners while 2 were Republican.
Margin of Victory in 2012 United States Senate Races | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
State | Winner | Margin of Victory | Total Votes | Top Opponent | ||||
North Dakota | ![]() |
0.9% | 319,738 | Rick Berg | ||||
Nevada | ![]() |
1.2% | 997,805 | Shelley Berkely | ||||
Arizona | ![]() |
3% | 2,243,422 | Richard Carmona | ||||
Montana | ![]() |
3.7% | 486,066 | Denny Rehberg | ||||
Wisconsin | ![]() |
5.6% | 2,999,757 | Tommy Thompson | ||||
New Mexico | ![]() |
5.7% | 775,176 | Heather Wilson | ||||
Indiana | ![]() |
5.8% | 2,560,102 | Richard Mourdock | ||||
Virginia | ![]() |
5.9% | 3,802,196 | George F. Allen | ||||
Ohio | ![]() |
6% | 5,449,018 | Josh Mandel | ||||
Massachusetts | ![]() |
7.5% | 3,184,196 | Scott Brown | ||||
Pennsylvania | ![]() |
9.1% | 5,627,422 | Tom Smith | ||||
Connecticut | ![]() |
12.1% | 1,503,168 | Linda McMahon | ||||
Florida | ![]() |
13% | 8,189,946 | Connie Mack | ||||
Nebraska | ![]() |
15.5% | 788,572 | Bob Kerrey | ||||
Missouri | ![]() |
15.7% | 2,725,752 | Todd Akin | ||||
Texas | ![]() |
15.8% | 7,864,822 | Paul Sadler | ||||
Mississippi | ![]() |
16.6% | 1,241,568 | Albert N. Gore, Jr. | ||||
New Jersey | ![]() |
19.5% | 3,366,604 | Joe Kyrillos | ||||
Michigan | ![]() |
20.8% | 4,652,849 | Pete Hoekstra | ||||
Washington | ![]() |
20.9% | 3,069,417 | Michael Baumgartner | ||||
West Virginia | ![]() |
23.9% | 647,521 | John R. Raese | ||||
Hawaii | ![]() |
24.8% | 437,082 | Linda Lingle | ||||
California | ![]() |
25% | 12,578,511 | Elizabeth Emken | ||||
Maryland | ![]() |
29.7% | 2,630,840 | Dan Bongino | ||||
Rhode Island | ![]() |
29.8% | 418,189 | B. Barrett Hinckley, III | ||||
Minnesota | ![]() |
34.7% | 2,843,207 | Kurt Bills | ||||
Tennessee | ![]() |
34.7% | 2,304,961 | Mark E. Clayton | ||||
Utah | ![]() |
35.6% | 999,728 | Scott Howell | ||||
Delaware | ![]() |
37.9% | 379,347 | Kevin Wade | ||||
Maine | ![]() |
38.3% | 724,720 | Cynthia Dill | ||||
New York | ![]() |
42.9% | 7,116,628 | Wendy Long | ||||
Vermont | ![]() |
46.1% | 292,510 | John MacGovern | ||||
Wyoming | ![]() |
54.1% | 244,445 | Tim Chesnut |
Ballotpedia staff counted 10 total U.S. Senate incumbents who did not run for re-election in the 2012 elections.
Name: | Party: | Current office: |
---|---|---|
Ben Nelson | ![]() | Nebraska |
Daniel Akaka | ![]() | Hawaii |
Herb Kohl | ![]() | Wisconsin |
Jeff Bingaman | ![]() | New Mexico |
Jim Webb | ![]() | Virginia |
Joe Lieberman | ![]() | Connecticut |
Jon Kyl | ![]() | Arizona |
Kay Bailey Hutchison | ![]() | Texas |
Kent Conrad | ![]() | North Dakota |
Olympia Snowe | ![]() | Maine |
U.S. House
All 435 seats of the U.S. House were up for election.
U.S. House Partisan Breakdown | |||
---|---|---|---|
Party | As of November 2012 | After the 2012 Election | |
Democratic Party | 193 | 201 | |
Republican Party | 242 | 234 | |
Total | 435 | 435 |
Defeated incumbents
A total of 27 incumbents were defeated in the general election on November 6, 2012. Of those 27 incumbents, 10 were Democrats and 17 were Republicans.
U.S. House incumbents defeated in 2012 general election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | District | ||||||
Allen B. West | ![]() |
Florida, District 22 | ||||||
Ann Marie Buerkle | ![]() |
New York, District 25 | ||||||
Ben Chandler | ![]() |
Kentucky, District 6 | ||||||
Betty Sutton | ![]() |
Ohio, District 13 | ||||||
Robert T. Schilling | ![]() |
Illinois, District 17 | ||||||
Brian Bilbray | ![]() |
California, District 50 | ||||||
Charles Bass | ![]() |
New Hampshire, District 2 | ||||||
Chip Cravaack | ![]() |
Minnesota, District 8 | ||||||
Dan Lungren | ![]() |
California, District 3 | ||||||
David Rivera | ![]() |
Florida, District 25 | ||||||
Francisco Canseco | ![]() |
Texas, District 23 | ||||||
Frank Guinta | ![]() |
New Hampshire, District 1 | ||||||
Howard Berman | ![]() |
California, District 28 | ||||||
Jeff Landry | ![]() |
Louisiana, District 3 | ||||||
Joe Baca | ![]() |
California, District 43 | ||||||
Joe Walsh | ![]() |
Illinois, District 8 | ||||||
Judy Biggert | ![]() |
Illinois, District 13 | ||||||
Kathy Hochul | ![]() |
New York, District 26 | ||||||
Larry Kissell | ![]() |
North Carolina, District 8 | ||||||
Laura Richardson | ![]() |
California, District 37 | ||||||
Leonard Boswell | ![]() |
Iowa, District 3 | ||||||
Mark Critz | ![]() |
Pennsylvania, District 12 | ||||||
Mary Bono Mack | ![]() |
California, District 45 | ||||||
Nan Hayworth | ![]() |
New York, District 19 | ||||||
Pete Stark | ![]() |
California, District 13 | ||||||
Robert J. Dold | ![]() |
Illinois, District 10 | ||||||
Roscoe Bartlett | ![]() |
Maryland, District 6 |
US House Margin of victory
There were a total of 435 seats up for election in 2012. The following table shows the margin of victory for each race winner, which is calculated by examining the percentage difference between the top-two vote getters. If the race was uncontested, the margin of victory is listed as 100%. Some general facts:
- 30 races (6.9 percent) had a margin of victory of less than 5 percent. Of those 30 races, 18 were Democratic winners while 12 were Republican.
- 33 races (7.6 percent) had a margin of victory between 5 and 10 percent. Of those 33 races, 15 were Democratic winners while 18 were Republican.
- 87 races (20 percent) had a margin of victory between 10 and 20 percent. Of those 87 races, 23 were Democratic winners while 64 were Republican.
- 285 races (65.5 percent) had a margin of victory of greater than 20 percent. Of those 285 races, 145 were Democratic winners while 140 were Republican.
- The fewest votes were in Texas' 29th District, with only 95,611 total votes. Incumbent Gene Green (D) faced two third-party candidates in the general election.
- The most votes were in Montana, with 479,740 votes cast. Montana has a total population of 998,199 -- which is roughly 250,000 above the average district size in states without single districts. Because Montana has only one district for the whole state, its voters per district is higher than the rest of the country. The average size of each district is 709,000. The second-most votes cast came in Colorado's 2nd District, with 421,580 total votes.
- The smallest margin of victory, was North Carolina's 7th District, where incumbent Democrat Mike McIntyre defeated David Rouzer (R) by 0.2 percent (654 votes).
- The largest margin of victory where both major parties fielded a general election candidate was in New York's 15th District, where incumbent Democrat Jose Serrano defeated Frank Della Valle (R) by 83%.
- The average margin of victory of all congressional districts was 31.85%, meaning that on average the winner of each race received nearly twice as many votes as the top opponent. Average MOV for Democratic winners was 35.7%, while the average for Republicans was 28.6%.
- The average number of votes cast per district was 281,917, yielding an average voter turnout of 39.76%.
Margin of Victory in 2012 United States House of Representatives Elections | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
State | Winner | Margin of Victory | Total Votes | Top Opponent | ||||
North Carolina, District 7 | ![]() |
0.2% | 336,736 | David Rouzer | ||||
Illinois, District 13 | ![]() |
0.3% | 294,385 | David Gill | ||||
Utah, District 4 | ![]() |
0.3% | 245,277 | Mia B. Love | ||||
Michigan, District 1 | ![]() |
0.5% | 347,037 | Gary McDowell | ||||
Florida, District 18 | ![]() |
0.6% | 330,665 | Allen West | ||||
Arizona, District 2 | ![]() |
0.8% | 292,279 | Martha McSally | ||||
Massachusetts, District 6 | ![]() |
1.1% | 389,852 | Richard Tisei | ||||
Minnesota, District 6 | ![]() |
1.2% | 355,153 | Jim Graves | ||||
Illinois, District 10 | ![]() |
1.3% | 264,454 | Robert J. Dold | ||||
Indiana, District 2 | ![]() |
1.4% | 273,475 | Brendan Mullen | ||||
New York, District 27 | ![]() |
1.5% | 329,768 | Kathy Hochul | ||||
Nebraska, District 2 | ![]() |
1.6% | 263,731 | John Ewing | ||||
New York, District 21 | ![]() |
1.9% | 268,741 | Matthew Doheny | ||||
Colorado, District 6 | ![]() |
2% | 342,891 | Joe Miklosi | ||||
California, District 52 | ![]() |
2.4% | 295,910 | Brian Bilbray | ||||
Connecticut, District 5 | ![]() |
2.6% | 284,747 | Andrew Roraback | ||||
California, District 7 | ![]() |
3.4% | 273,291 | Dan Lungren | ||||
Florida, District 10 | ![]() |
3.5% | 318,269 | Val Demings | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 12 | ![]() |
3.5% | 338,941 | Mark Critz | ||||
Arizona, District 1 | ![]() |
3.6% | 251,595 | Jonathon Paton | ||||
New York, District 23 | ![]() |
3.6% | 279,796 | Nate Shinagawa | ||||
New York, District 18 | ![]() |
3.7% | 295,436 | Nan Hayworth | ||||
New Hampshire, District 1 | ![]() |
3.8% | 344,830 | Frank Guinta | ||||
Kentucky, District 6 | ![]() |
3.9% | 303,000 | Ben Chandler | ||||
Arizona, District 9 | ![]() |
4.1% | 250,141 | Vernon B. Parker | ||||
Ohio, District 16 | ![]() |
4.1% | 355,765 | Betty Sutton | ||||
California, District 15 | ![]() |
4.2% | 231,034 | Pete Stark | ||||
New York, District 1 | ![]() |
4.6% | 294,578 | Randy Altschuler | ||||
New Hampshire, District 2 | ![]() |
4.8% | 337,188 | Charles Bass | ||||
Texas, District 23 | ![]() |
4.8% | 192,169 | Francisco Canseco | ||||
New York, District 11 | ![]() |
5% | 214,755 | Mark Murphy | ||||
New York, District 19 | ![]() |
5.3% | 305,882 | Julian Schreibman | ||||
New York, District 24 | ![]() |
5.3% | 303,567 | Ann Marie Buerkle | ||||
California, District 26 | ![]() |
5.4% | 263,935 | Tony Strickland | ||||
California, District 10 | ![]() |
5.4% | 209,199 | Jose Hernandez | ||||
Florida, District 2 | ![]() |
5.5% | 333,718 | Al Lawson | ||||
California, District 36 | ![]() |
5.9% | 208,142 | Mary Bono Mack | ||||
North Carolina, District 9 | ![]() |
6.1% | 375,690 | Jennifer Roberts | ||||
Michigan, District 11 | ![]() |
6.4% | 358,124 | Syed Taj | ||||
Ohio, District 6 | ![]() |
6.5% | 308,980 | Charlie Wilson | ||||
Illinois, District 17 | ![]() |
6.6% | 288,152 | Bobby Schilling | ||||
West Virginia, District 3 | ![]() |
7.1% | 191,518 | Rick Snuffer | ||||
Florida, District 16 | ![]() |
7.2% | 349,076 | Keith Fitzgerald | ||||
Georgia, District 12 | ![]() |
7.4% | 259,121 | Lee Anderson | ||||
Nevada, District 3 | ![]() |
7.5% | 272,523 | John Oceguera | ||||
Virginia, District 2 | ![]() |
7.7% | 309,222 | Paul Hirschbiel | ||||
North Carolina, District 8 | ![]() |
7.8% | 302,280 | Larry Kissell | ||||
California, District 33 | ![]() |
7.9% | 318,520 | Bill Bloomfield | ||||
Washington, District 1 | ![]() |
7.9% | 328,212 | John Koster | ||||
Nevada, District 4 | ![]() |
8% | 240,492 | Danny Tarkanian | ||||
Iowa, District 4 | ![]() |
8.1% | 377,657 | Christie Vilsack | ||||
Minnesota, District 2 | ![]() |
8.2% | 358,446 | Mike Obermuller | ||||
Michigan, District 3 | ![]() |
8.4% | 326,281 | Steve Pestka | ||||
California, District 3 | ![]() |
8.5% | 233,968 | Kim Vann | ||||
Iowa, District 3 | ![]() |
8.6% | 386,270 | Leonard Boswell | ||||
Illinois, District 12 | ![]() |
8.9% | 303,947 | Jason Plummer | ||||
Minnesota, District 8 | ![]() |
8.9% | 353,663 | Chip Cravaack | ||||
New Jersey, District 3 | ![]() |
8.9% | 324,408 | Shelley Adler | ||||
Texas, District 14 | ![]() |
8.9% | 245,839 | Nick Lampson | ||||
Hawaii, District 1 | ![]() |
9% | 217,796 | Charles Djou | ||||
Florida, District 22 | ![]() |
9.3% | 313,071 | Adam Hasner | ||||
Illinois, District 8 | ![]() |
9.5% | 225,066 | Joe Walsh | ||||
California, District 25 | ![]() |
9.6% | 236,575 | Lee Rogers | ||||
California, District 24 | ![]() |
10.2% | 284,495 | Abel Maldonado | ||||
Michigan, District 7 | ![]() |
10.3% | 318,069 | Kurt R. Haskell | ||||
Indiana, District 8 | ![]() |
10.3% | 283,992 | Dave Crooks | ||||
California, District 31 | ![]() |
10.4% | 161,219 | Bob Dutton | ||||
Montana, At-Large, District | ![]() |
10.5% | 479,740 | Kim Gillan | ||||
Florida, District 26 | ![]() |
10.6% | 252,957 | David Rivera | ||||
Indiana, District 9 | ![]() |
10.9% | 298,180 | Shelli Yoder | ||||
California, District 9 | ![]() |
11.1% | 213,077 | Ricky Gill | ||||
South Carolina, District 5 | ![]() |
11.1% | 278,003 | Joyce Knott | ||||
South Carolina, District 7 | ![]() |
11.1% | 275,738 | Gloria Bromell Tinubu | ||||
Tennessee, District 4 | ![]() |
11.5% | 230,590 | Eric Stewart | ||||
Wisconsin, District 1 | ![]() |
11.5% | 365,058 | Rob Zerban | ||||
Oregon, District 5 | ![]() |
11.6% | 327,970 | Fred Thompson | ||||
California, District 35 | ![]() |
11.7% | 142,680 | Joe Baca | ||||
Michigan, District 6 | ![]() |
12% | 320,475 | Mike O'Brien | ||||
Wisconsin, District 8 | ![]() |
12% | 355,464 | Jamie Wall | ||||
Rhode Island, District 1 | ![]() |
12.1% | 205,115 | Brendan Doherty | ||||
Colorado, District 3 | ![]() |
12.3% | 347,247 | Sal Pace | ||||
New Jersey, District 5 | ![]() |
12.3% | 304,371 | Adam Gussen | ||||
Wisconsin, District 7 | ![]() |
12.3% | 359,669 | Pat Kreitlow | ||||
Virginia, District 5 | ![]() |
12.6% | 348,111 | John Douglass | ||||
Colorado, District 7 | ![]() |
12.7% | 340,970 | Joe Coors, Jr. | ||||
Ohio, District 7 | ![]() |
12.8% | 315,812 | Joyce Healy-Abrams | ||||
Iowa, District 2 | ![]() |
13.1% | 380,952 | John Archer | ||||
California, District 47 | ![]() |
13.1% | 230,012 | Gary DeLong | ||||
North Dakota, At-Large, District | ![]() |
13.2% | 316,224 | Pam Gulleson | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 8 | ![]() |
13.2% | 352,238 | Kathryn Boockvar | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 15 | ![]() |
13.5% | 297,724 | Rick Daugherty | ||||
North Carolina, District 13 | ![]() |
13.6% | 370,610 | Charles Malone | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 3 | ![]() |
13.8% | 302,514 | Missa Eaton | ||||
North Carolina, District 10 | ![]() |
14% | 334,849 | Patricia Keever | ||||
Virginia, District 4 | ![]() |
14% | 350,046 | Ella Ward | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 6 | ![]() |
14.3% | 335,528 | Manan Trivedi | ||||
Florida, District 6 | ![]() |
14.4% | 342,451 | Heather Beaven | ||||
New York, District 25 | ![]() |
14.4% | 322,760 | Maggie Brooks | ||||
North Carolina, District 2 | ![]() |
14.5% | 311,397 | Steve Wilkins | ||||
New York, District 3 | ![]() |
14.6% | 306,274 | Stephen Labate | ||||
California, District 1 | ![]() |
14.8% | 294,213 | Jim Reed | ||||
California, District 16 | ![]() |
14.8% | 147,450 | Brian Daniel Whelan | ||||
California, District 8 | ![]() |
14.8% | 179,644 | Greg Imus | ||||
North Carolina, District 11 | ![]() |
14.8% | 331,426 | Hayden Rogers | ||||
South Dakota, At-Large, District | ![]() |
14.9% | 361,429 | Matt Varilek | ||||
Florida, District 13 | ![]() |
15.1% | 329,347 | Jessica Ehrlich | ||||
North Carolina, District 5 | ![]() |
15.1% | 349,197 | Elisabeth Motsinger | ||||
Virginia, District 1 | ![]() |
15.1% | 356,806 | Adam Cook | ||||
Minnesota, District 1 | ![]() |
15.2% | 335,880 | Allen Quist | ||||
Ohio, District 14 | ![]() |
15.3% | 339,868 | Dale Virgil Blanchard | ||||
Iowa, District 1 | ![]() |
15.4% | 390,590 | Ben Lange | ||||
New York, District 2 | ![]() |
15.4% | 271,832 | Vivianne Falcone | ||||
California, District 21 | ![]() |
15.5% | 116,283 | John Hernandez | ||||
California, District 39 | ![]() |
15.6% | 251,967 | Jay Chen | ||||
Maine, District 2 | ![]() |
15.7% | 343,908 | Kevin Raye | ||||
Arkansas, District 2 | ![]() |
15.7% | 286,598 | Herb Rule | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 16 | ![]() |
15.8% | 284,781 | Aryanna Strader | ||||
Minnesota, District 3 | ![]() |
16.3% | 382,705 | Brian Barnes | ||||
California, District 49 | ![]() |
16.3% | 274,618 | Jerry Tetalman | ||||
California, District 45 | ![]() |
16.9% | 293,231 | Sukhee Kang | ||||
Virginia, District 7 | ![]() |
17% | 381,909 | E. Wayne Powell | ||||
Illinois, District 11 | ![]() |
17.1% | 254,276 | Judy Biggert | ||||
Arkansas, District 1 | ![]() |
17.1% | 246,843 | Scott Ellington | ||||
Colorado, District 2 | ![]() |
17.1% | 421,580 | Kevin Lundberg | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 11 | ![]() |
17.1% | 285,198 | Gene Stilp | ||||
New Jersey, District 7 | ![]() |
17.1% | 307,315 | Upendra Chivukula | ||||
Washington, District 10 | ![]() |
17.1% | 278,417 | Richard Muri | ||||
Florida, District 17 | ![]() |
17.3% | 282,266 | William Bronson | ||||
Ohio, District 2 | ![]() |
17.3% | 331,373 | William R. Smith | ||||
Florida, District 7 | ![]() |
17.4% | 316,010 | Jason Kendall | ||||
New Jersey, District 2 | ![]() |
17.4% | 289,069 | Cassandra Shober | ||||
Texas, District 27 | ![]() |
17.5% | 212,651 | Rose Meza Harrison | ||||
Illinois, District 14 | ![]() |
17.6% | 301,954 | Dennis Anderson | ||||
California, District 40 | ![]() |
17.8% | 125,553 | David Sanchez | ||||
California, District 41 | ![]() |
17.9% | 175,652 | John Tavaglione | ||||
Washington, District 6 | ![]() |
18% | 316,386 | Bill Driscoll | ||||
Ohio, District 5 | ![]() |
18.1% | 351,878 | Angela Zimmann | ||||
New Mexico, District 2 | ![]() |
18.2% | 225,515 | Evelyn Madrid Erhard | ||||
Kansas, District 2 | ![]() |
18.3% | 293,718 | Tobias Schlingensiepen | ||||
New Mexico, District 1 | ![]() |
18.3% | 275,856 | Janice Arnold-Jones | ||||
Illinois, District 6 | ![]() |
18.4% | 326,129 | Leslie Coolidge | ||||
New Jersey, District 11 | ![]() |
18.8% | 309,859 | John Arvanites | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 7 | ![]() |
18.8% | 353,451 | George Badey | ||||
Texas, District 6 | ![]() |
18.8% | 249,936 | Kenneth Sanders | ||||
Texas, District 32 | ![]() |
18.8% | 251,636 | Katherine Savers McGovern | ||||
Oklahoma, District 2 | ![]() |
19% | 250,612 | Rob Wallace | ||||
Washington, District 8 | ![]() |
19.3% | 302,090 | Karen Porterfield | ||||
Virginia, District 10 | ![]() |
19.7% | 366,444 | Kristin Cabral | ||||
Connecticut, District 4 | ![]() |
19.9% | 293,432 | Steve Obsitnik | ||||
New York, District 22 | ![]() |
19.9% | 280,189 | Dan Lamb | ||||
Oregon, District 4 | ![]() |
20.1% | 360,088 | Art Robinson | ||||
Ohio, District 1 | ![]() |
20.1% | 349,716 | Jeff Sinnard | ||||
California, District 44 | ![]() |
20.4% | 165,898 | Laura Richardson | ||||
California, District 30 | ![]() |
20.6% | 247,851 | Howard Berman | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 17 | ![]() |
20.6% | 267,601 | Laureen Cummings | ||||
Rhode Island, District 2 | ![]() |
20.6% | 222,660 | Michael G. Riley | ||||
Indiana, District 5 | ![]() |
20.8% | 333,359 | Scott Reske | ||||
Washington, District 3 | ![]() |
20.8% | 293,884 | Jon T. Haugen | ||||
Maryland, District 6 | ![]() |
20.9% | 309,549 | Roscoe Bartlett | ||||
Texas, District 25 | ![]() |
21% | 263,932 | Elaine M. Henderson | ||||
Arizona, District 3 | ![]() |
21.2% | 168,698 | Gabriela Saucedo Mercer | ||||
California, District 42 | ![]() |
21.2% | 214,947 | Michael Williamson | ||||
Michigan, District 8 | ![]() |
21.3% | 345,054 | Lance Enderle | ||||
Florida, District 8 | ![]() |
21.4% | 348,909 | Shannon Roberts | ||||
Oklahoma, District 5 | ![]() |
21.4% | 261,677 | Tom Guild | ||||
Nevada, District 2 | ![]() |
21.4% | 281,449 | Samuel Koepnick | ||||
Colorado, District 4 | ![]() |
21.7% | 342,076 | Brandon Shaffer | ||||
Louisiana, District 3 | ![]() |
21.8% | 96,584 | Jeff Landry | ||||
North Carolina, District 6 | ![]() |
21.8% | 364,583 | Tony Foriest | ||||
Ohio, District 4 | ![]() |
21.9% | 312,998 | Jim Slone | ||||
California, District 48 | ![]() |
22% | 290,502 | Ron Varasteh | ||||
Ohio, District 10 | ![]() |
22.1% | 349,671 | Sharen Swartz Neuhardt | ||||
California, District 4 | ![]() |
22.2% | 323,688 | Jack Uppal | ||||
Washington, District 2 | ![]() |
22.3% | 302,291 | Dan Matthews | ||||
Virginia, District 9 | ![]() |
22.7% | 301,658 | Anthony Flaccavento | ||||
Arkansas, District 4 | ![]() |
22.8% | 258,953 | Gene Jeffress | ||||
California, District 53 | ![]() |
22.9% | 268,307 | Nick Popaditch | ||||
Missouri, District 2 | ![]() |
23% | 394,448 | Glenn Koenen | ||||
Ohio, District 15 | ![]() |
23.1% | 333,462 | Pat Lang | ||||
Florida, District 27 | ![]() |
23.2% | 230,171 | Manny Yevancey | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 9 | ![]() |
23.3% | 274,305 | Karen Ramsburg | ||||
Mississippi, District 1 | ![]() |
23.5% | 309,177 | Brad Morris | ||||
Illinois, District 16 | ![]() |
23.6% | 294,090 | Wanda Rohl | ||||
Missouri, District 5 | ![]() |
23.6% | 330,936 | Jacob Turk | ||||
California, District 22 | ![]() |
23.8% | 213,941 | Otto Lee | ||||
Washington, District 5 | ![]() |
23.8% | 308,578 | Rich Cowan | ||||
Indiana, District 6 | ![]() |
24% | 275,253 | Brad Bookout | ||||
Texas, District 15 | ![]() |
24% | 146,661 | Dale A. Brueggemann | ||||
Georgia, District 7 | ![]() |
24.3% | 252,066 | Steve Reilly | ||||
Texas, District 10 | ![]() |
24.3% | 264,019 | Tawana W. Cadien | ||||
Wisconsin, District 6 | ![]() |
24.3% | 359,745 | Joe Kallas | ||||
Texas, District 7 | ![]() |
24.4% | 234,837 | James Cargas | ||||
Massachusetts, District 4 | ![]() |
24.5% | 373,114 | Sean Bielat | ||||
West Virginia, District 1 | ![]() |
24.6% | 194,863 | Sue Thorn | ||||
Missouri, District 4 | ![]() |
24.8% | 318,723 | Teresa Hensley | ||||
Massachusetts, District 9 | ![]() |
24.9% | 385,799 | Christopher Sheldon | ||||
Florida, District 9 | ![]() |
25% | 263,747 | Todd Long | ||||
Texas, District 24 | ![]() |
25% | 243,489 | Tim Rusk | ||||
Texas, District 21 | ![]() |
25.2% | 308,865 | Candace E. Duval | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 4 | ![]() |
25.3% | 303,980 | Harry Perkinson | ||||
Minnesota, District 7 | ![]() |
25.5% | 327,576 | Lee Byberg | ||||
Virginia, District 11 | ![]() |
25.5% | 332,243 | Chris Perkins | ||||
Indiana, District 7 | ![]() |
25.7% | 257,950 | Carlos May | ||||
Texas, District 34 | ![]() |
25.7% | 144,778 | Jessica Puente Bradshaw | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 5 | ![]() |
25.8% | 282,465 | Charles Dumas | ||||
Georgia, District 1 | ![]() |
26% | 249,580 | Lesli Messinger | ||||
Tennessee, District 3 | ![]() |
26% | 256,829 | Mary Headrick | ||||
New York, District 4 | ![]() |
26.1% | 299,484 | Francis Becker Jr. | ||||
Florida, District 19 | ![]() |
26.2% | 306,216 | Jim Roach | ||||
North Carolina, District 3 | ![]() |
26.2% | 309,885 | Erik Anderson | ||||
New Mexico, District 3 | ![]() |
26.2% | 264,719 | Jeff Byrd | ||||
South Carolina, District 1 | ![]() |
26.3% | 290,013 | Bobbie Rose | ||||
Texas, District 31 | ![]() |
26.3% | 237,187 | Stephen M. Wyman | ||||
Oregon, District 1 | ![]() |
26.6% | 331,980 | Delinda Morgan | ||||
New York, District 17 | ![]() |
26.7% | 297,379 | Joe Carvin | ||||
Michigan, District 2 | ![]() |
26.9% | 318,267 | Willie German, Jr. | ||||
Ohio, District 12 | ![]() |
26.9% | 368,474 | James Reese | ||||
Kentucky, District 4 | ![]() |
27.2% | 299,444 | Bill Adkins | ||||
Alabama, District 2 | ![]() |
27.3% | 283,953 | Therese Ford | ||||
Georgia, District 2 | ![]() |
27.6% | 255,161 | John House | ||||
Florida, District 23 | ![]() |
27.6% | 275,430 | Karen Harrington | ||||
California, District 46 | ![]() |
27.7% | 149,815 | Jerry Hayden | ||||
Indiana, District 4 | ![]() |
27.8% | 272,268 | Tara Nelson | ||||
Michigan, District 9 | ![]() |
27.9% | 337,316 | Don Volaric | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 18 | ![]() |
27.9% | 338,873 | Larry Maggi | ||||
California, District 27 | ![]() |
28% | 241,008 | Jack Orswell | ||||
Arizona, District 6 | ![]() |
28% | 293,177 | Matt Jette | ||||
New Jersey, District 6 | ![]() |
28.1% | 239,638 | Anna Little | ||||
Alabama, District 3 | ![]() |
28.2% | 273,930 | John Andrew Harris | ||||
Maine, District 1 | ![]() |
28.3% | 380,715 | Jonathan Courtney | ||||
Arizona, District 8 | ![]() |
28.3% | 272,791 | Gene Scharer | ||||
Wisconsin, District 3 | ![]() |
28.3% | 339,764 | Ray Boland | ||||
New Jersey, District 4 | ![]() |
28.5% | 306,247 | Brian Froelich | ||||
Utah, District 2 | ![]() |
28.7% | 248,545 | Jay Seegmiller | ||||
Georgia, District 6 | ![]() |
29% | 294,034 | Jeff Kazanow | ||||
Florida, District 11 | ![]() |
29% | 338,663 | David Werder | ||||
Kentucky, District 3 | ![]() |
29.4% | 322,656 | Brooks Wicker | ||||
Michigan, District 4 | ![]() |
29.5% | 312,949 | Debra Freidell Wirth | ||||
Alabama, District 5 | ![]() |
30% | 291,293 | Charlie L. Holley | ||||
Louisiana, District 2 | ![]() |
30.1% | 287,354 | Gary Landrieu | ||||
Idaho, District 2 | ![]() |
30.3% | 318,494 | Nicole LeFavour | ||||
Maryland, District 8 | ![]() |
30.4% | 343,256 | Ken Timmerman | ||||
Texas, District 20 | ![]() |
30.4% | 186,177 | David Rosa | ||||
Florida, District 12 | ![]() |
30.5% | 330,167 | Jonathan Michael Snow | ||||
Kansas, District 4 | ![]() |
30.6% | 258,922 | Robert Leo Tillman | ||||
Missouri, District 3 | ![]() |
30.6% | 338,385 | Eric C. Mayer | ||||
Massachusetts, District 3 | ![]() |
30.7% | 335,111 | Jon Golnik | ||||
Virginia, District 6 | ![]() |
30.7% | 323,893 | Andy Schmookler | ||||
Minnesota, District 4 | ![]() |
30.8% | 347,991 | Tony Hernandez | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 10 | ![]() |
31.2% | 273,790 | Philip Scollo | ||||
South Carolina, District 4 | ![]() |
31.2% | 266,884 | Deb Morrow | ||||
Texas, District 5 | ![]() |
31.2% | 208,230 | Linda S. Mrosko | ||||
California, District 32 | ![]() |
31.4% | 190,111 | David Miller | ||||
Oklahoma, District 1 | ![]() |
31.4% | 285,312 | John Olson | ||||
Delaware, At-Large, District | ![]() |
31.5% | 368,154 | Thomas Kovach | ||||
Texas, District 35 | ![]() |
31.9% | 165,179 | Susan Narvaiz | ||||
Nevada, District 1 | ![]() |
32% | 179,278 | Chris Edwards | ||||
Texas, District 22 | ![]() |
32.1% | 250,911 | Kesha Rogers | ||||
Texas, District 2 | ![]() |
32.1% | 246,328 | Jim Dougherty | ||||
Idaho, District 1 | ![]() |
32.2% | 316,724 | Jimmy Farris | ||||
Florida, District 3 | ![]() |
32.3% | 315,669 | Jacques Rene Gaillot, Jr. | ||||
New York, District 6 | ![]() |
32.4% | 186,932 | Daniel Halloran | ||||
Washington, District 4 | ![]() |
32.4% | 233,689 | Mary Baechler | ||||
Missouri, District 6 | ![]() |
32.5% | 333,688 | Kyle Yarber | ||||
Texas, District 16 | ![]() |
32.5% | 155,005 | Barbara Carrasco | ||||
Tennessee, District 5 | ![]() |
32.5% | 263,083 | Brad Staats | ||||
Kentucky, District 2 | ![]() |
32.6% | 282,267 | David Lynn Williams | ||||
Illinois, District 9 | ![]() |
32.7% | 293,793 | Timothy Wolfe | ||||
Missouri, District 7 | ![]() |
33% | 318,731 | Jim Evans | ||||
South Carolina, District 3 | ![]() |
33.3% | 254,763 | Brian Doyle | ||||
Michigan, District 5 | ![]() |
33.5% | 330,146 | Jim Slezak | ||||
Virginia, District 8 | ![]() |
34% | 351,187 | Patrick Murray | ||||
Indiana, District 3 | ![]() |
34.1% | 280,235 | Kevin Boyd | ||||
Arizona, District 5 | ![]() |
34.4% | 273,059 | Spencer Morgan | ||||
Maryland, District 2 | ![]() |
34.5% | 295,940 | Nancy Jacobs | ||||
New York, District 20 | ![]() |
34.5% | 317,678 | Robert Dieterich | ||||
Indiana, District 1 | ![]() |
34.6% | 279,034 | Joel Phelps | ||||
California, District 38 | ![]() |
35.1% | 215,087 | Benjamin Campos | ||||
Alaska, At-Large, District | ![]() |
35.3% | 289,804 | Sharon M. Cissna | ||||
Mississippi, District 4 | ![]() |
35.3% | 285,432 | Matthew Moore | ||||
California, District 50 | ![]() |
35.4% | 258,293 | David Secor | ||||
Wisconsin, District 5 | ![]() |
35.7% | 369,664 | Dave Heaster | ||||
Maryland, District 1 | ![]() |
35.9% | 337,760 | Wendy Rosen | ||||
Wisconsin, District 2 | ![]() |
36% | 390,898 | Chad Lee | ||||
Mississippi, District 2 | ![]() |
36.2% | 320,244 | Bill Marcy | ||||
Nebraska, District 1 | ![]() |
36.6% | 256,095 | Korey L. Reiman | ||||
Kansas, District 3 | ![]() |
36.9% | 293,762 | Joel Balam | ||||
Illinois, District 3 | ![]() |
37% | 246,391 | Richard Grabowski | ||||
Georgia, District 11 | ![]() |
37.1% | 287,321 | Patrick Thompson | ||||
Illinois, District 5 | ![]() |
37.1% | 270,377 | Dan Schmitt | ||||
Illinois, District 15 | ![]() |
37.2% | 299,937 | Angela Michael | ||||
Maryland, District 3 | ![]() |
37.3% | 319,859 | Eric Delano Knowles | ||||
Texas, District 28 | ![]() |
38.1% | 165,645 | William R. Hayward | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 13 | ![]() |
38.2% | 303,819 | Joe Rooney | ||||
New Jersey, District 1 | ![]() |
38.3% | 308,519 | Greg Horton | ||||
Arizona, District 4 | ![]() |
38.5% | 243,760 | Johnnie Robinson | ||||
Connecticut, District 2 | ![]() |
38.9% | 299,960 | Paul M Formica | ||||
Michigan, District 12 | ![]() |
39% | 319,223 | Cynthia Kallgren | ||||
Michigan, District 10 | ![]() |
39.1% | 328,612 | Chuck Stadler | ||||
Kentucky, District 1 | ![]() |
39.3% | 287,155 | Charles Kendall Hatchett | ||||
California, District 11 | ![]() |
39.5% | 287,879 | Virginia Fuller | ||||
Oregon, District 2 | ![]() |
39.5% | 332,255 | Joyce Segers | ||||
Texas, District 26 | ![]() |
39.6% | 258,723 | David Sanchez | ||||
West Virginia, District 2 | ![]() |
39.6% | 226,165 | Howard Swint | ||||
New Jersey, District 12 | ![]() |
39.7% | 274,398 | Eric Beck | ||||
Tennessee, District 8 | ![]() |
39.9% | 279,422 | Timothy Dixon | ||||
Illinois, District 2 | ![]() |
40.1% | 297,424 | Brian Woodworth | ||||
Oklahoma, District 4 | ![]() |
40.3% | 260,331 | Donna Marie Bebo | ||||
Florida, District 14 | ![]() |
40.5% | 280,601 | Evelio Otero Jr. | ||||
California, District 18 | ![]() |
41% | 301,934 | Dave Chapman | ||||
Colorado, District 1 | ![]() |
41.5% | 348,210 | Danny Stroud | ||||
Maryland, District 5 | ![]() |
41.7% | 343,820 | Anthony O'Donnell | ||||
Ohio, District 3 | ![]() |
41.9% | 295,647 | Chris Long | ||||
Connecticut, District 1 | ![]() |
42% | 297,061 | John Henry Decker | ||||
California, District 2 | ![]() |
42.5% | 317,526 | Daniel W. Roberts | ||||
Alabama, District 6 | ![]() |
42.5% | 308,102 | Penny H. Bailey | ||||
California, District 43 | ![]() |
42.5% | 200,894 | Bob Flores | ||||
Florida, District 1 | ![]() |
42.5% | 342,594 | James Bryan | ||||
California, District 51 | ![]() |
43% | 159,398 | Michael Crimmins | ||||
Washington, District 9 | ![]() |
43.2% | 268,139 | Jim Postma | ||||
Georgia, District 13 | ![]() |
43.5% | 281,538 | S. Malik | ||||
Texas, District 12 | ![]() |
44.2% | 247,712 | Dave Robinson | ||||
Texas, District 36 | ![]() |
44.2% | 233,832 | Max Martin | ||||
Florida, District 5 | ![]() |
44.5% | 269,153 | LeAnne Kolb | ||||
Texas, District 1 | ![]() |
44.5% | 249,658 | Shirley J. McKellar | ||||
Wyoming, At-Large, District | ![]() |
45.1% | 241,205 | Chris Henrichsen | ||||
Louisiana, District 1 | ![]() |
45.4% | 290,410 | Vinny Mendoza | ||||
Ohio, District 13 | ![]() |
45.5% | 323,612 | Marisha Agana | ||||
Georgia, District 14 | ![]() |
45.9% | 219,192 | Daniel Grant | ||||
New York, District 26 | ![]() |
46.2% | 304,961 | Michael Madigan | ||||
California, District 23 | ![]() |
46.4% | 216,003 | Terry Phillips | ||||
California, District 19 | ![]() |
46.5% | 221,613 | Robert Murray | ||||
New York, District 16 | ![]() |
46.5% | 270,320 | Joseph McLaughlin | ||||
Texas, District 33 | ![]() |
46.7% | 117,375 | Chuck Bradley | ||||
Utah, District 1 | ![]() |
46.8% | 245,528 | Donna M. McAleer | ||||
Tennessee, District 7 | ![]() |
47% | 257,306 | Credo Amouzouvik | ||||
Georgia, District 4 | ![]() |
47.1% | 283,902 | J. Chris Vaughn | ||||
California, District 17 | ![]() |
47.1% | 216,728 | Evelyn Li | ||||
Missouri, District 8 | ![]() |
47.4% | 300,391 | Jack Rushin | ||||
Wisconsin, District 4 | ![]() |
47.4% | 325,788 | Dan Sebring | ||||
Illinois, District 1 | ![]() |
47.6% | 320,843 | Donald Peloquin | ||||
Massachusetts, District 5 | ![]() |
47.9% | 364,201 | Tom Tierney | ||||
California, District 29 | ![]() |
48.1% | 150,281 | David Hernandez | ||||
California, District 20 | ![]() |
48.1% | 233,562 | Jeff Taylor | ||||
Alabama, District 4 | ![]() |
48.1% | 269,118 | Daniel H. Boman | ||||
Illinois, District 18 | ![]() |
48.3% | 329,631 | Steve Waterworth | ||||
Nebraska, District 3 | ![]() |
48.3% | 252,689 | Mark Sullivan | ||||
Vermont, At-Large, District | ![]() |
48.7% | 289,663 | Mark Donka | ||||
Massachusetts, District 8 | ![]() |
48.9% | 371,694 | Joe Selvaggi | ||||
California, District 5 | ![]() |
48.9% | 272,417 | Randy Loftin | ||||
North Carolina, District 4 | ![]() |
48.9% | 348,485 | Tim D'Annunzio | ||||
New Jersey, District 9 | ![]() |
48.9% | 220,133 | Shmuley Boteach | ||||
Texas, District 4 | ![]() |
48.9% | 250,343 | VaLinda Hathcox | ||||
Minnesota, District 5 | ![]() |
49.3% | 351,969 | Chris Fields | ||||
Connecticut, District 3 | ![]() |
49.4% | 291,299 | Wayne Winsley | ||||
Ohio, District 9 | ![]() |
50% | 298,164 | Samuel Wurzelbacher | ||||
California, District 6 | ![]() |
50.1% | 214,073 | Joseph McCray, Sr. | ||||
Louisiana, District 4 | ![]() |
50.6% | 249,531 | Randall Lord | ||||
Tennessee, District 9 | ![]() |
51.3% | 250,984 | George Flinn Jr. | ||||
Alabama, District 7 | ![]() |
51.8% | 306,558 | Don Chamberlain | ||||
Georgia, District 9 | ![]() |
52.4% | 252,153 | Jody Cooley | ||||
Texas, District 18 | ![]() |
52.4% | 194,932 | Sean Seibert | ||||
North Carolina, District 1 | ![]() |
52.5% | 338,066 | Pete DiLauro | ||||
California, District 28 | ![]() |
53% | 246,711 | Phil Jennerjahn | ||||
New York, District 10 | ![]() |
53.2% | 236,323 | Michael Chan | ||||
Utah, District 3 | ![]() |
53.2% | 259,547 | Soren D. Simonsen | ||||
Tennessee, District 2 | ![]() |
53.8% | 264,505 | Troy Goodale | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 14 | ![]() |
53.8% | 327,634 | Hans Lessmann | ||||
Oregon, District 3 | ![]() |
54.7% | 355,875 | Ronald Green | ||||
New York, District 12 | ![]() |
54.7% | 268,287 | Christopher Wight | ||||
Oklahoma, District 3 | ![]() |
55.3% | 268,003 | Timothy Ray Murray | ||||
Maryland, District 7 | ![]() |
55.7% | 323,818 | Frank Mirabile, Jr. | ||||
Kentucky, District 5 | ![]() |
55.8% | 250,853 | Kenneth Stepp | ||||
Tennessee, District 1 | ![]() |
56.2% | 239,672 | Alan Woodruff | ||||
Maryland, District 4 | ![]() |
56.4% | 311,512 | Faith Loudon | ||||
Texas, District 8 | ![]() |
57% | 251,052 | Neil Burns | ||||
Colorado, District 5 | ![]() |
57.6% | 307,231 | Jim Pirtle | ||||
California, District 14 | ![]() |
57.8% | 258,283 | Deborah Bacigalupi | ||||
New York, District 14 | ![]() |
57.9% | 170,995 | William Gibbons Jr. | ||||
Hawaii, District 2 | ![]() |
58.3% | 219,162 | Kawika "David" Crowley | ||||
Texas, District 9 | ![]() |
58.8% | 183,566 | Steve Mueller | ||||
New Jersey, District 8 | ![]() |
59.1% | 167,790 | Maria Karczewski | ||||
North Carolina, District 12 | ![]() |
59.3% | 310,908 | Jack Brosch | ||||
Washington, District 7 | ![]() |
59.3% | 374,580 | Ron Bemis | ||||
Massachusetts, District 7 | ![]() |
59.5% | 285,134 | Karla Romero | ||||
Texas, District 30 | ![]() |
59.8% | 217,014 | Travis Washington, Jr. | ||||
Arkansas, District 3 | ![]() |
59.9% | 245,660 | Rebekah Kennedy | ||||
Texas, District 17 | ![]() |
59.9% | 179,262 | Ben Easton | ||||
Mississippi, District 3 | ![]() |
60% | 293,322 | John Luke Pannell | ||||
Texas, District 11 | ![]() |
60.1% | 226,023 | Jim Riley | ||||
Missouri, District 1 | ![]() |
60.8% | 340,583 | Robyn Hamlin | ||||
Virginia, District 3 | ![]() |
62.8% | 318,936 | Dean Longo | ||||
Louisiana, District 5 | ![]() |
63.4% | 260,216 | Ron Ceasar | ||||
Arizona, District 7 | ![]() |
63.5% | 127,827 | Joe Cobb | ||||
Illinois, District 4 | ![]() |
66% | 160,505 | Hector Concepcion | ||||
Michigan, District 14 | ![]() |
66.6% | 328,792 | John Hauler | ||||
New York, District 5 | ![]() |
66.8% | 224,508 | Allan Jennings Jr. | ||||
Florida, District 25 | ![]() |
67.1% | 200,229 | VoteforEddie.Com | ||||
Tennessee, District 6 | ![]() |
67.5% | 241,241 | Pat Riley | ||||
New York, District 9 | ![]() |
67.8% | 238,957 | Daniel Cavanagh | ||||
Georgia, District 5 | ![]() |
68.8% | 277,665 | Howard Stopeck | ||||
Louisiana, District 6 | ![]() |
68.9% | 306,713 | Rufus Holt Craig,Jr | ||||
Florida, District 21 | ![]() |
68.9% | 284,400 | Cesear Henao | ||||
Michigan, District 13 | ![]() |
69.1% | 284,270 | Harry T. Sawicki | ||||
New York, District 13 | ![]() |
69.8% | 233,172 | Craig Schley | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 1 | ![]() |
69.9% | 277,102 | John Featherman | ||||
Texas, District 19 | ![]() |
70% | 192,063 | Richard Peterson | ||||
California, District 12 | ![]() |
70.2% | 298,187 | John Dennis | ||||
New York, District 8 | ![]() |
70.4% | 236,292 | Alan Bellone | ||||
California, District 34 | ![]() |
71.2% | 140,590 | Stephen Smith | ||||
California, District 37 | ![]() |
72.8% | 239,580 | Morgan Osborne | ||||
California, District 13 | ![]() |
73.6% | 288,582 | Marilyn M. Singleton | ||||
Illinois, District 7 | ![]() |
73.7% | 286,428 | Rita Zak | ||||
Massachusetts, District 2 | ![]() |
74.5% | 342,736 | All Others | ||||
New York, District 7 | ![]() |
74.7% | 178,825 | James Murray | ||||
Florida, District 20 | ![]() |
75.8% | 244,285 | Randall Terry | ||||
Florida, District 4 | ![]() |
76% | 315,470 | Gary Koniz | ||||
Massachusetts, District 1 | ![]() |
76.6% | 336,555 | All Others | ||||
New Jersey, District 10 | ![]() |
77% | 230,060 | Brian Kelemen | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 2 | ![]() |
79.9% | 356,386 | Robert Mansfield | ||||
New York, District 15 | ![]() |
83% | 178,645 | Frank Della Valle | ||||
Texas, District 13 | ![]() |
84.8% | 206,388 | John Robert Deek | ||||
Texas, District 29 | ![]() |
84.8% | 95,611 | James Stanczak | ||||
South Carolina, District 6 | ![]() |
88.1% | 233,615 | Nammu Y Muhammad | ||||
South Carolina, District 2 | ![]() |
92.5% | 203,718 | Write-In | ||||
Alabama, District 1 | ![]() |
95.7% | 200,676 | N/A | ||||
Ohio, District 8 | ![]() |
98.4% | 248,316 | James Condit Jr. | ||||
Georgia, District 8 | ![]() |
100% | 197,789 | Unopposed | ||||
Georgia, District 10 | ![]() |
100% | 211,065 | Unopposed | ||||
Georgia, District 3 | ![]() |
100% | 232,380 | Unopposed | ||||
Kansas, District 1 | ![]() |
100% | 211,337 | Unopposed | ||||
Ohio, District 11 | ![]() |
100% | 258,359 | Unopposed | ||||
Texas, District 3 | ![]() |
100% | 187,180 | Unopposed | ||||
Florida, District 15 | ![]() |
100% | 01 | Unopposed | ||||
Florida, District 24 | ![]() |
100% | 01 | Unopposed | ||||
1Note: In Florida, if a candidate runs unopposed, then there are no votes captured in the election. Thus, the total votes counted is 0. |
Ballotpedia staff counted 43 total U.S. House incumbents who did not run for re-election in the 2012 elections.
- (a) - After originally announcing he would not seek re-election, Davis subsequently resigned prior to the end of the 112th Congress on July 31, 2012.
- (b) - After announcing he would run for governor rather than re-election to Congress, Inslee subsequently resigned from the House of Representatives on March 10, 2012.
- (c) - McCotter failed to file enough valid signatures to qualify for the ballot for his House seat. He subsequently resigned prior to the end of the 112th Congress on July 6, 2012.
State executives
Twenty-two states were scheduled to hold state executive official elections in 2012. In those elections, a total of 37 state executive seats and 57 down ballot seats are up for election. Wisconsin also held two special recall elections for Gov. Scott Walker and Lt. Gov Rebecca Kleefisch on June 5, 2012.
Positions up for election in 2012 included governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, treasurer, auditor, superintendent of schools, insurance commissioner, natural resources commissioner, agriculture commissioner, labor commissioner, public service commissioner and railroad commissioner.
State legislatures
- See also: State legislative elections, 2012
In the 50 states, 86 of the 99 chambers held state legislative elections on November 6, 2012.
1,301 (65.97%) of the country's 1,972 state senate seats were up for re-election in November 2012, and 4,714 (87.12%) of the country's 5,411 state house seats were up for re-election. Altogether, 6,015 (81.47%) of the country's 7,383 state legislative seats were up for re-election during the presidential election year.
- 43 of the 50 state senates held elections.
- 43 of the 49 state houses held elections.
The 6,015 seats up for election were 111 fewer than the 6,125 that were contested in 2010.
See also
Ballot measures
- See also: 2012 ballot measures and Local ballot measure elections in 2012
State measures
|
2012 ballot measures |
Tuesday Count • 2012 Scorecard |
Potential measures • Calendar ![]() |
2012 U.S. State Ballot Measures | |
---|---|
2013 »
« 2011
| |
![]() | |
Part 1: Overview | |
Measure results | |
Polls | |
Endorsements | |
Part 2: Finances | |
Contributions | |
Signature costs | |
Ballot Measure Monthly | |
Signature requirements | |
Finance disclosure rules |
184 ballot questions were certified for spots on 39 statewide ballots in 2012.
172 of those ballot questions were on the November 6, 2012 ballot in 38 states. A total of 8 elections on statewide ballot measures were scheduled for 2012.
Historically, even-numbered election years feature significantly higher measures than odd-numbered years. In 2010 alone, 184 ballot questions were certified for spots on 38 statewide ballots. In comparison, only 34 ballot measures were on the ballot in 9 states in 2011.
In 2012, veto referendums exploded on the scene. In 2008, 6 veto referendums were on the ballot for voters to decide on. Two years later in the next even-numbered election year, in 2010, only 4 made the ballot. 13 veto referendums appeared on the ballot for 2012. 11 of those measures appeared on the fall election ballot. Referendums in 2012 challenged a variety of legislation including same-sex marriage, medical marijuana and redistricting.
With Legislative referrals, there was a decrease in 2012, with 119 on the ballot, not including advisory questions and automatic ballot referrals. In 2010, there were 134 legislative referrals that were sent to the ballot, leaving 2012 with 15 less referrals. However, in the previous presidential election in 2008, there were only 100 legislative referrals on the ballot, 19 less than 2012.
Ballot initiatives saw a slight increase from 2010, with 50 citizen-initiatives on the ballot, four more than in 2010. However, compared to 2008, 2012's total fell short of that year's by 18.
Also on the ballot were three constitutional convention questions that were automatically referred to the ballot due to provisions in those respective states' constitutions.
The top five political topics included: taxes, administration of government, bond issues, state judiciary, and law enforcement. This page features election results for all 172 ballot questions that were on the November 6, 2012 general election ballot in 38 states. Additionally, results are listed below for some of the most notable local measures on the November 6 ballot.
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ELECTION RESULTS |
NOTABLE BALLOT MEASURES |
2012 ballot measure calendar |
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Local measures
As of the November 2012 election there have been 30 elections held for the year and 3,818 local ballot questions appeared on ballots in 11 states in 2012. A total of 30 elections were scheduled in 2012.
- 2,831 measures were approved.
- 969 measures were defeated.
Ballotpedia currently tracks a total of 11 states at the local level, based on the availability of comprehensive online election information. A county election website evaluation study can be seen here.
Judicial elections
- In thirteen states, Judgepedia provides coverage from the filing deadline to the oath of office. Those states are: Wisconsin, Ohio, Alabama, Louisiana, North Carolina, Idaho, Oregon, Arkansas, California, Georgia, Tennessee, Michigan, and Florida.
- The 33 Supreme Court elections will be covered from start to finish.
- In the seven states with only retention elections, Judgepedia will make sure judge pages are enhanced with biographical information and campaign updates.
- Judgepedia will also cover appellate races and general jurisdiction trial court races in all thirty-nine states with judicial elections in 2012.
See also
Footnotes