2016 United States Senate elections















2016 United States Senate elections







← 2014
November 8, 2016
2018 →



Class 3 (34 of the 100) seats in the United States Senate
51 seats needed for a majority



























































































































 
Majority party
Minority party
 

Sen Mitch McConnell official.jpg

Harry Reid official portrait 2009.jpg
Leader

Mitch McConnell

Harry Reid
(retired)
Party

Republican

Democratic
Leader's seat

Kentucky

Nevada
Seats before

54
44
Seats after

52
46
Seat change

Decrease 2

Increase 2
Popular vote
40,402,790

51,496,682[Note 1]
Percentage
42.4%

53.8%[Note 1]
Swing

Decrease 9.3%

Increase 10.0%
Seats up

24
10
Races won

22
12

 
Third party

 


Party

Independent

Seats before
2[Note 2]

Seats after
2[Note 2]

Seat change
Steady
Popular vote
562,935

Percentage
0.5%

Swing

Decrease 1.0%

Seats up
0

Races won
0






United States Senate election in Alabama, 2016
United States Senate election in Alaska, 2016
United States Senate election in Arizona, 2016
United States Senate election in Arkansas, 2016
United States Senate election in California, 2016
United States Senate election in Colorado, 2016
United States Senate election in Connecticut, 2016
United States Senate election in Florida, 2016
United States Senate election in Georgia, 2016
United States Senate election in Hawaii, 2016
United States Senate election in Idaho, 2016
United States Senate election in Illinois, 2016
United States Senate election in Indiana, 2016
United States Senate election in Iowa, 2016
United States Senate election in Kansas, 2016
United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2016
United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2016
United States Senate election in Maryland, 2016
United States Senate election in Missouri, 2016
United States Senate election in Nevada, 2016
United States Senate election in New Hampshire, 2016
United States Senate election in New York, 2016
United States Senate election in North Carolina, 2016
United States Senate election in North Dakota, 2016
United States Senate election in Ohio, 2016
United States Senate election in Oklahoma, 2016
United States Senate election in Oregon, 2016
United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, 2016
United States Senate election in South Carolina, 2016
United States Senate election in South Dakota, 2016
United States Senate election in Utah, 2016
United States Senate election in Vermont, 2016
United States Senate election in Washington, 2016
United States Senate election in Wisconsin, 2016
2016 US Senate election results map.svg
About this image



Results of the 2016 general elections:
     Democratic gain      Republican gain
     Democratic hold      Republican hold









Majority Leader before election

Mitch McConnell
Republican



Elected Majority Leader

Mitch McConnell
Republican




Elections to the United States Senate were held November 8, 2016. The presidential election, House elections, 14 gubernatorial elections, and many state and local elections were held on the same date.


In the 2016 Senate elections, 34 of the 100 seats—all class 3 Senate seats—were contested in regular elections; the winners will serve six-year terms until January 3, 2023. Class 3 was last up for election in 2010, when Republicans won a net gain of six seats.


In 2016, Democrats defended 10 seats, while Republicans defended 24 seats. Republicans, having won a majority of seats in the Senate in 2014, held the Senate majority with 54 seats before this election. Democrats won a net gain of two seats. Republicans retained control of the Senate for the 115th United States Congress. Only two incumbents lost their seats, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and Mark Kirk of Illinois, to Democrats Maggie Hassan and Tammy Duckworth, respectively. Despite Republicans retaining control of the Senate, 2016 marks the first time since 1986 that Democrats made a net gain of seats in class 3. This is the first and only election since the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913 where the winning party in every Senate election mirrored the winning party for their state in the presidential election.[1][2]


This election marks the first time since 2000 in which the party in opposition to the elected or reelected presidential candidate made net gains in the Senate, with both cases being a Republican president and Democratic gains in the Senate.


With the retirement of Harry Reid, Chuck Schumer became the Democratic leader after the elections, while Mitch McConnell retained his position as Senate Majority Leader.




Contents






  • 1 Results summary


  • 2 Change in composition


    • 2.1 Before the elections


    • 2.2 After the general elections




  • 3 Final predictions of competitive seats in the general elections


  • 4 Close races


  • 5 Primary dates


  • 6 Race summary


    • 6.1 Elections leading to the next Congress




  • 7 Alabama


  • 8 Alaska


  • 9 Arizona


  • 10 Arkansas


  • 11 California


  • 12 Colorado


  • 13 Connecticut


  • 14 Florida


  • 15 Georgia


  • 16 Hawaii


  • 17 Idaho


  • 18 Illinois


  • 19 Indiana


  • 20 Iowa


  • 21 Kansas


  • 22 Kentucky


  • 23 Louisiana


  • 24 Maryland


  • 25 Missouri


  • 26 Nevada


  • 27 New Hampshire


  • 28 New York


  • 29 North Carolina


  • 30 North Dakota


  • 31 Ohio


  • 32 Oklahoma


  • 33 Oregon


  • 34 Pennsylvania


  • 35 South Carolina


  • 36 South Dakota


  • 37 Utah


  • 38 Vermont


  • 39 Washington


  • 40 Wisconsin


  • 41 See also


  • 42 Notes


  • 43 References





Results summary


All 34 Class 3 Senators were up for election in 2016; Class 3 consisted of 10 Democrats and 24 Republicans. Of the Senators not up for election, 34 Senators were Democrats, 30 Senators were Republicans and two Senators are independents who caucus with the Senate Democrats.
















































































































































































































































Parties






Total

Democratic

Republican
Independent

Libertarian

Green
Other
Before these elections
44
54
2



100
Not up
34
30
2



66


Class 1 (2012→2018)
23
8
2



33

Class 2 (2014→2020)
11
22
0



33
Up
10
24
0



34


Class 3 (2010→2016)
10
24
0



34

Special: All classes
0
0
0



0

General election
Incumbent retired
3
2




5


Held by same party
3
2




5

Replaced by other party
0
0




0

Result
3
2




5
Incumbent ran
7
22




29


Won re-election
7
20




27

Lost re-election

Decrease 2 Republicans replaced by Increase 2 Democrats




2

Lost renomination
but held by same party

0
0




0

Result
9
20




29

Total elected
12
22




34
Net gain/loss

Increase 2

Decrease 2
Steady Steady Steady Steady Steady

Nationwide vote
51,269,434
40,761,406
562,935
1,950,641
680,966
1,237,790
96,103,172

Share
53.54%
42.41%
0.58%
1.65%
0.71%
1.29%
100%


Result
46
52
2



100


Change in composition



Before the elections




























































































































D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
D20
D19
D18
D17
D16
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D21
D22
D23
D24
D25
D26
D27
D28
D29
D30
D40
Ran
D39
Ran
D38
Ran
D37
Ran
D36
Ran
D35
Ran
D34
D33
D32
D31
D41
Ran
D42
Retired
D43
Retired
D44
Retired
I1
I2
R54
Retired
R53
Retired
R52
Ran
R51
Ran

Majority →
R41
Ran
R42
Ran
R43
Ran
R44
Ran
R45
Ran
R46
Ran
R47
Ran
R48
Ran
R49
Ran
R50
Ran
R40
Ran
R39
Ran
R38
Ran
R37
Ran
R36
Ran
R35
Ran
R34
Ran
R33
Ran
R32
Ran
R31
Ran
R21
R22
R23
R24
R25
R26
R27
R28
R29
R30
R20
R19
R18
R17
R16
R15
R14
R13
R12
R11
R1
R2
R3
R4
R5
R6
R7
R8
R9
R10


After the general elections




























































































































D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
D20
D19
D18
D17
D16
D15
D14
D13
D12
D11
D21
D22
D23
D24
D25
D26
D27
D28
D29
D30
D40
Re-elected
D39
Re-elected
D38
Re-elected
D37
Re-elected
D36
Re-elected
D35
Re-elected
D34
D33
D32
D31
D41
Re-elected
D42
Hold
D43
Hold
D44
Hold
D45
Gain
D46
Gain
I1
I2
R52
Hold
R51
Hold

Majority →
R41
Re-elected
R42
Re-elected
R43
Re-elected
R44
Re-elected
R45
Re-elected
R46
Re-elected
R47
Re-elected
R48
Re-elected
R49
Re-elected
R50
Re-elected
R40
Re-elected
R39
Re-elected
R38
Re-elected
R37
Re-elected
R36
Re-elected
R35
Re-elected
R34
Re-elected
R33
Re-elected
R32
Re-elected
R31
Re-elected
R21
R22
R23
R24
R25
R26
R27
R28
R29
R30
R20
R19
R18
R17
R16
R15
R14
R13
R12
R11
R1
R2
R3
R4
R5
R6
R7
R8
R9
R10


Final predictions of competitive seats in the general elections


Several sites and individuals publish predictions of competitive seats. These predictions look at factors such as the strength of the incumbent (if the incumbent is running for re-election), the strength of the candidates, and the partisan leanings of the state (reflected in part by the state's Cook Partisan Voting Index rating). The predictions assign ratings to each seat, with the rating indicating the predicted advantage that a party has in winning that seat. Most election predictors use "tossup" to indicate that neither party has an advantage, "lean" to indicate that one party has a slight advantage, "likely" or "favored" to indicate that one party has a significant but not insurmountable advantage, and "safe" or "solid" to indicate that one party has a near-certain chance of victory. Some predictions also include a "tilt" rating that indicates that one party has an advantage that is not quite as strong as the "lean" rating would indicate.


Where a site gives a percentage probability as its primary indicator of expected outcome, the chart below classifies a race as follows:



  • Tossup: 50-55%

  • Tilt: 56-60%

  • Lean: 61-75%

  • Likely: 76-93%

  • Safe: 94-100%


The New York Times's Upshot gave the Democrats a 60% chance of winning the Senate on August 24, 2016;[3] on September 23, their model gave Republicans a 58% chance to maintain control.[4]


All seats classified with at least one rating of anything other than "safe" or "solid" are listed below.

















































































































































































































































































State

PVI
Incumbent

2010
result

Cook
Nov. 2
2016
[5]

Sabato
Nov. 7
2016
[6]

Roth.
Nov. 3
2016
[7]

Kos
Nov. 7
2016
[8]

RCP
Nov. 2
2016
[9]

538
Nov. 7
2016
[10]

NYT
Nov. 7
2016
[11]

TPM
Nov. 5
2016
[12]
Winner

Alaska

R+12

Lisa Murkowski (R)
39.5%[13]

Likely R

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

98% R

99+% R

Safe R
Murkowski (R)

Arizona

R+7

John McCain (R)
59.2%

Lean R

Likely R

Likely R

Likely R

Lean R

97% R

99% R

Safe R
McCain (R)

Colorado

D+1

Michael Bennet (D)

47.7%

Likely D

Safe D

Safe D

Safe D

Lean D

95% D

96% D

Likely D
Bennet (D)

Florida

R+2

Marco Rubio (R)
48.9%

Lean R

Lean R

Lean R

Likely R

Tossup

87% R

85% R

Lean R
Rubio (R)

Georgia

R+6

Johnny Isakson (R)
58.1%

Likely R

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

Likely R

97% R

99% R

Safe R
Isakson (R)

Illinois

D+8

Mark Kirk (R)
48.2%

Lean D

Likely D

Lean D

Safe D

Likely D

97% D

98% D

Safe D

Duckworth (D)

Indiana

R+5

Dan Coats (R)
(Retiring)
56.4%

Tossup

Lean R

Tossup

Tossup

Tossup

61% R

53% D

Lean R

Young (R)

Iowa

D+1

Chuck Grassley (R)
64.5%

Likely R

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

99+% R

99+% R

Safe R
Grassley (R)

Kentucky

R+13

Rand Paul (R)
55.7%

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

Safe R

Likely R

93% R

97% R

Safe R
Paul (R)

Louisiana

R+12

David Vitter (R)
(Retiring)
56.6%

Safe R

Likely R

Safe R

Safe R

Likely R

86% R

96% R

Likely R

Kennedy (R)

Missouri

R+5

Roy Blunt (R)
54.3%

Tossup

Lean R

Tossup

Tossup

Tossup

55% R

65% R

Tossup
Blunt (R)

Nevada

D+2

Harry Reid (D)
(Retiring)

50.2%

Tossup

Lean D

Tossup

Lean D

Tossup

57% D

60% D

Tossup

Cortez Masto (D)

New Hampshire

D+1

Kelly Ayotte (R)
60.2%

Tossup

Lean D

Tossup

Tossup

Tossup

53% D

55% R

Tossup

Hassan (D)

North Carolina

R+3

Richard Burr (R)
55.0%

Tossup

Lean R

Tossup

Tossup

Tossup

69% R

67% R

Tossup
Burr (R)

Ohio

R+1

Rob Portman (R)
57.3%

Lean R

Safe R

Likely R

Safe R

Likely R

98% R

97% R

Safe R
Portman (R)

Pennsylvania

D+1

Pat Toomey (R)
51.0%

Tossup

Lean D

Tossup

Tossup

Tossup

68% D

66% D

Lean D
Toomey (R)

Wisconsin

D+2

Ron Johnson (R)
51.9%

Tossup

Lean D

Tilt D

Lean D

Tossup

87% D

72% D

Lean D
Johnson (R)

Cook, Sabato, Rothenberg, Daily Kos Elections, FiveThirtyEight, Real Clear Politics, Talking Points Memo, and the New York Times consider the states listed below to be safe seats for the party currently holding the seat.











































Safe Republican
Safe Democratic

Alabama

CaliforniaO

Arkansas

Connecticut

Idaho

Hawaii

Kansas

MarylandO

North Dakota

New York

Oklahoma

Oregon

South Carolina

Vermont

South Dakota

Washington

Utah


O indicates an open seat



Close races


Red denotes Senate races won by Republicans; Blue denotes those won by Democrats.


States where the margin of victory was under 1%:


  1. New Hampshire, 0.14%

States where the margin of victory was between 1% and 5%:



  1. Pennsylvania, 1.43%

  2. Nevada, 2.43%

  3. Missouri, 2.79%

  4. Wisconsin, 3.36%


States where the margin of victory was between 5% and 10%:



  1. Colorado, 5.66%

  2. North Carolina, 5.70%

  3. Florida, 7.67%

  4. Indiana, 9.70%





Primary dates


This table shows the primary dates for regularly-scheduled elections. It also shows the type of primary.



  • "Open" primary: any registered voter can vote in any party's primary

  • "Closed" primary, only voters registered with a specific party can vote in that party's primary.

  • "Top-two" primary, all candidates run against each other regardless of party affiliation, and the top two candidates advance to the second round of voting. (In Louisiana, a candidate can win the election by winning a majority of the vote in the first round.)

  • All of the various other primary types are classified as "hybrid." Alaska in 2008 provides one example of a hybrid primary: The Democratic Party allowed unaffiliated voters to vote in its primary, while the Republican Party only allowed party members to vote in its primary.[14]


















































































































































































State
Date[15]
Type[14]

Alabama
Mar. 1R
Open

Arkansas
Mar. 1R
Open

Illinois
Mar 15
Hybrid

North Carolina
Mar 15
Hybrid

Ohio
Mar 15
Hybrid

Maryland
April 26
Hybrid

Pennsylvania
April 26
Closed

Indiana
May 3
Open

Idaho
May 17
Hybrid

Kentucky
May 17
Closed

Oregon
May 17
Hybrid

Georgia
May 24R
Open

California
June 7
Top-two

Iowa
June 7
Hybrid

South Dakota
June 7R
Hybrid

Nevada
June 14
Closed

North Dakota
June 14
Open

South Carolina
June 14R
Hybrid

Colorado
June 28
Hybrid

New York
June 28
Closed

Oklahoma
June 28R
Hybrid

Utah
June 28
Hybrid

Kansas
Aug 2
Closed

Missouri
Aug 2
Open

Washington
Aug 2
Top-two

Connecticut
Aug 9
Hybrid

Vermont
Aug 9
Open

Wisconsin
Aug 9
Open

Hawaii
Aug 13
Open

Alaska
Aug 16
Hybrid

Arizona
Aug 30
Hybrid

Florida
Aug 30
Closed

New Hampshire
Sep 13
Hybrid

Louisiana
Nov 8
Top-two

RIndicates a state that requires primary run-off elections under certain conditions.



Race summary



Elections leading to the next Congress


In these general elections, the winners were elected for the term beginning January 3, 2017; ordered by state.


All of the elections involved the Class 3 seats.






























































































































































































































































































State
(linked to
summaries below)

Incumbent
Results
Candidates
Senator
Party
Electoral history

Alabama

Richard Shelby
Republican

1986
1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Richard Shelby (Republican)[16] 64.0%
Ron Crumpton (Democratic)[17] 35.8%
Others (write-in) 0.2%

Alaska

Lisa Murkowski
Republican

2002 (Appointed)
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Lisa Murkowski (Republican)[18] 44%
Joe Miller (Libertarian)[19] 29%
Margaret Stock (Independent)[20][21] 13%
Ray Metcalfe (Democratic)[22] 12%

Arizona

John McCain
Republican

1986
1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ John McCain (Republican)[23] 53%
Ann Kirkpatrick (Democratic)[24] 41%
Pat Quinn (independent/Write-in)[25][26]
Gary Swing (Green/Write-in)[27] 5%

Arkansas

John Boozman
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ John Boozman (Republican)[28] 59.7%
Conner Eldridge (Democratic)[29] 36.3%
Frank Gilbert (Libertarian)[30] 4.0%

California

Barbara Boxer
Democratic

1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent retired.
New senator elected.
Democratic hold.

√ Kamala Harris (Democratic)[31] 61.8%
Loretta Sanchez (Democratic)[32] 38.2%

Colorado

Michael Bennet
Democratic

2009 (Appointed)
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Michael Bennet (Democratic)[33] 50.0%
Darryl Glenn (Republican)[34] 44.3%
Lily Tang Williams (Libertarian)[35] 3.6%
Arn Menconi (Green)[36] 1.3%

Connecticut

Richard Blumenthal
Democratic

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Richard Blumenthal (Democratic)[37] 63.2%
Dan Carter (Republican)[38] 34.6%
Richard Lion (Libertarian)[39] 1.1%
Jeff Russell (Green)[40] 1.0%

Florida

Marco Rubio
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Marco Rubio (Republican)[41] 52.0%
Patrick Murphy (Democratic)[42] 44.3%
Paul Stanton (Libertarian)[43] 2.1%

Georgia

Johnny Isakson
Republican

2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Johnny Isakson (Republican)[44] 54.8%
Jim Barksdale (Democratic)[45] 41%
Allen Buckley (Libertarian)[46] 4.16%


Hawaii

Brian Schatz
Democratic

2012 (Appointed)
2014 (Special)
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Brian Schatz (Democratic)[47] 73.6%
John Carroll (Republican)[47] 22.2%

Idaho

Mike Crapo
Republican

1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Mike Crapo (Republican)[48] 66.1%
Jerry Sturgill (Democratic)[49] 27.8%Ray Writz (Constitution)6.0%

Illinois

Mark Kirk
Republican

2010
Incumbent lost re-election.
New senator elected.
Democratic gain.

√ Tammy Duckworth (Democratic)[50] 54.9%
Mark Kirk (Republican)[51] 39.8%
Kent McMillen (Libertarian)[52] 3.2%
Scott Summers (Green)[53] 2.1%

Indiana

Dan Coats
Republican
1989 (Appointed)
1990 (Special)
1992
1998 (Retired)
2010
Incumbent retired.
New senator elected.
Republican hold.

√ Todd Young (Republican)[54] 52.1%
Evan Bayh (Democratic)[55] 42.4%
Lucy Brenton (Libertarian)[56] 5.5%

Iowa

Chuck Grassley
Republican

1980
1986
1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Chuck Grassley (Republican)[57] 60.1%
Patty Judge (Democratic)[58] 35.7%
John Heiderscheit (Libertarian)[59] 2.7%

Kansas

Jerry Moran
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Jerry Moran (Republican)[60] 62.1%
Patrick Wiesner (Democratic)[61] 32.2%
Robert Garrard (Libertarian)[62] 5.5%

Kentucky

Rand Paul
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Rand Paul (Republican)[63] 57.27%
Jim Gray (Democratic)[64] 42.73%

Louisiana

David Vitter
Republican

2004
2010
Incumbent retired.
New senator elected.
Republican hold.

√John N. Kennedy (Republican)[65] 60.65%
Foster Campbell (Democratic)[66] 39.35%

Maryland

Barbara Mikulski
Democratic

1986
1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent retired.
New senator elected.
Democratic hold.

√ Chris Van Hollen (Democratic)[67] 60.9%
Kathy Szeliga (Republican)[68] 35.7%
Margaret Flowers (Green)[69]

Missouri

Roy Blunt
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Roy Blunt (Republican)[70] 49.3%
Jason Kander (Democratic)[71] 46.2%
Jonathan Dine (Libertarian)[72]

Nevada

Harry Reid
Democratic

1986
1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent retired.
New senator elected.
Democratic hold.

√ Catherine Cortez Masto (Democratic) 47.1%[73]
Joe Heck (Republican) 44.7%[74]

Tom Jones (Independent American)
Tony Gumina (unaffiliated)
Tom Sawyer (unaffiliated)
Jarrod Michael Williams (unaffiliated)
(None of these candidates)



New Hampshire

Kelly Ayotte
Republican

2010
Incumbent lost re-election.
New senator elected.
Democratic gain.

√ Maggie Hassan (Democratic) 47.97%[75]
Kelly Ayotte (Republican) 47.87%[76]
Brian Chabot (Libertarian)[77]

New York

Chuck Schumer
Democratic

1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Chuck Schumer (Democratic) 70.4%[37]
Wendy Long (Republican) 27.4%[78]
Alex Merced (Libertarian)[79]
Robin Wilson (Green)[80]

North Carolina

Richard Burr
Republican

2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Richard Burr (Republican) 51.1%[81]
Deborah Ross (Democratic) 45.3%[82]
Sean Haugh (Libertarian)[83]

North Dakota

John Hoeven
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ John Hoeven (Republican) 78.4%[84]
Eliot Glassheim (Democratic) 17.0%[85]
Robert Marquette (Libertarian)[86]

Ohio

Rob Portman
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Rob Portman (Republican) 58.0%[87]
Ted Strickland (Democratic) 37.1%[88]
Joseph DeMare (Green)[89]

Oklahoma

James Lankford
Republican

2014 (Special)
Incumbent re-elected.

√ James Lankford (Republican) 67.7%[37]
Mike Workman (Democratic) 24.5%[90]
Robert Murphy (Libertarian)[91]

Oregon

Ron Wyden
Democratic

1996 (Special)
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Ron Wyden (Democratic) 56.1%[37]
Mark Callahan (Republican) 33.35%[92]
Jim Lindsay (Libertarian)[93]
Eric Navickas (Green)[93]

Pennsylvania

Pat Toomey
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Pat Toomey (Republican) 48.9%[94]
Katie McGinty (Democratic) 47.2%[95]
Edward Clifford (Libertarian)[96]

South Carolina

Tim Scott
Republican

2013 (Appointed)
2014 (Special)
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Tim Scott (Republican) 60.5%[37]
Thomas Dixon (Democratic) 37.0%[97]
Bill Bledsoe (Libertarian)[98]

South Dakota

John Thune
Republican

2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ John Thune (Republican) 71.8%[99]
Jay Williams (Democratic) 28.2%[100]

Utah

Mike Lee
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Mike Lee (Republican) 68.1%[101]
Misty K. Snow (Democratic) 27.1%[102]
Stoney Fonua (Independent American)
Bill Barron (unaffiliated)

Vermont

Patrick Leahy
Democratic

1974
1980
1986
1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Patrick Leahy (Democratic) 61.3%[103]
Scott Milne (Republican) 33.0%[104]
Pete Diamondstone (Liberty Union)
Cris Ericson (Marijuana)[verification needed]
Jerry Trudell (unaffiliated)


Washington

Patty Murray

Democratic

1992
1998
2004
2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Patty Murray (Democratic) 59.04%[105]
Chris Vance (Republican) 40.96%[106]

Wisconsin

Ron Johnson
Republican

2010
Incumbent re-elected.

√ Ron Johnson (Republican) 50.19%[107]
Russ Feingold (Democratic) 46.84%[108]
Phil Anderson (Libertarian) 2.7%[109]


Alabama











Alabama election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Richard Shelby, official portrait, 112th Congress (cropped).jpg

No image.svg
Nominee

Richard Shelby
Ron Crumpton

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,335,104
748,709
Percentage

63.9%
35.8%




Alabama Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Richard Shelby
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Richard Shelby
Republican






Incumbent Republican Richard Shelby won re-election to a sixth term in office. The primaries were held on March 1. Ron Crumpton, a marijuana legalization activist, was the Democratic nominee.[16] Shelby won re-election with 63.9% of the vote.


Shelby was first elected to the Senate in 1986 as a Democrat and was easily re-elected in 1992 as such. He switched his party affiliation to Republican on November 9, 1994, one day after the Republicans won control of both houses in the midterm elections. He won his first full term as a Republican in 1998 by a large margin and faced no significant opposition in 2004 or 2010.


Following the divisive Republican primary in Mississippi ahead of the 2014 election in which Senator Thad Cochran was almost defeated, it had been speculated that Shelby could also face a Tea Party primary challenger, due to his lengthy tenure and support for federal largesse. However, that didn't happen, in part due to his large campaign war chest, which stood at $19.4 million as of September 2015.[16] If Shelby had decided to retire, numerous high-profile Alabama Republicans were speculated to run, including U.S. Representatives Robert Aderholt, Mo Brooks, Bradley Byrne, Gary Palmer, Martha Roby, and Mike Rogers, State Treasurer Young Boozer, State Speaker Mike Hubbard, Lieutenant Governor Kay Ivey, State Senate President Pro Tempore Del Marsh, Secretary of State John Merrill, U.S. Appeals Court Judge William H. Pryor, Jr., former Governor Bob Riley, and Attorney General Luther Strange.[110][111][112] Shelby announced in January 2015 that he would run for re-election.[113]




















































Republican primary results[114]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Richard Shelby

505,586

64.91%


Republican
Jonathan McConnell
214,770
27.58%


Republican
John Martin
23,558
3.02%


Republican
Marcus Bowman
19,707
2.53%


Republican
Shadrack McGill
15,230
1.96%
Total votes

778,851

100.00%






























Democratic primary results[114]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Ron Crumpton

145,681

55.97%


Democratic
Charles Nana
114,617
44.03%
Total votes

260,298

100.00%









































United States Senate election in Alabama, 2016[115]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Richard Shelby (incumbent)

1,335,104

63.96%


Democratic
Ron Crumpton
748,709
35.87%


Write-in
Others
3,631
0.17%
Total votes

2,087,444

100.00%


Republican hold



Alaska











Alaska election




← 2010


2022 →
























































 

Lisa Murkowski 1 (cropped).jpg

Joe Miller at Carlson Center, Fairbanks, Alaska - 201010.jpg
Nominee

Lisa Murkowski

Joe Miller

Party

Republican

Libertarian
Popular vote

138,149
90,825
Percentage

44.3%
29.1%

 

Margaret Stock.jpg

3x4.svg
Nominee

Margaret Stock

Ray Metcalfe

Party

Independent

Democratic
Popular vote
41,194
36,200
Percentage
13.2%
11.6%




Alaska senate election results by state house district, 2016.svg

Results by state house district:
Murkowski:      30-40%      40-50%      50-60%
Miller:      40-50%








U.S. Senator before election

Lisa Murkowski
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Lisa Murkowski
Republican






Two-term Senator Lisa Murkowski (Republican) was appointed in 2002 and elected to a full term in 2004. She was defeated in the Republican primary in 2010 by Joe Miller. She later ran as a write-in candidate in the 2010 general election and was re-elected to a second full term with 40% of the vote, making her one of two senators in US history to win election via write-in votes. She was 59 years old in 2016. She ran for re-election.[18]


Thomas Lamb, a candidate for the State House in 2006, and Bob Lochner filed to run against Murkowski.[116] Other potential Republican primary challengers included 2010 nominee and 2014 candidate Joe Miller, State Senator Mike J. Dunleavy, former Lieutenant Governor Mead Treadwell, and former Mayor of Anchorage Dan Sullivan.[117]


The only person to file for the Democratic primary as of May 20 was writer and satirist Richard Grayson, who previously sought election to Wyoming's House seat in 2014.[118][119][120][116] Potential Democratic candidates included State Senator Dennis Egan, State Representative Andy Josephson, State Senator Bill Wielechowski, State Senator Hollis French and State Senate Minority Leader Johnny Ellis.[121] Former Senator Mark Begich was mentioned as a possible candidate,[122] but he declined to run.[123]


Murkowski won her primary on August 16, 2016 with 72 percent of the vote. Joe Miller received the Libertarian nomination and will run against Murkowski in the general election. Anchorage attorney and veteran Margaret Stock ran as an Independent candidate.[124]


Murkowski won re-election with 44% of the vote compared to Miller with 30% and Metcalfe with 11%. 15% went to other candidates. Murkowski has been re-elected three times now with 48% in 2004, 39.5% in 2010 and 44% in 2016, never having won a majority.













































Republican primary election[125]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Lisa Murkowski (Incumbent)

39,545

71.52%


Republican
Bob Lochner
8,480
15.34%


Republican
Paul Kendall
4,272
7.73%


Republican
Thomas Lamb
2,996
5.42%
Total votes

55,293

100.00%





































Other primary elections[125]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Ray Metcalfe

15,228

50.06%


Democratic
Edgar Blatchford
10,090
33.17%


Libertarian

Cean Stevens

5,102

16.77%
Total votes

30,420

100.00%





































































General election[126]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Lisa Murkowski (Incumbent)

138,149

44.36%


Libertarian
Joe Miller
90,825
29.16%


Independent
Margaret Stock
41,194
13.23%


Democratic
Ray Metcalfe
36,200
11.62%


Independent
Breck A. Craig
2,609
0.84%


Independent
Ted Gianoutsos
1,758
0.56%


Write-in
Other write-in votes
706
0.23%
Total votes

311,441

100.00%


Republican hold



Arizona











Arizona election




← 2010


2022 →
























































 

John McCain official portrait 2009.jpg

Ann Kirkpatrick.jpg
Nominee

John McCain

Ann Kirkpatrick

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,359,267
1,031,245
Percentage

53.7%
40.8%

 

Gary swing.jpg

Nominee
Gary Swing


Party

Green

Popular vote
138,634

Percentage
5.5%





Arizona Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

John McCain
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

John McCain
Republican






Five-term Senator and Republican presidential candidate in 2008 John McCain was re-elected with 59% of the vote in 2010. He was 80 years old in 2016. Despite speculation that he might retire,[127] McCain ran for re-election.[23]


McCain faced primary challenges from Fair Tax activist Alex Meluskey,[128] businessman David Pizer,[129] talk radio host Clair Van Steenwyk,[130] and State Senator Kelli Ward.[131] David Pizer later dropped out of the race. Representatives Matt Salmon and David Schweikert were both mentioned as possible candidates,[132] but both chose not to run.[133][134] Other potential Republican candidates included former Governor Jan Brewer,[135] businesswoman and 2014 gubernatorial candidate Christine Jones,[136] former Governor of Alaska and 2008 vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin,[137] former U.S. Representative John Shadegg,[138] and former Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods.[138]


Congresswoman Ann Kirkpatrick[24] and teacher Lennie Clark[139] ran for the Democratic nomination. Lennie Clark dropped out and Ann Kirkpatrick became the Democratic nominee. Other potential Democratic candidates included U.S. Representative Ruben Gallego, former Surgeon General and 2012 nominee Richard Carmona, 2014 gubernatorial nominee Fred DuVal, Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton, and retired astronaut Mark Kelly, who is the husband of ex-Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords.[111][140]




















































Arizona Republican primary election[141]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

John McCain

302,532

51.7%


Republican

Kelli Ward
235,988
39.2%


Republican
Alex Meluskey
31,159
5.5%


Republican
Clair Van Steenwyk
21,476
3.6%


Republican
Sean Webster (Write-In)
175
0.0%
Total votes

591,330

100.00%






























Arizona Democratic primary election[141]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Ann Kirkpatrick

333,586

99.85%


Democratic
Alex Bello (Write-In)
508
0.15%
Total votes

334,094

100.00%























Arizona Green primary election[141]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Green

Gary Swing (Write-In)

238

100.00%
Total votes

238

100.00%























Arizona Libertarian primary election[141]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Libertarian

Merissa Hamilton (Write-In)

1,286

100.00%
Total votes

1,286

100.00%

Sen. McCain won re-election with 53% to Kirkpatrick's 41%.






























































Arizona general election[142]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

John McCain (Incumbent)

1,359,267

53.74%

-5.33%


Democratic

Ann Kirkpatrick
1,031,245
40.77%
+5.99%


Green
Gary Swing
138,634
5.48%
+4.03%

Plurality
328,022
12.97%

Total votes
2,529,146
100.00%


Turnout
3,588,466
74.17%

?


Republican hold

Swing





Arkansas











Arkansas election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

John Boozman, official portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

Connereldridge-150.jpg
Nominee

John Boozman

Conner Eldridge

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

661,984
400,602
Percentage

59.8%
36.2%




Arkansas Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

John Boozman
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

John Boozman
Republican






One-term Senator John Boozman (Republican) defeated two-term Senator Blanche Lincoln with 58% of the vote in 2010. He was 65 years old in 2016. Despite speculation that he might retire following health problems,[143][144] Boozman ran for re-election.[28] Fellow Republican Curtis Coleman, who ran against Boozman in 2010 but came in fifth place, ran again.[145]


Conner Eldridge, the former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Arkansas, is the only Democrat who met the filing deadline.[146]


Frank Gilbert was the candidate for the Libertarian Party,[147][148][149] and Jason Tate was running a write-in campaign.[150]































Arkansas Republican primary election[151]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

John Boozman

298,039

76.45%


Republican
Curtis Coleman
91,795
23.55%
Total votes

389,834

100.00%























Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Conner Eldridge

214,228

100.00%
Total votes

214,228

100.00%

Sen. Boozman won re-election with 60% to Eldridge's 36%.

















































Arkansas general election< [152]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

John Boozman (Incumbent)

661,984

59.77%


Democratic
Conner Eldridge
400,602
36.17%


Libertarian
Frank Gilbert
43,866
3.96%

Write-ins
Others
1,070
0.10%
Total votes

1,107,522

100.00%


Republican hold



California











California election




← 2010


2022 →




























 

Kamala Harris Official Attorney General Photo.jpg

Loretta Sanchez official photo.jpg
Candidate

Kamala Harris

Loretta Sanchez
Party

Democratic

Democratic
Popular vote

7,542,753
4,701,417
Percentage

61.6%
38.4%




CaliforniaSenateElection2016.svg
County Results
















U.S. Senator before election

Barbara Boxer
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Kamala Harris
Democratic






Four-term Senator Barbara Boxer (Democrat) was re-elected with 52% of the vote in 2010. Boxer declined to run for re-election.[153]California Attorney General Kamala Harris and U.S. Representative Loretta Sanchez, both Democrats, finished first and second, respectively,[154] in California's nonpartisan blanket primary, and will contest the general election. As such, Boxer's successor is guaranteed to be a Democrat.[155] This marks a historic first such occasion in California, ever since the Senate elections began in 1914.


Other Democrats on the primary ballot included "President" Cristina Grappo, Massie Munroe, Herbert Peters, Emory Rogers, and Steve Stokes.[156] Among the potential candidates who declined to run were Governor Jerry Brown, Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, U.S. Representatives Xavier Becerra and Adam Schiff, and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.


Former state Republican Party chairs Tom Del Beccaro[157] and Duf Sundheim,[158] and former State Senator Phil Wyman[159][160] ran, along with Don Krampe,[161] Tom Palzer,[162] Karen Roseberry,[163] Greg Conlon, Von Huogo, Jerry Laws, Ron Unz, Jarrell Williamson, and George Yang.[156] State Assemblymen Rocky Chavez was running as well,[164] but withdrew from the race.[165] Republicans who were once considered potential candidates but ruled out runs included San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability and 2014 gubernatorial nominee Neel Kashkari, U.S. Representative Darrell Issa, and businesswoman and nominee for the U.S. Senate in 2010 Carly Fiorina.[166]


Independent Mike Beitiks ran on a single-issue climate change platform.[167]


Polling conducted by the SurveyUSA from March 30, 2016 to April 3, 2016 indicated that Harris was ahead with 26%, compared to Rep. Sánchez with 22%, Del Beccaro with 8%, Wyman with 8%, and Sundheim with 3%; 7% of those polled were supporting other candidates, and 24% were undecided.[168]


Harris won the election with 62% of the vote to Sanchez's 38%.




















































































































































































































































































California Democratic primary election[169]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Kamala Harris

3,000,689

39.9%


Democratic

Loretta Sanchez

1,416,203

18.9%


Republican

Duf Sundheim
584,251
7.8%


Republican

Phil Wyman
352,821
4.7%


Republican

Tom Del Beccaro
323,614
4.3%


Republican
Greg Conlon
230,944
3.1%


Democratic
Steve Stokes
168,805
2.2%


Republican
George C. Yang
112,055
1.5%


Republican
Karen Roseberry
110,557
1.5%


Libertarian
Gail K. Lightfoot
99,761
1.3%


Democratic
Massie Munroe
98,150
1.3%


Green
Pamela Elizondo
95,677
1.3%


Republican
Tom Palzer
93,263
1.2%


Republican

Ron Unz
92,325
1.2%


Republican
Don Krampe
69,635
0.9%


No party preference
Eleanor García
65,084
0.9%


Republican
Jarrell Williamson
64,120
0.9%


Republican
Von Hougo
63,609
0.8%


Democratic
President Cristina Grappo
63,330
0.8%


Republican
Jerry J. Laws
53,023
0.7%


Libertarian

Mark Matthew Herd
41,344
0.6%


Peace and Freedom
John Thompson Parker
35,998
0.5%


No party preference
Ling Ling Shi
35,196
0.5%


Democratic
Herbert G. Peters
32,638
0.4%


Democratic
Emory Peretz Rodgers
31,485
0.4%


No party preference
Mike Beitiks
31,450
0.4%


No party preference
Clive Grey
29,418
0.4%


No party preference
Jason Hanania
27,715
0.4%


No party preference
Paul Merritt
24,031
0.3%


No party preference
Jason Kraus
19,318
0.3%


No party preference
Don J. Grundmann
15,317
0.2%


No party preference
Scott A. Vineberg
11,843
0.2%


No party preference
Tim Gildersleeve
9,798
0.1%


No party preference
Gar Myers
8,726
0.1%


Write-in
Billy Falling
87
0.0%


Write-in
Ric M. Llewellyn
32
0.0%


Write-in
Alexis Stuart
10
0.0%
Total votes

7,512,322

100.0%


































California general election[170]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Kamala Harris

7,542,753

61.6%


Democratic

Loretta Sanchez
4,701,417
38.4%
Total votes

12,244,170

100.0%


Democratic hold



Colorado











Colorado election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Michael Bennet Official Photo (cropped).jpg

No image.svg
Nominee

Michael Bennet

Darryl Glenn

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

1,370,710
1,215,318
Percentage

50.0%
44.3%




Colorado Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Michael Bennet
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Michael Bennet
Democratic






One-term Senator Michael Bennet (Democrat) was appointed in 2009 and elected to a full term with 48% of the vote in 2010. He was 51 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[33]


Businessman Robert Blaha,[171] former Aurora councilman Ryan Frazier,[172]El Paso County Commissioners Darryl Glenn,[34] and Peggy Littleton,[173] former Colorado State University Athletic Director Jack Graham,[174]State Representative Jon Keyser,[175] former SBA director Greg Lopez,[176]State Senator Tim Neville,[177] and Jefferson County Commissioner Donald Rosier[178][179] ran for the Republican nomination. Glenn, Graham, Blaha, Keyser, and Frazier actually competed in the primary.[180]


Darryl Glenn won the Republican nomination with 37% of the vote against four other opponents.[180]


Bennet won re-election with 50% of the vote to Glenn's 44%.
























Colorado Democratic primary election[181]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Michael Bennet (Incumbent)

262,344

100.00%
Total votes

262,344

100.00%



















































Colorado Republican primary election[181]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Darryl Glenn

131,125

37.74%


Republican
Jack Graham
85,400
24.58%


Republican
Robert Blaha
57,196
16.46%


Republican
Jon Keyser
43,509
12.52%


Republican
Ryan Frazier
30,241
8.70%
Total votes

347,471

100.00%





































































Colorado general election[182]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Michael Bennet (Incumbent)

1,370,710

49.97%


Republican

Darryl Glenn
1,215,318
44.31%


Libertarian
Lily Tang Williams
99,277
3.62%


Green

Arn Menconi
36,805
1.34%


Unity
Bill Hammons
9,336
0.34%


Independent
Dan Chapin
8,361
0.30%


Independent
Paul Fiorino
3,216
0.12%
Total votes

2,743,023

100.00%


Democratic hold



Connecticut











Connecticut election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Richard Blumenthal Official Portrait (cropped).jpg

Rep Dan Carter.jpg
Nominee

Richard Blumenthal

Dan Carter

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

1,008,714
552,621
Percentage

63.2%
34.6%




Connecticut Election Results by County, all Democratic.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Richard Blumenthal
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Richard Blumenthal
Democratic






One-term Senator Richard Blumenthal (Democrat) was elected with 55% of the vote in 2010. He was 70 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[37]


State Representative Dan Carter,[38] apparel company CEO and 2004 Senate nominee Jack Orchulli,[183] and former Olympic athlete August Wolf[184] ran for the Republican nomination. Another potential candidate was former West Hartford Town Councilor Joe Visconti, who ran for CT-01 in 2008 and ran as an Independent for Governor in 2014.[185] Former U.S. Comptroller General and 2014 candidate for Lieutenant Governor David M. Walker,[186][187] former U.S. Representative and 2010 candidate Rob Simmons,[188] and economist and former CNBC television host Lawrence Kudlow declined to run.[189][190]


Blumenthal won re-election with 63% of the vote to Carter's 35%.





























































































Connecticut general election[191]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Richard Blumenthal

920,766

57.68%




Working Families
Richard Blumenthal
87,948
5.51%



Total

Richard Blumenthal (Incumbent)

1,008,714

63.19%

+7.95%


Republican
Dan Carter
552,621
34.62%
-8.53%


Libertarian
Richard Lion
18,190
1.14%



Green
Jeffery Russell
16,713
1.05%


Write-In
Andrew Rule
26
0.00%


Write-In
John M. Traceski
12
0.00%

Majority
449,973
28.42%

Total votes
1,596,276
100.00%



Democratic hold



Florida











Florida election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Marco Rubio, Official Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

Patrick Murphy crop.jpg
Nominee

Marco Rubio

Patrick Murphy

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

4,835,191
4,122,088
Percentage

52.0%
44.3%




Florida Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Marco Rubio
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Marco Rubio
Republican






One-term Senator Marco Rubio (Republican) was elected in a three-way race with 49% of the vote in 2010. In April 2014, Rubio stated that he would not run for both the Senate and President in 2016, as Florida law prohibits a candidate from appearing twice on a ballot.[192] In April 2015, he announced that he would run for President and would not seek re-election.[193] After suspending his campaign on March 15, 2016, Rubio announced on June 22, 2016 that he changed his mind and will run for re-election.[41]


U.S. Representative Ron DeSantis, combat veteran Todd Wilcox,[194] real estate developer Carlos Beruff,[195] retired college lecturer Ilya Katz,[196] and Donald J. DeRenzo ran for the Republican nomination.[197][198]Ben Carson, retired neurosurgeon and candidate for President in 2016 is also mentioned as a potential candidate.[199] On June 17, 2016, U.S. Representative David Jolly withdrew from the race to run for re-election to his House seat, four days after Rubio began openly considering reversing his decision to not run for re-election.[200]


U.S. Representative Patrick Murphy[42] defeated fellow representative Alan Grayson, as well as Pam Keith, Lateresa Jones, Richard Coleman, Sam Brian Gibbons, and Josh Larose, for the Democratic nomination. Murphy lost to incumbent Marco Rubio in the November general election on November 8.[201]


Sen. Rubio won re-election with 52% of the vote compared to Murphy's 44%.













































Florida Republican primary election[202]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Marco Rubio (Incumbent)

1,029,830

71.99%


Republican

Carlos Beruff
264,427
18.49%


Republican
Dwight Young
91,082
6.37%


Republican
Ernie Rivera
45,153
3.16%
Total votes

1,430,492

100.00%



















































Florida Democratic primary election[202]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Patrick Murphy

665,985

58.92%


Democratic

Alan Grayson
199,929
17.72%


Democratic
Pam Keith
173,919
15.40%


Democratic

Rocky De La Fuente
60,810
5.38%


Democratic
Reginald Luster
29,138
2.58%
Total votes

1,129,781

100.00%



Georgia











Georgia election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Johnny Isakson 113th Congress.jpg

Jim Barksdale Portrait.jpg
Nominee

Johnny Isakson

Jim Barksdale

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

2,135,806
1,599,726
Percentage

54.8%
41.0%




Georgia Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Johnny Isakson
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Johnny Isakson
Republican






Two-term Senator Johnny Isakson (Republican) was re-elected with 58% of the vote in 2010. He was 71 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[44] In 2015, Isakson announced he was being treated for Parkinson's disease, but stated that his treatment would not interfere with his re-election campaign or his ability to serve another term.[203]


Mary Kay Bacallao, college professor, former Fayette County Board of Education member, and candidate for State Superintendent of Schools in 2014[204] and Derrick Grayson, candidate for the state's other Senate seat in 2014,[205] challenged Isakson for the Republican nomination. Isakson won the Republican nomination with more than three quarters of the vote.[206]


Investment firm executive Jim Barksdale,[45] project manager Cheryl Copeland,[207] and businessman John Coyne[208] ran for the Democratic nomination. USAF veteran Jim Knox was running but dropped out of the race.[209] Barksdale defeated Copeland in a close race to win the Democratic nomination.[206]


Sen. Isakson won re-election with 55% to Barksdale's 41%.






































Georgia Republican primary election[210]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Johnny Isakson (Incumbent)

447,661

77.50%


Republican
Derrick Grayson
69,101
11.96%


Republican
Mary Kay Bacallao
60,898
10.54%
Total votes

577,660

100.00%





































Georgia Democratic primary election[210]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Jim Barksdale

166,627

53.74%


Democratic
Cheryl Copeland
130,822
42.19%


Democratic
John Coyne
12,604
4.07%
Total votes

310,053

100.00%









































Georgia general election[211]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Johnny Isakson (Incumbent)

2,135,806

54.80%


Democratic

Jim Barksdale
1,599,726
41.04%


Libertarian
Allen Buckley
162,260
4.16%
Total votes

3,897,792

100.00%


Republican hold



Hawaii











Hawaii election




← 2014


2022 →





























 

Brian Schatz, official portrait, 113th Congress 2.jpg

John Carroll.jpg
Nominee

Brian Schatz

John Carroll

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

306,604
92,653
Percentage

70.1%
21.2%




Hawaii Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Brian Schatz
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Brian Schatz
Democratic






In 2012, Hawaii Governor Neil Abercrombie appointed Lieutenant Governor Brian Schatz (Democrat) to take the place of deceased nine-term Senator Daniel Inouye. Schatz won a 2014 special election to serve the remainder of Inouye's term. Schatz ran for re-election.[37]


Former U.S. Representative and 2014 Senate candidate Colleen Hanabusa may challenge Schatz in the primary again,[212] while U.S. Representative Tulsi Gabbard declined to seek the Democratic nomination for the seat.[213]


Charles Collins, a Republican who ran for the Senate in 2012 and for Governor in 2014, was seeking the nomination again,[214] but withdrew from the race.[215]


Sen. Schatz won re-election with 74% of the vote compared to Carroll's 22%.




















































Hawaii Democratic primary election[216][217][218]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Brian Schatz (Incumbent)

162,891

86.17%


Democratic
Makani Christensen
11,898
6.29%


Democratic
Miles Shiratori
8,620
4.56%


Democratic
Arturo Reyes
3,819
2.02%


Democratic
Tutz Honeychurch
1,815
0.96%
Total votes

189,043

100.00%























Hawaii Constitution primary election[216][217][218]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Constitution

Joy Allison

217

100.00%
Total votes

217

100.00%























Hawaii American Shopping primary election[216][217][218]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Independent

John Giuffre

111

100.00%
Total votes

111

100.00%





















































































Hawaii general election[219]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Brian Schatz (Incumbent)

306,604

70.1%

N/A


Republican
John Carroll
92,653
21.2%
N/A


Constitution
Joy Allison
9,103
2.1%
N/A


Libertarian
Michael Kokowski
6,809
1.6%
N/A


Independent
John Giuffre
1,393
0.3%




Blank votes
20,763
4.7%



Over votes
339
0.0%
Majority
213,951
48.88%

Total votes
437,664
100.0%



Democratic hold

Swing





Idaho











Idaho election




← 2010


2022 →
























































 

Mike Crapo Official Photo 110th Congress.jpg

Jerry Sturgill.jpg
Nominee

Mike Crapo
Jerry Sturgill

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

449,017
188,249
Percentage

66.1%
27.7%

 


Nominee
Ray Writz


Party

Constitution

Popular vote
41,677

Percentage
6.1%





Idaho Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Mike Crapo
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Mike Crapo
Republican






Three-term Senator Mike Crapo (Republican) was re-elected with 71% of the vote in 2010. Crapo was 65 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[48] U.S Representative Raul Labrador declined to challenge Crapo in the Republican primary.[220][221]


Jerry Sturgill ran for the Democratic nomination.[49]


Perennial candidate Pro-Life ran as an independent.[222][223] He was defeated in the Constitution Party primary on May 17, 2016 to Ray J. Writz.[224]


Sen. Crapo was re-elected.
























Idaho Republican primary election[225]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Mike Crapo

119,633

100.00%
Total votes

119,633

100.00%























Idaho Democratic primary election[225]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Jerry Sturgill

26,471

100.00%
Total votes

26,471

100.00%






























Idaho Constitution primary election[225]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Constitution

Ray J. Writz

131

59.5%


Constitution
Pro-Life
89
40.5%
Total votes

220

100.0%























































Idaho general election[226]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Mike Crapo (Incumbent)

449,017

66.13%

-5.06%


Democratic
Jerry Sturgill
188,249
27.73%
N/A


Constitution
Ray J. Writz
41,677
6.14%
N/A
Majority
260,768
38.40%

Total votes
678,943
100.0%
+51.06%


Republican hold

Swing





Illinois











Illinois election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Tammy Duckworth, official portrait, 113th Congress (cropped).jpg

Senator Mark Kirk official portrait crop.jpg
Nominee

Tammy Duckworth

Mark Kirk

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

3,012,940
2,184,693
Percentage

54.9%
39.8%




Illinois Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg

Duckworth:
     40-50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Kirk:
     40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%








U.S. Senator before election

Mark Kirk
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Tammy Duckworth
Democratic






One-term Senator Mark Kirk (Republican) was elected with 48% of the vote in 2010. He was 57 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election. Kirk suffered a stroke in January 2012 that kept him away from the Senate until January 2013.[227] In June 2013, he confirmed that he was planning to run for re-election,[228] but speculation he might retire persisted.[229] In November 2014, Kirk reiterated that he was going to run for re-election, saying: "No frickin' way am I retiring."[230]


Joe Walsh, a former U.S. Representative and conservative talk radio host, declined to challenge Kirk in the Republican primary.[231] Two others filed for the right to challenge Senator Kirk in the primary: businessman James Marter,[232] and Elizabeth Pahlke,[233] but Pahlke was disqualified, so only Marter was on the ballot running against Kirk.[234] On March 15, Kirk won the primary with 71% of the vote.[235]


U.S. Representative Tammy Duckworth,[236] President and CEO of the Chicago Urban League, Andrea Zopp,[237] and State Senator Napoleon Harris ran for the Democratic nomination.[238][239] On March 15, Duckworth won the primary with 64% of the vote.[235]


In December 2015, Jim Brown, a teacher and former businessman, announced he was running as an independent.[240]


Chris Aguayo, an Iraq/Afghan War veteran and Veterans Party State Chair, announced he was running, representing the Veterans Party.[241]


Rep. Duckworth unseated Sen. Kirk with 55% compared to his 40%.










































United States Senate election in Illinois Republican Primary, 2016[242]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Mark Kirk (Incumbent)

931,619

70.6%

+14.0%


Republican
James T. Marter
388,571
29.4%
N/A
Majority
543,048
41.2%
+3.9%

Turnout
1,320,191

+77.9%





































Illinois Democratic primary election[243]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Tammy Duckworth

1,220,128

64.38%


Democratic
Andrea Zopp
455,729
24.05%


Democratic
Napoleon Harris
219,286
11.57%
Total votes

1,859,257

100.00%















































































































Illinois general election[244]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Tammy Duckworth

3,012,940

54.9%

+8.5%


Republican

Mark Kirk (Incumbent)
2,184,692
39.8%
-8.2%


Libertarian
Kenton McMillen
175,988
3.2%
+0.8%


Green
Scott Summers
117,619
2.1%
-1.1%


Write-in
Chad Koppie
408
.007%
N/A


Write-in
Jim Brown
106
.002%
N/A


Write-in
Christopher Aguayo
77
.001%
N/A


Write-in
Susana Sandoval
42
.0008%
N/A


Write-in
Eric Kufi James Stewart
5
.00009%
N/A


Write-in
Patricia Beard
1
.00002%
N/A
Majority
828,248
15.1%
+13.5%

Turnout
5,491,878

+48.2%


Democratic gain from Republican

Swing





Indiana











Indiana election




← 2010


2022 →
























































 

Todd Young, Official Portrait, 112th Congress (cropped).jpg

Evan Bayh official portrait v2.jpg
Nominee

Todd Young

Evan Bayh

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,423,991
1,158,974
Percentage

52.1%
42.4%

 


Nominee

Lucy Brenton


Party

Libertarian

Popular vote
149,481

Percentage
5.5%





Indiana Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Dan Coats
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Todd Young
Republican






Three-term Senator Dan Coats (Republican) was elected with 55% of the vote in 2010; Coats served in the Senate from 1989 to 1999 and then returned to serve another term from 2011 to 2017. Coats did not run for re-election.[245] Republican candidates include U.S. Representatives Marlin Stutzman[246] and Todd Young.[54] Coats's chief of Staff Eric Holcomb was a candidate, but withdrew from the race.[247][248]


Former U.S. Representative Baron Hill won the Democratic nomination on May 3, but withdrew in July 2016 in favor of Evan Bayh.[249] Bayh held the seat from 1999 until his retirement in 2011, and also served as Governor of Indiana from 1989 to 1997. Former non-profit director John Dickerson also announced he was going to run, but suspended his campaign in early 2016.[250][251]


Former Sen. Bayh lost his bid to regain his seat to Rep. Young. Rep Young garnered 52% to Bayh's 42%































Indiana Republican primary election[252]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Todd Young

661,136

67.0%


Republican
Marlin Stutzman
324,429
33.0%
Total votes

985,565

100.0%























Indiana Democratic primary election[252]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Baron Hill

516,183

100.00%
Total votes

516,183

100.00%





















































Indiana general election[253]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Todd Young

1,423,991

52.11%


Democratic

Evan Bayh
1,158,947
42.41%


Libertarian

Lucy Brenton
149,481
5.47%

Write-in
James L. Johnson, Jr.
127
0.01%
Majority
265,044
9.70%
Total votes

2,732,573

100.00%


Republican hold



Iowa











Iowa election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Sen Chuck Grassley official.jpg

Patty Judge (cropped).jpg
Nominee

Chuck Grassley

Patty Judge

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

926,007
549,460
Percentage

60.1%
35.7%




IowaSenateElection2016.svg
County Results
















U.S. Senator before election

Chuck Grassley
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Chuck Grassley
Republican






Six-term Senator Chuck Grassley was re-elected with 65% of the vote in 2010. He was 83 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[254][255] Talk radio host Robert Rees announced he was going to challenge Grassley for the nomination,[256] but later withdrew.[257]


Former Lt Governor Patty Judge [58] earned the Democratic nomination by defeating State Senator Rob Hogg,[258] former state Senator Tom Fiegen,[259] and former state representative Bob Krause.[260] Former state representative Ray Zirkelbach[261] briefly ran but ended his campaign soon after.


Sen. Grassley won re-election with 60% to Judge's 36%.































Iowa Republican primary election[262]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Chuck Grassley (Incumbent)

90,089

98.36%


Republican
Write-ins
1,500
1.64%
Total votes

91,589

100.00%



















































Iowa Democratic primary election[262]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Patty Judge

46,322

47.62%


Democratic
Rob Hogg
37,801
38.86%


Democratic
Tom Fiegen
6,573
6.76%


Democratic
Bob Krause
6,425
6.60%


Democratic
Write-ins
154
0.16%
Total votes

97,275

100.00%















































































Iowa general election[263]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Chuck Grassley (Incumbent)

926,007

60.09%

-4.26%


Democratic
Patty Judge
549,460
35.66%
+2.36%


Libertarian
John Heiderscheit
41,794
2.71%
+0.44%


Independent
Jim Hennager
17,649
1.15%
N/A


Independent
Michael Luick-Thrams
4,441
0.29%
N/A

Write-ins

1,685
0.11%
+0.03%
Majority
376,547
24.43%
-6.62%

Turnout
1,541,036




Republican hold

Swing





Kansas











Kansas election




← 2010


2022 →
























































 

Jerry Moran, official portrait, 112th Congress headshot.jpg

No image.png
Nominee

Jerry Moran
Patrick Wiesner

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

732,376
379,740
Percentage

62.2%
32.2%

 


Nominee
Robert Garrard


Party

Libertarian

Popular vote
65,760

Percentage
5.6%





Kansas Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Jerry Moran
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Jerry Moran
Republican






One-term Senator Jerry Moran (Republican) was elected with 70% of the vote in 2010. He was 62 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[60] Radiologist and 2014 Senate candidate Milton R. Wolf and U.S. Representative Tim Huelskamp declined to run.[60][111][264][265]


Patrick Wiesner,[61] an attorney and a candidate for the Senate in 2010 and 2014, defeated Monique Singh-Bey[266] for the Democratic nomination. Potential candidates who declined to run included Wichita Mayor Carl Brewer, 2014 Governor nominee Paul Davis, former Kansas City Mayor Joe Reardon, former U.S. Representative and 2008 nominee Jim Slattery, and 2014 KS-02 nominee Margie Wakefield.[111]


Sen. Moran won re-election with 62% to Wiesner's 32%.































Republican primary results [267]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Jerry Moran

230,907

79.09%


Republican
D.J. Smith
61,056
20.91%
Total votes

291,963

100.00%






























Democratic primary results [267]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Patrick Wiesner

59,522

62.94%


Democratic
Monique Singh-Bey
35,042
37.06%
Total votes

94,564

100.00%























Libertarian primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Libertarian

Robert Garrard

 

100.00%
Total votes

 

100.00%































































Kansas general election[268]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Jerry Moran

732,376

62.18%

-8.16%


Democratic
Patrick Wiesner
379,740
32.24%
+6.08%


Libertarian
Robert D. Garrard
65,760
5.58%
+3.46%

Independent (United States)
DJ Smith
46
0.00%
N/A
Majority
352,636
29.94%

Total votes
1,177,922
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing





Kentucky











Kentucky election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Rand Paul, official portrait, 112th Congress alternate (cropped).jpg

Mayor Jim Gray.jpg
Nominee

Rand Paul

Jim Gray

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,090,177
813,246
Percentage

57.3%
42.7%




Kentucky Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Rand Paul
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Rand Paul
Republican






One-term Senator Rand Paul (Republican) was elected with 56% of the vote in 2010. He was 53 years old in 2016. Paul filed for re-election,[63] although he was also running for President of the United States in 2016.[269] Although Kentucky law did not allow for a candidate to appear twice on the same ballot, Paul successfully convinced the Kentucky GOP to adopt a caucus system for 2016, allowing Paul to run for president and for the Senate simultaneously.[270] Kentucky law still bars Paul from appearing twice on the ballot in the general election.[270] However, on February 3, 2016, Paul ended his campaign for the presidency and ran for reelection.[271] James Gould and Stephen Slaughter filed to run against Paul.[272] Paul won the Republican primary, receiving 169,180 votes (about 85%); James R. Gould received 16,611 (about 8%) and Stephen Howard Slaughter received 13,728 (about 7%).[273]


Lexington Mayor Jim Gray,[64] Rory Houlihan,[274] Ron Leach,[275] Sellus Wilder[276] Jeff Kender, Tom Recktenwald (who was a candidate in 2014), and Grant Short ran for the Democratic nomination.[272] Gray won the nomination.


Paul won re-election with 57% of the vote to Gray's 43%.






































Kentucky Republican primary election[277]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Rand Paul

169,180

84.79%


Republican
James Gould
16,611
8.33%


Republican
Stephen Slaughter
13,728
6.88%
Total votes

199,519

100.00%

































































Kentucky Democratic primary election[277]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Jim Gray

240,613

58.73%


Democratic
Sellus Wilder
52,728
12.87%


Democratic
Ron Leach
39,026
9.53%


Democratic
Tom Recktenwald
21,910
5.35%


Democratic
Grant Short
21,558
5.26%


Democratic
Jeff Kender
20,239
4.94%


Democratic
Rory Houlihan
13,585
3.32%
Total votes

409,659

100.00%























































Kentucky general electionref name=KYGeneralresults>"Official Results" (PDF). Kentucky Secretary of State. Retrieved December 20, 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}</ref>
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Rand Paul (Incumbent)

1,090,177

57.27%

+1.58%


Democratic
Jim Gray
813,246
42.73%
-1.53%

Write-ins

42
0.00%
N/A
Majority
276,931
14.55%

Total votes
1,903,465
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing





Louisiana











Louisiana election







← 2010
November 8 and December 10, 2016
2022 →




























 

John Neely Kennedy, official portrait, 115th Congress 2.jpg

FosterCampbell.jpg
Nominee

John Kennedy

Foster Campbell

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

536,191
347,816
Percentage

60.7%
39.3%




Louisiana Senate Runoff Election Results 2016.svg
Parish Results
















U.S. Senator before election

David Vitter
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

John Kennedy
Republican






Two-term Senator David Vitter (Republican) was re-elected with 57% of the vote in 2010. After losing the 2015 gubernatorial race, Vitter chose to retire from the Senate at the end of his term.[37][278]


Republicans who ran for the seat included U.S. Representatives Charles Boustany[279] and John Fleming,[280] former U.S. Representative Joseph Cao,[281] State Treasurer John Kennedy,[65] retired U.S. Air Force Colonel Rob Maness,[282] and former Louisiana State Representative David Duke. Other potential Republican candidates included Public Service Commissioner Erik Skrmetta,[283]2014 candidate for LA-05 Zach Dasher,[283] state representative Paul Hollis,[284] and former President of Jefferson Parish John Young.[285]


Democratic candidates included Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell,[66] attorney Derrick Edwards,[286]Caroline Fayard, an attorney and candidate for Lieutenant Governor in 2010,[287] and businessman Josh Pellerin.[288] Other potential Democratic candidates included state legislators Robert Johnson, Eric LaFleur, and Gary Smith, Jr., and Mayor of Alexandria Jacques Roy.[289][290][291] Former U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu and her brother, New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, declined to run.[292]


As no candidate won a majority of the vote in the "jungle primary", a runoff election was held on December 10 to choose between Kennedy and Campbell (the 2 candidates with the most votes in the primary).[293] John Kennedy was declared the winner of the runoff election with 61% of the vote to Campbell's 39%.
















































Louisiana general election[294]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

John Kennedy

536,191

60.65%

+4.09%


Democratic

Foster Campbell
347,816
39.35%
+1.68%
Majority
188,375
21.30%

Total votes
884,007
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing





Maryland











Maryland election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Chris Van Hollen official portrait 115th Congress.jpg

Kathy Szeliga Press Conference (28133161470) (cropped).jpg
Nominee

Chris Van Hollen

Kathy Szeliga

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

1,659,907
972,557
Percentage

60.9%
35.7%




Maryland Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Barbara Mikulski
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Chris Van Hollen
Democratic






Five-term U.S. Senator Barbara Mikulski of the Democratic Party was re-elected with 62% of the vote in 2010. She is the longest-serving female Senator and the longest-serving woman in the history of the U.S. Congress. She is not seeking re-election.[295]


The candidates who filed for the Democratic nomination were: U.S. Representatives Donna Edwards[296] and Chris Van Hollen,[67] Freddie Donald Dickson, Jr., Ralph Jaffe, Theresa Scaldaferri, Charles Smith, Violate Staley, Blaine Taylor, Ed Tinus, and Lih Young.[297] Van Hollen won the April 26 primary.


The Republican candidates who filed were former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense and Senate candidate in 2012 Richard Douglas,[298] Chrys Kefalas,[299] State Delegate Kathy Szeliga,[68] Chris Chaffee, Sean Connor, John Graziani, Greg Holmes, Joseph David Hooe, Mark McNicholas, Lynn Richardson, Anthony Seda, Richard Shawver, Dave Walle, and Garry T. Yarrington.[297] Szeliga won the primary and will face Van Hollen in the general election.


Rep. Van Hollen won election to the Senate with 61% of the vote to Szeliga's 36%.























































































Maryland Democratic primary election[300]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Chris Van Hollen

470,320

53.2%


Democratic
Donna Edwards
343,620
38.9%


Democratic
Freddie Dickson
14,856
1.7%


Democratic
Theresa Scaldaferri
13,178
1.5%


Democratic
Violet Staley
10,244
1.2%


Democratic
Lih Young
8,561
1.0%


Democratic
Charles Smith
7,912
0.9%


Democratic
Ralph Jaffe
7,161
0.8%


Democratic
Blaine Taylor
5,932
0.7%


Democratic
Ed Tinus
2,560
0.3%
Total votes

884,344

100.00%


















































































































Maryland Republican primary election[300]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Kathy Szeliga

135,337

35.6%


Republican
Chris Chaffee
52,066
13.7%


Republican
Chrys Kefalas
36,340
9.6%


Republican
Richard Douglas
29,007
7.6%


Republican
Dave Wallace
23,226
6.1%


Republican
Sean Connor
21,727
5.7%


Republican
Lynn Richardson
20,792
5.5%


Republican
John Graziani
16,722
4.4%


Republican
Greg Holmes
16,148
4.3%


Republican
Mark McNicholas
9,988
2.6%


Republican
Joe Hooe
8,282
2.2%


Republican
Anthony Seda
3,873
1.0%


Republican
Richard Shawver
3,155
0.8%


Republican
Garry Yarrington
2,988
0.8%
Total votes

379,651

100.00%






























Maryland Green primary election[301]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Green

Margaret Flowers

125

98.0%


Green
None of the above
3
2.0%
Total votes

128

100.00%































































Maryland general election[302]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Chris Van Hollen

1,659,907

60.89%

-1.30%


Republican
Kathy Szeliga
972,557
35.67%
-0.08%


Green
Margaret Flowers
89,970
3.30%
+2.06%

Write-ins

3,736
0.14%
+0.03%
Majority
687,350
25.21%

Total votes
2,726,170
100.00%



Democratic hold

Swing





Missouri











Missouri election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Roy Blunt, Official Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

Jason Kander (cropped).jpg
Nominee

Roy Blunt

Jason Kander

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,378,458
1,300,200
Percentage

49.18%
46.39%




Missouri Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Roy Blunt
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Roy Blunt
Republican






One-term Senator Roy Blunt (Republican) was elected with 54% of the vote in 2010. He was 66 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[70] Former U.S. Representative and 2012 Senate nominee Todd Akin was rumored to be a possible candidate, but declined to run.[303][304] Three candidates ran against Blunt for the Republican nomination, the best-known being sales manager, Tea Party activist, and 2010 candidate Kristin Nichols, but Blunt won decisively with 72% of the vote.


For the Democrats, Secretary of State Jason Kander[71] easily won the nomination, defeating Robert Mack, Pastor Cori Bush[305][306] and activist Chief Wana Dubie.[307]Governor Jay Nixon and State Treasurer Clint Zweifel chose not to seek election to the Senate.[308][309]


Sen. Blunt won re-election with 49% of the vote to Kander's 46%.













































Missouri Republican primary election[310]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Roy Blunt

481,444

72.55%


Republican
Kristi Nichols
134,025
20.20%


Republican
Ryan Luethy
29,328
4.42%


Republican
Bernie Mowinski
18,789
2.83%
Total votes

663,586

100.00%












































Missouri Democratic primary election[310]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Jason Kander

223,492

69.87%


Democratic
Cori Bush
42,453
13.27%


Democratic
Chief Wana Dubie
30,432
9.51%


Democratic
Robert Mack
23,509
7.35%
Total votes

319,886

100.00%






























Missouri Libertarian primary election[310]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Libertarian

Jonathan Dine

2,002

54.90%


Libertarian
Herschel Young
1,642
45.06%
Total votes

3,644

100.00%























Missouri Constitution primary election[310]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Constitution

Fred Ryman

545

100.00%
Total votes

545

100.00%












































































Missouri general election[311]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Roy Blunt

1,378,458

49.18%

-5.05%


Democratic

Jason Kander
1,300,200
46.39%
+5.76%


Libertarian
Jonathan Dine
67,738
2.42%
-0.60%


Green
Johnathan McFarland
30,743
1.10%
N/A


Constitution
Fred Ryman
25,407
0.91%
-1.22%


Write-ins
95
0.03%
N/A

Plurality
78,258
2.79%

Total votes
2,802,641
100.00%



Republican hold



Nevada











Nevada election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Catherine Cortez Masto official portrait.jpg

Joseph J. Heck 141212-A-ZP772-001.jpg
Nominee

Catherine Cortez Masto

Joe Heck

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

521,994
495,079
Percentage

47.1%
44.7%




Nevada Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Harry Reid
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Catherine Cortez Masto
Democratic






Five-term Senator and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (Democrat) was re-elected with 50% of the vote in 2010. Reid is not seeking re-election.[312] Former Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto earned the Democratic nomination, defeating Bobby Mahendra, Liddo Susan O'Briant, and Allen Rheinhart in the primary on June 14, 2016.


Congressman Joe Heck[74] defeated eight candidates, including 2010 nominee Sharron Angle,[313] who ran against Reid in 2010, for the Republican nomination.


Jarrod M. Williams, an independent candidate ran for the seat. He describes himself as a Democratic Socialist, a supporter of Bernie Sanders, and is a member of the Socialist Party USA, although the party doesn't have a chapter in the State of Nevada.[citation needed]


Cortez Masto was elected with 47.1% of the vote to Heck's 44.7%.




















































Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Catherine Cortez Masto

81,944

81.0%


Democratic
Allen Rheinhart
5,645
6.0%


Democratic
None of these candidates
5,498
5.0%


Democratic
Liddo Susan O'Briant
4,834
5.0%


Democratic
Bobby Mahendra
3,760
3.0%
Total votes

101,681

100.0%






















































































Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Joe Heck

74,517

65.0%


Republican
Sharron Angle
26,142
23.0%


Republican
None of these candidates
3,902
3.0%


Republican
Thomas Heck
3,570
3.0%


Republican
Eddie Hamilton
2,507
2.0%


Republican
D'Nese Davis
1,937
1.8%


Republican
Bill Tarbell
1,179
1.0%


Republican
Robert Leeds
662
0.6%


Republican
Juston Preble
582
0.5%


Republican
Carlo Poliak
279
0.2%
Total votes

114,827

100.0%















































































Nevada general election[314]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Catherine Cortez Masto

521,994

47.10%

-3.19%


Republican
Joe Heck
495,079
44.67%
+0.12%


None of These Candidates

42,257
3.81%
+1.56%


Independent American
Tom Jones
17,128
1.55%
+1.11%


Independent
Tony Guinta
10,740
0.97%
N/A


Independent
Jarrod Williams
6,888
0.62%
N/A

Plurality
26,231
2.37%

Total votes
1,108,294
100.00%
+53.64%


Democratic hold

Swing
Democratic hold




New Hampshire











New Hampshire election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Maggie Hassan, official portrait, 115th Congress.jpg

Kelly Ayotte, Official Portrait, 112th Congress 1.jpg
Nominee

Maggie Hassan

Kelly Ayotte

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

354,649
353,632
Percentage

48.0%
47.8%




New Hampshire Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg

Hassan:
     40-50%     50–60%
Ayotte:
     40–50%      50–60%








U.S. Senator before election

Kelly Ayotte
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Maggie Hassan
Democratic






One-term Senator Kelly Ayotte (Republican) was elected with 60% of the vote in 2010. She was 48 years old in 2016. Ayotte ran for re-election.[76]Jim Rubens, a former state senator, candidate for Governor in 1998 and for the Senate in 2014, announced a challenge to Ayotte in the primary,[315][316] but Ayotte won the nomination.


Brian Chabot is the Libertarian candidate for US Senate in 2016. He is a relative newcomer to politics, having run for US Senate in 2010 and US Representative in 2014.


Governor Maggie Hassan ran for the Democratic nomination.[75] Other potential candidates include Executive Councilor Chris Pappas, State Senators Dan Feltes and Donna Soucy, Portsmouth City Councilor and daughter of U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen Stefany Shaheen, and campaign manager for Senator Shaheen Mike Vlacich.[317]


A series of polls taken by WMUR/UNH in February, April, and July 2016, as well as WBUR polls taken in May and July/August, show Hassan gaining support over time and now leading Ayotte.


Gov. Hassan won a very close election, 353,978 or 47.97%, to Sen. Ayotte's 353,262 or 47.87%, a difference of 716 votes. Sen. Ayotte conceded the race to Gov. Hassan around noon Wednesday November 9, 2016.


































































New Hampshire Republican primary election[318]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Kelly Ayotte

86,558

78.55%


Republican
Jim Rubens
19,139
17.37%


Republican
Tom Alciere
1,586
1.44%


Republican
Gerald Beloin
1,252
1.14%


Republican
Stanley Emanuel
1,187
1.08%


Democratic
Maggie Hassan (write-in)
301
0.27%


Scatter
167
0.15%
Total votes

110,190

100.00%































































New Hampshire general election[319]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Margaret Wood Hassan

354,649

47.98%

+11.28%


Republican
Kelly Ann Ayotte (Incumbent)
353,632
47.84%
-12.28%


Independent
Aaron Day
17,742
2.40%
N/A


Libertarian
Brian Chabot
12,597
1.70%
+0.65%

Plurality

1,017

0.14%


Turnout
738,620
100.00%



Democratic gain from Republican

Swing





New York











New York election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Chuck Schumer official photo (cropped).jpg

EWendyLong022612 12 (cropped).jpg
Nominee

Chuck Schumer

Wendy Long

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

5,221,945
2,009,355
Percentage

70.6%
27.2%




New York Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg

Schumer:
     50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Long:
     50–60%








U.S. Senator before election

Chuck Schumer
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Chuck Schumer
Democratic






Three-term Senator Chuck Schumer (Democrat) was re-elected with 66% of the vote in 2010. He was 66 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[37] Chuck Schumer has been elected leader of the Senate Democrats succeeding Harry Reid.[320]


Wendy Long, the Republican nominee in 2012, ran as the nominee of Republican, Conservative, and Reform Parties.[78] Other potential Republican candidates included U.S. Representatives Chris Gibson and Peter T. King.[321] U.S. Representative Richard L. Hanna, Manhattan Republican Party Chairwoman Adele Malpass, and former CNBC television host Larry Kudlow[322] were also mentioned as possible candidates, but all have declined to run.[321][323]


Robin Laverne Wilson, the Green Party of New York nominee, received 1.5% of the vote.[324] Alex Merced, the Libertarian Party candidate,[325] received 0.7% of the vote.[324]


























































































































New York general election[326]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Chuck Schumer
4,784,218
61.34%
N/A


Working Families

Chuck Schumer
241,672
3.10%
N/A


Independence

Chuck Schumer
150,654
1.93%
N/A


Women's Equality

Chuck Schumer
45,401
0.58%
N/A


Total

Chuck Schumer

5,221,945

66.95%
+2.97%


Republican

Wendy Long
1,723,920
22.10%
N/A


Conservative (N.Y.)

Wendy Long
267,622
3.43%
N/A


Reform

Wendy Long
17,813
0.23%
N/A

Total

Wendy Long
2,009,335
25.76%
-0.58%


Green
Robin Laverne Wilson
113,413
1.45%
+0.45%


Libertarian

Alex Merced
48,120
0.62%
+0.02%

None
Blank/Void/Scattering
407,786
5.22%
N/A
Total votes
7,800,619
100.00%



Democratic hold

Swing





North Carolina











North Carolina election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Richard Burr official portrait (cropped).jpg

Deborah K Ross.jpg
Nominee

Richard Burr

Deborah K. Ross

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

2,395,376
2,128,165
Percentage

51.1%
45.4%




North Carolina Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Richard Burr
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Richard Burr
Republican






Two-term Senator Richard Burr (Republican) was re-elected with 55% of the vote in 2010. He was 61 years old in 2016. There had been speculation that Burr might retire,[327] but he ran for re-election.[81][328]


Three Republicans challenged Burr in the primary: Greg Brannon,[329] Larry Holmquist,[330] and former Superior Court Judge Paul Wright.[331] On March 15, Burr won the primary with 61% of the vote.[332]


Former state representative Deborah Ross,[82]Spring Lake Mayor Chris Rey,[333] businessman Kevin Griffin,[334] and retired U.S. Army Captain Ernest Reeves[335] ran for the Democratic nomination. Former U.S. Senator Kay Hagan,[336] state treasurer Janet Cowell,[337] and Anthony Foxx, the United States Secretary of Transportation and former Mayor of Charlotte, declined to run.[338] On March 15, Ross won the primary with 62% of the vote.[339]


Burr won re-election 51% to 45% for Ross.













































North Carolina Republican primary election[340]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Richard Burr

622,074

61.41%


Republican
Greg Brannon
255,030
25.17%


Republican
Paul Wright
85,944
8.48%


Republican
Larry Holmquist
50,010
4.94%
Total votes

1,013,058

100.00%












































North Carolina Democratic primary election[341]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Deborah Ross

614,414

62.32%


Democratic
Chris Rey
162,869
16.52%


Democratic
Kevin Griffin
115,618
11.73%


Democratic
Ernest Reeves
93,005
9.43%
Total votes

985,906

100.00%























































North Carolina general election[342]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Richard Burr (Incumbent)

2,395,376

51.06%

-3.75%


Democratic
Deborah Ross
2,128,165
45.37%
+2.32%


Libertarian
Sean Haugh
167,592
3.57%
+1.48%
Majority
267,208
5.69%

Decrease 6.07%
Total votes
4,691,133
100.00%
+76.35%


Republican hold

Swing





North Dakota











North Dakota election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

John Hoeven, Official Senate Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

No image.png
Nominee

John Hoeven

Eliot Glassheim

Party

Republican

Democratic-NPL
Popular vote

268,788
58,116
Percentage

78.5%
17.0%




North Dakota Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

John Hoeven
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

John Hoeven
Republican






One-term Senator John Hoeven (Republican) was elected with 76% of the vote in 2010. He was 59 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[84]


Democrats endorsed state representative Eliot Glassheim[343] On November 7, 2015, the Libertarian party nominated Robert Marquette.


Hoeven defeated Glassheim 78% to 17%.































North Dakota Republican primary election[344]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

John Hoeven

103,677

99.57%


Republican
Write-in
445
0.43%
Total votes

104,122

100.00%






























Democratic-NPL primary election[344]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic-NPL

Eliot Glassheim

17,243

99.72%


Democratic-NPL
Write-in
48
0.28%
Total votes

17,291

100.00%






























Libertarian primary election[344]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Libertarian

Robert Marquette

1,089

99.54%


Libertarian
Write-in
5
0.46%
Total votes

1,094

100.00%







































































North Dakota general election<[345]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

John Hoeven

268,788

78.48%

+2.40%


Democratic-NPL
Eliot Glassheim
58,116
16.97%
-5.20%


Libertarian
Robert Marquette
10,556
3.08%
+1.45%


Independent
James Germalic
4,675
1.36%
N/A

Write-ins

366
0.11%
N/A
Majority
210,672
61.51%


Turnout
342,501
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing





Ohio











Ohio election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Rob Portman, official portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

Ted Strickland photo.jpg
Nominee

Rob Portman

Ted Strickland

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

3,118,567
1,996,908
Percentage

58.0%
37.2%




OhioSenateElection2016.svg
County Results
















U.S. Senator before election

Rob Portman
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Rob Portman
Republican






One-term Senator Rob Portman (Republican) was elected with 57% of the vote in 2010. He was 60 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election. He had considered running for President, but decided not to.[87]


Two candidates filed to challenge him: Don Elijah Eckhart, who ran for OH-15 as an independent in 2008,[346] and Melissa Strzala, but Strzala was disqualified.[347] On March 15, Portman won the primary with 82% of the vote.


Former Governor and Congressman Ted Strickland, Cincinnati City Councilman P.G. Sittenfeld, and occupational therapist Kelli Prather ran for the Democratic nomination.[348][349][350] Former State Representative Bob Hagan had filed papers to run,[351] but later withdrew from the race.[352] On March 15, Strickland won the primary with 65% of the vote.


Joseph DeMare, a machinist from Bowling Green, is the Green Party candidate. He ran unopposed in the March 15, 2016 primary, and received enough votes to substantially increase the number of enrolled Green Party members. In Ohio, the only way to join a political party is to vote in that Party's primary.































Ohio Republican primary election[353]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Rob Portman

1,336,686

82.16%


Republican
Don Elijah Eckhart
290,268
17.84%
Total votes

1,626,954

100.00%





































Ohio Democratic primary election[353]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Ted Strickland

742,676

65.04%


Democratic
P.G. Sittenfeld
254,232
22.26%


Democratic
Kelli Prather
144,945
12.69%
Total votes

1,141,853

100.00%























Green primary election[353]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Green

Joe DeMare

3,123

100.00%
Total votes

3,123

100.00%









































































Ohio general election[354]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Rob Portman (Incumbent)

3,118,567

58.03%

+1.18%


Democratic
Ted Strickland
1,996,908
37.16%
-2.24%


Independent
Tom Connors
93,041
1.73%
N/A


Green
Joseph R. DeMare
88,246
1.64%
N/A


Independent
Scott Rupert
77,291
1.44%
N/A


Independent
James Stahl (Write-in)
111
0.00%
N/A
Total votes
5,374,164
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing
NA




Oklahoma











Oklahoma election




← 2014


2022 →





























 

Senator James Lankford official portrait 115th congress.jpg

Mike Workman.jpg
Nominee

James Lankford
Mike Workman

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

980,892
355,911
Percentage

67.7%
24.6%




Oklahoma Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg

Lankford:
     50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%








U.S. Senator before election

James Lankford
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

James Lankford
Republican






Two-term Senator Tom Coburn (Republican) was re-elected with 71% of the vote in 2010, but chose to leave office before the end of his term after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. James Lankford won the 2014 special election to serve the remainder of Coburn's term.[355] Lankford ran for re-election.[37]


Former Congressman Dan Boren was viewed by some Oklahoma political operatives as the only Democrat who could make the 2016 race competitive, but was seen as unlikely to run.[356] Lankford's 2014 special election opponent Constance N. Johnson has said that she plans to run again.[357]































Libertarian primary election[358]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Libertarian

Robert Murphy

1,537

58.89%


Libertarian
Dax Ewbank
1,073
41.11%
Total votes

2,610

100.00%




























































Oklahoma general election[359]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

James Lankford (Incumbent)

980,892

67.74%


Democratic
Mike Workman
355,911
24.58%


Libertarian
Robert T. Murphy
43,421
3.00%


Independent
Sean Braddy
40,405
2.79%


Independent
Mark T. Beard
27,418
1.89%
Majority
624,981
43.16%
Total votes

1,448,047

100.00%


Republican hold



Oregon











Oregon election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Ron Wyden official portrait crop.jpg

Mark Callahan.jpg
Nominee

Ron Wyden

Mark Callahan

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

1,105,119
651,106
Percentage

56.6%
33.4%




Oregon Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Ron Wyden
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Ron Wyden
Democratic






Three-term Senator Ron Wyden (Democrat) was re-elected with 57% of the vote in 2010. He was 67 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[37]


Medford City Councilor Kevin Stine[360] and retired locomotive engineer Paul Weaver[361] challenged Wyden for the Democratic nomination. Wyden won the Democratic nomination.


Information technology consultant and 2014 candidate Mark Callahan,[92] businessman Sam Carpenter,[362] business consultant Dan Laschober,[363] Steven Reynolds,[361] and Lane County commissioner Faye Stewart[364] ran for the Republican nomination. Callahan won the Republican nomination.













































Oregon Democratic primary election[365]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Ron Wyden

501,903

83.20%


Democratic
Kevin Stine
78,287
12.98%


Democratic
Paul Weaver
20,346
3.37%



write-ins
2,740
0.45%
Total votes

603,276

100.00%



















































Oregon Republican primary election[365]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Mark Callahan

123,473

38.24%


Republican
Sam Carpenter
104,494
32.36%


Republican
Faye Stewart
57,399
17.78%


Republican
Dan Laschober
34,157
10.58%



write-ins
3,357
1.04%
Total votes

322,880

100.00%





































Independent primary election[365]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Independent

Steven Reynolds

10,497

40.80%


Independent
Marvin Sandnes
4,733
18.40%



write-ins
10,496
40.80%
Total votes

25,726

100.00%





































































Oregon general election<[366]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Ron Wyden (Incumbent)

1,105,119

56.60%


Republican
Mark Callahan
651,106
33.35%


Working Families
Shanti Lewallen
61,915
3.17%


Independent
Steven Reynolds
59,516
3.05%


Pacific Green
Eric Navickas
48,823
2.50%


Libertarian
Jim Lindsay
23,941
1.23%


Write-Ins

2,058
0.10%
Total votes

1,952,478

100.00%


Democratic hold



Pennsylvania











Pennsylvania election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Pat Toomey, Official Portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

Kathleen McGinty (2015).jpg
Nominee

Pat Toomey

Katie McGinty

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

2,951,702
2,865,012
Percentage

48.8%
47.3%




PennsylvaniaSenateElection2016.svg
County results
















U.S. Senator before election

Pat Toomey
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Pat Toomey
Republican






One-term Senator Pat Toomey (Republican) was elected with 51% of the vote in 2010. He was 54 years old in 2016. Toomey ran for re-election.[94]


Everett Stern, a security intelligence consultant and whistleblower of the HSBC money laundering scandal, announced that he would challenge Toomey for the Republican nomination,[367] but has missed the filing deadline, so Toomey was unopposed in the primary.


Democratic candidates included Katie McGinty, former Chief of Staff to Governor Tom Wolf and former Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection,[95] former Congressman Joe Sestak, who defeated incumbent Senator Arlen Specter (a Democrat turned Republican turned back to Democrat) for the 2010 Democratic nomination, but lost to Toomey in the general election,[368] the current mayor of Braddock, Pennsylvania, John Fetterman,[369] who is an AmeriCorps alum and Harvard University graduate,[370] and small businessman and senate candidate in 2010 and 2012 Joseph Vodvarka.[371]Allentown Mayor Ed Pawlowski announced his candidacy for the seat but suspended his campaign due to an FBI investigation of Allentown.[372] McGinty won the primary and faced Toomey in the general election on November 8, 2016. Toomey defeated McGinty and retained the seat.
























Pennsylvania Republican primary election[373]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

Pat Toomey

1,342,941

100.00%
Total votes

1,342,941

100.00%












































Pennsylvania Democratic primary election[373]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Katie McGinty

669,774

42.50%


Democratic

Joe Sestak
513,221
32.57%


Democratic

John Fetterman
307,090
19.49%


Democratic
Joseph Vodvarka
85,837
5.45%
Total votes

1,575,922

100.00%

















































Pennsylvania general election[374]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Pat Toomey (Incumbent)

2,951,702

48.77%

-2.24%


Democratic
Katie McGinty
2,865,012
47.34%
-1.65%


Libertarian
Edward T. Clifford III
235,142
3.89%
N/A
Total votes
6,051,941
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing
NA




South Carolina











South Carolina election




← 2014


2022 →





























 

Tim Scott, official portrait, 113th Congress (cropped).jpg

Sc pastor thomas dixon.jpg
Nominee

Tim Scott

Thomas Dixon

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,241,609
757,022
Percentage

60.6%
36.9%




South Carolina Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Tim Scott
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Tim Scott
Republican






Two-term Republican Senator Jim DeMint (Republican) was re-elected with 61% of the vote in 2010. He resigned at the start of 2013 to become President of The Heritage Foundation and U.S. Representative Tim Scott (Republican) of South Carolina's 1st congressional district was appointed to replace DeMint by Governor Nikki Haley.[375]


Scott subsequently won the special election in 2014 for the remaining two years of the term. Scott ran for re-election[37] and he was a potential Republican vice presidential nominee.[376][377]


Other potential Republican candidates include Congressmen Mick Mulvaney,[378]Jeff Duncan and Mark Sanford, along with State Senator Tom Davis, State Treasurer Curtis Loftis and State Attorney General Alan Wilson.[376]Darla Moore was mentioned as a potential candidate for either party.[376]


On the Democratic side, pastor Thomas Dixon ran in the general primary on November 8, 2016 but was defeated by the incumbent, Scott.[97]








































































South Carolina general election<[379][380]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Tim Scott (Incumbent)

1,241,609

60.57%

-0.55%


Democratic
Thomas Dixon
757,022
36.93%
-0.16%


Libertarian
Bill Bledsoe
37,482
1.83%
N/A


American



Michael Scarborough
11,923
0.58%
N/A

Other
Write-Ins
1,857
0.09%
+0.05%
Majority
484,587
23.62%
-0.41%

Turnout
2,049,893
65.75%
+22.75%


Republican hold

Swing





South Dakota











South Dakota election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

John Thune, official portrait, 111th Congress (cropped1).jpg

3x4.svg
Nominee

John Thune
Jay Williams

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

265,516
104,140
Percentage

71.8%
28.2%




South Dakota Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg







U.S. Senator before election

John Thune
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

John Thune
Republican






Two-term Senator John Thune (Republican) ran unopposed and was re-elected with 100% in 2010.[99]


Jay Williams, Chair of the Yankton County Democratic Party, and candidate for the State House in 2010 and 2014, is running for the Democratic nomination.[100] Other potential Democratic candidates include State Senator Bernie Hunhoff[381] and filmmaker and former television news producer Sam Hurst.[382]


Former U.S. Representative Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, Sioux Falls Mayor Mike Heuther, and 2014 nominee Rick Weiland all declined to run.[383][384]








































South Dakota general election[385]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Republican

John Thune (Incumbent)

265,494

71.83%


Democratic
Jay Williams
104,125
28.17%
Majority
161,369
43.66%
Total votes

369,619

100.00%


Republican hold



Utah











Utah election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Mike Lee official portrait 112th Congress.jpg

Misty Snow (30523743970 cropped).jpg
Nominee

Mike Lee

Misty Snow

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

760,241
301,860
Percentage

68.2%
27.1%




Utah Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Mike Lee
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Mike Lee
Republican






One-term Senator Mike Lee (Republican) was elected with 62% of the vote in 2010. He was 45 years old in 2016. He ran for re-election.[101] State party chair Thomas Wright, former State Senator Dan Liljenquist, State Senator Aaron Osmond, Congressman Jason Chaffetz, Congressman Chris Stewart, former Governor of Utah Mike Leavitt, and Mitt Romney's son Josh Romney[386][387][388] were mentioned as potential primary challengers, but all declined to run.[389][390] Lee ran unopposed at the Utah Republican convention and is the Republican nominee.[391]


Marriage therapist Jonathan Swinton[392] and grocery store clerk Misty Snow, a transgender woman, ran for the Democratic nomination. Snow defeated Swinton by more than 20 percentage points, running to the left of Swinton, criticizing him for supporting limitations on abortion rights. She became the first transgender woman to become a major party's nominee for the Senate.[393]































Utah Democratic primary election[394]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Misty K. Snow

28,928

59.40%


Democratic
Jonathan Swinton
19,774
40.60%
Total votes

48,702

100.00%































































Utah general election[395]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Mike Lee

760,241

68.15%

+6.59%


Democratic

Misty Snow
301,860
27.06%
-5.71%


Independent American
Stoney Fonua
27,340
2.45%
N/A

Unaffiliated
Bill Barron
26,167
2.34%
N/A
Majority
458,381


Total votes
1,115,608
100.00%



Republican hold

Swing





Vermont











Vermont election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Patrick Leahy 113th Congress.jpg

Scott Milne -- Vermont politician and businessman -- 2017-05-15-3.jpg
Nominee

Patrick Leahy

Scott Milne

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

192,243
103,637
Percentage

60.0%
32.3%




Vermont Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg

Leahy:
     50–60%      60–70%
Milne:
     40–50%








U.S. Senator before election

Patrick Leahy
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Patrick Leahy
Democratic






Seven-term Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy was re-elected with 64% of the vote in 2010. Leahy won re-election in 2016, aged 76.[103]


Scott Milne, the Republican nominee who narrowly lost the 2014 Vermont gubernatorial election, ran unsuccessfully against Leahy.[396][397]































Vermont Democratic primary election[398]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Patrick Leahy (Incumbent)

62,412

89.15%


Democratic
Cris Ericson
7,595
10.85%
Total votes

70,007

100.00%































































































Vermont general election[399][400]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Patrick Leahy (Incumbent)

192,243

59.99%

-3.05%


Republican

Scott Milne
103,637
32.34%
+2.08%


Marijuana
Cris Ericson
9,156
2.86%
+1.76%


Independent
Jerry Trudell
5,223
1.63%
N/A


Liberty Union

Peter Diamondstone
3,241
1.01%
0.40%

Write-ins

309
0.10%
N/A

Spoiled votes

466
0.15%
N/A

Blank votes

6,192
1.93%
N/A
Majority
88,606
27.65%

Total votes
320,467
100.00%



Democratic hold

Swing





Washington











Washington election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Patty Murray, official portrait, 113th Congress.jpg

No image.svg
Nominee

Patty Murray

Chris Vance

Party

Democratic

Republican
Popular vote

1,913,979
1,329,338
Percentage

59.0%
41.0%




Washington Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Patty Murray
Democratic



Elected U.S. Senator

Patty Murray
Democratic






Four-term Senator Patty Murray (Democrat) was re-elected with 52% of the vote in 2010. She ran successfully for re-election against Republican candidate Chris Vance.[106] Congressman Dave Reichert was considered a potential Republican candidate[401] but chose to run for reelection.[402]








































































































































Washington Blanket primary election [403]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Patty Murray (Incumbent)

745,421

53.82%


Republican

Chris Vance

381,004

27.51%


Republican
Eric John Makus
57,825
4.18%


Democratic
Phil Cornell
46,460
3.35%


Republican
Scott Nazarino
41,542
3.00%


Libertarian
Mike Luke
20,988
1.52%


Democratic
Mohammad Said
13,362
0.96%


Independent
Donna Rae Lands
11,472
0.83%


Independent
Ted Cummings
11,028
0.80%


Independent
Sam Wright
10,751
0.78%


Republican
Uncle Mover
8,569
0.62%


Independent
Jeremy Teuton
7,991
0.58%


Democratic
Thor Amundson
7,906
0.57%


Independent
Chuck Jackson
6,318
0.46%


Independent
Pano Churchill
5,150
0.37%


Independent
Zach Haller
5,092
0.37%


Independent
Alex Tsimerman
4,117
0.30%
Total votes

1,384,996

100.00%















































Washington general election[404]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Democratic

Patty Murray (Incumbent)

1,913,979

59.01%

+6.65%


Republican

Chris Vance
1,329,338
40.99%
-6.65%
Majority
584,641
18.02%
+13.30%
Total votes
3,243,317
100.00%
29.16%


Democratic hold

Swing





Wisconsin











Wisconsin election




← 2010


2022 →





























 

Ron Johnson, official portrait, 112th Congress.jpg

Russ Feingold Official Portrait 3.jpg
Nominee

Ron Johnson

Russ Feingold

Party

Republican

Democratic
Popular vote

1,479,471
1,380,335
Percentage

50.2%
46.8%




Wisconsin Senate Election Results by County, 2016.svg
County results








U.S. Senator before election

Ron Johnson
Republican



Elected U.S. Senator

Ron Johnson
Republican






One-term Senator Ron Johnson (Republican) defeated three-term Senator Russ Feingold (Democrat) with 52% of the vote in 2010.


On May 14, 2015, Feingold announced that he would seek a rematch against Johnson for his former Senate seat.[108] Immediately after his announcement, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee endorsed Feingold's candidacy.[405] Businesswoman and 2014 gubernatorial nominee Mary Burke has declared that she is not seeking statewide office in 2016.[406]


Johnson and Feingold faced each other again, and Johnson again defeated Feingold, in what many observers and pundits considered to be a surprising and uphill victory.[107]































Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%


Democratic

Russ Feingold

303,282

90.14%


Democratic
Scott Harbach
33,185
9.86%
Total votes

336,467

100.00%




























































Wisconsin general election[407]
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±


Republican

Ron Johnson (Incumbent)

1,479,471

50.2%

-1.7%


Democratic
Russ Feingold
1,380,335
46.8%
-0.2%


Libertarian

Phillip Anderson
87,531
3.0%
N/A


Write-In Votes
8
0.0%
N/A
Majority
99,136
3.4%
-1.5%

Turnout
2,947,345
100.0%



Republican hold


See also




  • United States elections, 2016 (other elections being held at the same time)

    • United States House of Representatives elections, 2016

    • United States presidential election, 2016

    • United States gubernatorial elections, 2016




  • United States Senate elections, 2010 (the previous election for this class of Senators)



Notes





  1. ^ ab Both general election candidates in California were Democrats, having won the top two spots in the nonpartisan blanket primary (established by California Proposition 14 (2010)), so all 12.2 million votes in California were for counted for Democrats. For comparison, in 2012, the last time a Republican candidate for the US Senate appeared on the ballot in California, 12.6 million votes were cast, of which 4.7 million, or 38%, were cast for the Republican candidate.


  2. ^ ab Both independents caucused with the Democrats.




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