United States Senate elections, 2018

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Revision as of 13:53, 7 December 2007

Elections for the United States Senate will be held on November 6, 2018, with 15 of the 36 seats in the Senate to be contested. 12 seats are regular elections; the winners serve six-year terms from 2019 until 2024 as members of Senate Class 2. There are also 3 special elections for a seats from the Atlantic Seaboard, New York, and the Ohio Valley to serve out the remaining 2 years of the term of those seats as members of Senate Class 3.

The 2018 gubernatorial elections and House of Representatives elections will occurr on the same date, as well as many regional and local elections.

Contents

Background

TBC

Results

TBC

Races

Retirements

No Senator has yet announced their intention to not seek re-election. However, Senator Samuel Clay will resign from the Senate if he is confirmed by the Senate to be President Whitney Mason's Secretary of State and some predict that Senator Al Marshall will not seek re-election.

Democratic incumbent races

Bradley Abbott (D-CT) of New England

Senator Bradley Abbott was elected to the Senate in 2016 to serve out the remaining two years of former Senator Joseph Salazar-Portela's term, having previously held the position of House Majority Leader. Massachusetts Congressman Walter Alhazred is the only declared Republican candidate for this race and appears to be Abbott's his likely opponent [1].

Red Blanchard (D-LA) of the Gulf Coast

TBC

Sandros Cheshire (D-NJ) of the Atlantic Seaboard

TBC

Hys Clematis (D-CA) of California

TBC

Calum Daniels (D-NC) of the Appalachia

TBC

Vincent Giorelli (D-NJ) of the Atlantic Seaboard

TBC

Al Marshall (D-TN) of the Southeast

TBC

Dante Moretti (D-NY) of New York

TBC

Gregory Wolff (D-IL) of Illinois

TBC

Republican incumbent races

Constantine Gurlakis (R-FL) of Florida

TBC

Andrew Graham (R-MN) of the Midwest

TBC

Troy Carter (R-OH) of Ohio

TBC

Samuel Clay (R-PA) of Pennsylvania

TBC

Keiko Kagura (R-MT) of the Rocky Mountains

TBC

Kyle Van Horn (R-TX) of Texas

TBC

Summary table

TBC

See also

United States Senate Elections
2008 | 2010 | 2012 | 2014 | 2016 | 2018 | 2020 | 2022 | 2024 | 2026 | 2028
See also: Elections | House | Senate | Governors | President
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