United States House of Representatives elections, 2012
Elections to the U.S. House were held on November 6, 2012. All 435 seats were up for election.
The 2012 elections were the first using new redistricting maps based on 2010 Census data. As a result of redistricting, the number of swing races that are competitive was expected to drop below 100.[1] Redistricting was considered a draw between Democrats and Republicans, with both parties gaining advantages in some states.[2] Democrats would have required a net gain of 25 seats to re-take control of the U.S. House.[3] The 2012 election produced the largest class of Latinos to ever enter Congress, while simultaneously showing the biggest increase in total seats held by Latino representatives in the history of the House. There were 22 incumbent Latinos on the ballot, and as many as nine additional challengers were considered possible to win. A total of 30 Latino members were elected to the 113th Congress.[4][5]
For only the fourth time in 100 years, the party that pulled the most total popular votes nationwide did not win control of the House.[6][7] Democratic candidates nationwide tallied more votes than Republican candidates. The last time this occurred was in 1952, when Democrats won the popular vote but Republicans won the House. The other two times this phenomenon took place was 1914 and 1942, when Republicans won the popular vote but did not win the most seats.[8] Republicans were not required to win a single Democratic-leaning district in order to hold their majority, owing to the fact that 241 districts have GOP-leaning populations.[9]
Following the general election, Democratic candidates held on to nine seats that had a political lean favoring Republicans by 54% or more. This is down from prior to 2010 where Democrats held 32 seats in that same environment. With regards to ticket-splitting, there were 24 districts in which one party's nominee carried the presidential vote and the other party's nominee won the congressional race. All but four of which were won by an incumbent.[10]
In 2010, 54 incumbents lost to challengers in the general election with Republicans swinging 63 total seats in their favor.[11][12]
Partisan breakdown
Heading into the 2012 election, Republicans were the majority party in the U.S. House. A total of 218 seats were needed for a majority. Republicans could have lost as many as 24 seats in the November election and still maintained control of the chamber. Democrats needed to win at least 25 seats to take back the partisan advantage.
U.S. House Partisan Breakdown | |||
---|---|---|---|
Party | As of November 2012 | After the 2012 Election | |
Democratic Party | 193 | 201 | |
Republican Party | 242 | 234 | |
Total | 435 | 435 |
A Washington Post article in May 2012 indicated that the Republican House majority was no guarantee, based on polls indicated the vulnerability of some incumbents in neutral districts.[13] A Politico story in May 2012 pointed to California as the likely state that would determine whether Democrats win control of the House.[14] An October 24, 2012, article in Bloomberg Businessweek indicated that Republicans were in a "strong position" to retain their majority in the House. Political analysts predicted that Democrats could gain up to 10 seats on election night.[15][16] A Salon article highlighted that while Democratic candidates won more than a million votes over Republican candidates in the 2012 general election, most of the votes were clustered around urban areas as opposed being broadly dispersed across the country. There are 47 districts with a partisan divide of 70 percent to 30 percent in favor of Democrats. Only 23 such districts exist on the Republican side. Of the 16 districts where the partisan divide is 80% to 20% or more, Democrats represent 15 of them.[10]
Margin of victory
There were a total of 435 seats up for election in 2012. The following table shows the margin of victory for each race winner, which is calculated by examining the percentage difference between the top-two vote getters. If the race was uncontested, the margin of victory is listed as 100%. Some general facts:
- 30 races (6.9 percent) had a margin of victory of less than 5 percent. Of those 30 races, 18 were Democratic winners while 12 were Republican.
- 33 races (7.6 percent) had a margin of victory between 5 and 10 percent. Of those 33 races, 15 were Democratic winners while 18 were Republican.
- 87 races (20 percent) had a margin of victory between 10 and 20 percent. Of those 87 races, 23 were Democratic winners while 64 were Republican.
- 285 races (65.5 percent) had a margin of victory of greater than 20 percent. Of those 285 races, 145 were Democratic winners while 140 were Republican.
- The fewest votes were in Texas' 29th District, with only 95,611 total votes. Incumbent Gene Green (D) faced two third-party candidates in the general election.
- The most votes were in Montana, with 479,740 votes cast. Montana has a total population of 998,199 -- which is roughly 250,000 above the average district size in states without single districts. Because Montana has only one district for the whole state, its voters per district is higher than the rest of the country. The average size of each district is 709,000. The second-most votes cast came in Colorado's 2nd District, with 421,580 total votes.
- The smallest margin of victory, was North Carolina's 7th District, where incumbent Democrat Mike McIntyre defeated David Rouzer (R) by 0.2 percent (654 votes).
- The largest margin of victory where both major parties fielded a general election candidate was in New York's 15th District, where incumbent Democrat Jose Serrano defeated Frank Della Valle (R) by 83%.
- The average margin of victory of all congressional districts was 31.85%, meaning that on average the winner of each race received nearly twice as many votes as the top opponent. Average MOV for Democratic winners was 35.7%, while the average for Republicans was 28.6%.
- The average number of votes cast per district was 281,917, yielding an average voter turnout of 39.76%.
Margin of Victory in 2012 United States House of Representatives Elections | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
State | Winner | Margin of Victory | Total Votes | Top Opponent | ||||
North Carolina, District 7 | Mike McIntyre | 0.2% | 336,736 | David Rouzer | ||||
Illinois, District 13 | Rodney Davis | 0.3% | 294,385 | David Gill | ||||
Utah, District 4 | Jim Matheson | 0.3% | 245,277 | Mia B. Love | ||||
Michigan, District 1 | Dan Benishek | 0.5% | 347,037 | Gary McDowell | ||||
Florida, District 18 | Patrick Murphy | 0.6% | 330,665 | Allen West | ||||
Arizona, District 2 | Ron Barber | 0.8% | 292,279 | Martha McSally | ||||
Massachusetts, District 6 | John Tierney | 1.1% | 389,852 | Richard Tisei | ||||
Minnesota, District 6 | Michele Bachmann | 1.2% | 355,153 | Jim Graves | ||||
Illinois, District 10 | Brad Schneider | 1.3% | 264,454 | Robert J. Dold | ||||
Indiana, District 2 | Jackie Walorski | 1.4% | 273,475 | Brendan Mullen | ||||
New York, District 27 | Chris Collins | 1.5% | 329,768 | Kathy Hochul | ||||
Nebraska, District 2 | Lee Terry | 1.6% | 263,731 | John Ewing | ||||
New York, District 21 | Bill Owens | 1.9% | 268,741 | Matthew Doheny | ||||
Colorado, District 6 | Mike Coffman | 2% | 342,891 | Joe Miklosi | ||||
California, District 52 | Scott Peters | 2.4% | 295,910 | Brian Bilbray | ||||
Connecticut, District 5 | Elizabeth Esty | 2.6% | 284,747 | Andrew Roraback | ||||
California, District 7 | Ami Bera | 3.4% | 273,291 | Dan Lungren | ||||
Florida, District 10 | Daniel Webster | 3.5% | 318,269 | Val Demings | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 12 | Keith Rothfus | 3.5% | 338,941 | Mark Critz | ||||
Arizona, District 1 | Ann Kirkpatrick | 3.6% | 251,595 | Jonathon Paton | ||||
New York, District 23 | Tom Reed | 3.6% | 279,796 | Nate Shinagawa | ||||
New York, District 18 | Sean Maloney | 3.7% | 295,436 | Nan Hayworth | ||||
New Hampshire, District 1 | Carol Shea-Porter | 3.8% | 344,830 | Frank Guinta | ||||
Kentucky, District 6 | Andy Barr | 3.9% | 303,000 | Ben Chandler | ||||
Arizona, District 9 | Kyrsten Sinema | 4.1% | 250,141 | Vernon B. Parker | ||||
Ohio, District 16 | James B. Renacci | 4.1% | 355,765 | Betty Sutton | ||||
California, District 15 | Eric Swalwell | 4.2% | 231,034 | Pete Stark | ||||
New York, District 1 | Tim Bishop | 4.6% | 294,578 | Randy Altschuler | ||||
New Hampshire, District 2 | Ann McLane Kuster | 4.8% | 337,188 | Charles Bass | ||||
Texas, District 23 | Pete Gallego | 4.8% | 192,169 | Francisco Canseco | ||||
New York, District 11 | Michael Grimm | 5% | 214,755 | Mark Murphy | ||||
New York, District 19 | Chris Gibson | 5.3% | 305,882 | Julian Schreibman | ||||
New York, District 24 | Dan Maffei | 5.3% | 303,567 | Ann Marie Buerkle | ||||
California, District 26 | Julia Brownley | 5.4% | 263,935 | Tony Strickland | ||||
California, District 10 | Jeff Denham | 5.4% | 209,199 | Jose Hernandez | ||||
Florida, District 2 | Steve Southerland II | 5.5% | 333,718 | Al Lawson | ||||
California, District 36 | Raul Ruiz | 5.9% | 208,142 | Mary Bono Mack | ||||
North Carolina, District 9 | Robert Pittenger | 6.1% | 375,690 | Jennifer Roberts | ||||
Michigan, District 11 | Kerry Bentivolio | 6.4% | 358,124 | Syed Taj | ||||
Ohio, District 6 | Bill Johnson | 6.5% | 308,980 | Charlie Wilson | ||||
Illinois, District 17 | Cheri Bustos | 6.6% | 288,152 | Bobby Schilling | ||||
West Virginia, District 3 | Nick Rahall | 7.1% | 191,518 | Rick Snuffer | ||||
Florida, District 16 | Vern Buchanan | 7.2% | 349,076 | Keith Fitzgerald | ||||
Georgia, District 12 | John Barrow | 7.4% | 259,121 | Lee Anderson | ||||
Nevada, District 3 | Joe Heck | 7.5% | 272,523 | John Oceguera | ||||
Virginia, District 2 | Scott Rigell | 7.7% | 309,222 | Paul Hirschbiel | ||||
North Carolina, District 8 | Richard Hudson | 7.8% | 302,280 | Larry Kissell | ||||
California, District 33 | Henry Waxman | 7.9% | 318,520 | Bill Bloomfield | ||||
Washington, District 1 | Suzan DelBene | 7.9% | 328,212 | John Koster | ||||
Nevada, District 4 | Steven Horsford | 8% | 240,492 | Danny Tarkanian | ||||
Iowa, District 4 | Steve King | 8.1% | 377,657 | Christie Vilsack | ||||
Minnesota, District 2 | John Kline | 8.2% | 358,446 | Mike Obermuller | ||||
Michigan, District 3 | Justin Amash | 8.4% | 326,281 | Steve Pestka | ||||
California, District 3 | John Garamendi | 8.5% | 233,968 | Kim Vann | ||||
Iowa, District 3 | Tom Latham | 8.6% | 386,270 | Leonard Boswell | ||||
Illinois, District 12 | William Enyart | 8.9% | 303,947 | Jason Plummer | ||||
Minnesota, District 8 | Rick Nolan | 8.9% | 353,663 | Chip Cravaack | ||||
New Jersey, District 3 | Jon Runyan | 8.9% | 324,408 | Shelley Adler | ||||
Texas, District 14 | Randy Weber | 8.9% | 245,839 | Nick Lampson | ||||
Hawaii, District 1 | Colleen Hanabusa | 9% | 217,796 | Charles Djou | ||||
Florida, District 22 | Lois Frankel | 9.3% | 313,071 | Adam Hasner | ||||
Illinois, District 8 | Tammy Duckworth | 9.5% | 225,066 | Joe Walsh | ||||
California, District 25 | Buck McKeon | 9.6% | 236,575 | Lee Rogers | ||||
California, District 24 | Lois Capps | 10.2% | 284,495 | Abel Maldonado | ||||
Michigan, District 7 | Tim Walberg | 10.3% | 318,069 | Kurt R. Haskell | ||||
Indiana, District 8 | Larry Bucshon | 10.3% | 283,992 | Dave Crooks | ||||
California, District 31 | Gary Miller | 10.4% | 161,219 | Bob Dutton | ||||
Montana, At-Large, District | Steve Daines | 10.5% | 479,740 | Kim Gillan | ||||
Florida, District 26 | Joe Garcia | 10.6% | 252,957 | David Rivera | ||||
Indiana, District 9 | Todd Young | 10.9% | 298,180 | Shelli Yoder | ||||
California, District 9 | Jerry McNerney | 11.1% | 213,077 | Ricky Gill | ||||
South Carolina, District 5 | Mick Mulvaney | 11.1% | 278,003 | Joyce Knott | ||||
South Carolina, District 7 | Tom Rice | 11.1% | 275,738 | Gloria Bromell Tinubu | ||||
Tennessee, District 4 | Scott DesJarlais | 11.5% | 230,590 | Eric Stewart | ||||
Wisconsin, District 1 | Paul Ryan | 11.5% | 365,058 | Rob Zerban | ||||
Oregon, District 5 | Kurt Schrader | 11.6% | 327,970 | Fred Thompson | ||||
California, District 35 | Gloria Negrete McLeod | 11.7% | 142,680 | Joe Baca | ||||
Michigan, District 6 | Fred Upton | 12% | 320,475 | Mike O'Brien | ||||
Wisconsin, District 8 | Reid Ribble | 12% | 355,464 | Jamie Wall | ||||
Rhode Island, District 1 | David Cicilline | 12.1% | 205,115 | Brendan Doherty | ||||
Colorado, District 3 | Scott Tipton | 12.3% | 347,247 | Sal Pace | ||||
New Jersey, District 5 | Scott Garrett | 12.3% | 304,371 | Adam Gussen | ||||
Wisconsin, District 7 | Sean Duffy | 12.3% | 359,669 | Pat Kreitlow | ||||
Virginia, District 5 | Robert Hurt | 12.6% | 348,111 | John Douglass | ||||
Colorado, District 7 | Ed Perlmutter | 12.7% | 340,970 | Joe Coors, Jr. | ||||
Ohio, District 7 | Bob Gibbs | 12.8% | 315,812 | Joyce Healy-Abrams | ||||
Iowa, District 2 | Dave Loebsack | 13.1% | 380,952 | John Archer | ||||
California, District 47 | Alan Lowenthal | 13.1% | 230,012 | Gary DeLong | ||||
North Dakota, At-Large, District | Kevin Cramer | 13.2% | 316,224 | Pam Gulleson | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 8 | Michael G. Fitzpatrick | 13.2% | 352,238 | Kathryn Boockvar | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 15 | Charlie Dent | 13.5% | 297,724 | Rick Daugherty | ||||
North Carolina, District 13 | George E.B. Holding | 13.6% | 370,610 | Charles Malone | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 3 | Mike Kelly | 13.8% | 302,514 | Missa Eaton | ||||
North Carolina, District 10 | Patrick McHenry | 14% | 334,849 | Patricia Keever | ||||
Virginia, District 4 | Randy Forbes | 14% | 350,046 | Ella Ward | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 6 | Jim Gerlach | 14.3% | 335,528 | Manan Trivedi | ||||
Florida, District 6 | Ron DeSantis | 14.4% | 342,451 | Heather Beaven | ||||
New York, District 25 | Louise Slaughter | 14.4% | 322,760 | Maggie Brooks | ||||
North Carolina, District 2 | Renee Ellmers | 14.5% | 311,397 | Steve Wilkins | ||||
New York, District 3 | Steve Israel | 14.6% | 306,274 | Stephen Labate | ||||
California, District 1 | Doug La Malfa | 14.8% | 294,213 | Jim Reed | ||||
California, District 16 | Jim Costa | 14.8% | 147,450 | Brian Daniel Whelan | ||||
California, District 8 | Paul Cook | 14.8% | 179,644 | Greg Imus | ||||
North Carolina, District 11 | Mark Meadows | 14.8% | 331,426 | Hayden Rogers | ||||
South Dakota, At-Large, District | Kristi Noem | 14.9% | 361,429 | Matt Varilek | ||||
Florida, District 13 | C.W. Bill Young | 15.1% | 329,347 | Jessica Ehrlich | ||||
North Carolina, District 5 | Virginia Foxx | 15.1% | 349,197 | Elisabeth Motsinger | ||||
Virginia, District 1 | Robert J. Wittman | 15.1% | 356,806 | Adam Cook | ||||
Minnesota, District 1 | Tim Walz | 15.2% | 335,880 | Allen Quist | ||||
Ohio, District 14 | David Joyce | 15.3% | 339,868 | Dale Virgil Blanchard | ||||
Iowa, District 1 | Bruce Braley | 15.4% | 390,590 | Ben Lange | ||||
New York, District 2 | Peter T. King | 15.4% | 271,832 | Vivianne Falcone | ||||
California, District 21 | David G. Valadao | 15.5% | 116,283 | John Hernandez | ||||
California, District 39 | Ed Royce | 15.6% | 251,967 | Jay Chen | ||||
Maine, District 2 | Mike Michaud | 15.7% | 343,908 | Kevin Raye | ||||
Arkansas, District 2 | Tim Griffin | 15.7% | 286,598 | Herb Rule | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 16 | Joseph R. Pitts | 15.8% | 284,781 | Aryanna Strader | ||||
Minnesota, District 3 | Erik Paulsen | 16.3% | 382,705 | Brian Barnes | ||||
California, District 49 | Darrell Issa | 16.3% | 274,618 | Jerry Tetalman | ||||
California, District 45 | John Campbell | 16.9% | 293,231 | Sukhee Kang | ||||
Virginia, District 7 | Eric Cantor | 17% | 381,909 | E. Wayne Powell | ||||
Illinois, District 11 | Bill Foster | 17.1% | 254,276 | Judy Biggert | ||||
Arkansas, District 1 | Rick Crawford | 17.1% | 246,843 | Scott Ellington | ||||
Colorado, District 2 | Jared Polis | 17.1% | 421,580 | Kevin Lundberg | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 11 | Lou Barletta | 17.1% | 285,198 | Gene Stilp | ||||
New Jersey, District 7 | Leonard Lance | 17.1% | 307,315 | Upendra Chivukula | ||||
Washington, District 10 | Denny Heck | 17.1% | 278,417 | Richard Muri | ||||
Florida, District 17 | Thomas J. Rooney | 17.3% | 282,266 | William Bronson | ||||
Ohio, District 2 | Brad Wenstrup | 17.3% | 331,373 | William R. Smith | ||||
Florida, District 7 | John L. Mica | 17.4% | 316,010 | Jason Kendall | ||||
New Jersey, District 2 | Frank LoBiondo | 17.4% | 289,069 | Cassandra Shober | ||||
Texas, District 27 | Blake Farenthold | 17.5% | 212,651 | Rose Meza Harrison | ||||
Illinois, District 14 | Randy Hultgren | 17.6% | 301,954 | Dennis Anderson | ||||
California, District 40 | Lucille Roybal-Allard | 17.8% | 125,553 | David Sanchez | ||||
California, District 41 | Mark Takano | 17.9% | 175,652 | John Tavaglione | ||||
Washington, District 6 | Derek Kilmer | 18% | 316,386 | Bill Driscoll | ||||
Ohio, District 5 | Robert E. Latta | 18.1% | 351,878 | Angela Zimmann | ||||
New Mexico, District 2 | Steve Pearce | 18.2% | 225,515 | Evelyn Madrid Erhard | ||||
Kansas, District 2 | Lynn Jenkins | 18.3% | 293,718 | Tobias Schlingensiepen | ||||
New Mexico, District 1 | Michelle Lujan Grisham | 18.3% | 275,856 | Janice Arnold-Jones | ||||
Illinois, District 6 | Peter Roskam | 18.4% | 326,129 | Leslie Coolidge | ||||
New Jersey, District 11 | Rodney Frelinghuysen | 18.8% | 309,859 | John Arvanites | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 7 | Patrick Meehan | 18.8% | 353,451 | George Badey | ||||
Texas, District 6 | Joe Barton | 18.8% | 249,936 | Kenneth Sanders | ||||
Texas, District 32 | Pete Sessions | 18.8% | 251,636 | Katherine Savers McGovern | ||||
Oklahoma, District 2 | Markwayne Mullin | 19% | 250,612 | Rob Wallace | ||||
Washington, District 8 | Dave Reichert | 19.3% | 302,090 | Karen Porterfield | ||||
Virginia, District 10 | Frank Wolf | 19.7% | 366,444 | Kristin Cabral | ||||
Connecticut, District 4 | Jim Himes | 19.9% | 293,432 | Steve Obsitnik | ||||
New York, District 22 | Richard Hanna | 19.9% | 280,189 | Dan Lamb | ||||
Oregon, District 4 | Peter DeFazio | 20.1% | 360,088 | Art Robinson | ||||
Ohio, District 1 | Steve Chabot | 20.1% | 349,716 | Jeff Sinnard | ||||
California, District 44 | Janice Hahn | 20.4% | 165,898 | Laura Richardson | ||||
California, District 30 | Brad Sherman | 20.6% | 247,851 | Howard Berman | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 17 | Matt Cartwright | 20.6% | 267,601 | Laureen Cummings | ||||
Rhode Island, District 2 | James R. Langevin | 20.6% | 222,660 | Michael G. Riley | ||||
Indiana, District 5 | Susan Brooks | 20.8% | 333,359 | Scott Reske | ||||
Washington, District 3 | Jaime Herrera Beutler | 20.8% | 293,884 | Jon T. Haugen | ||||
Maryland, District 6 | John Delaney | 20.9% | 309,549 | Roscoe Bartlett | ||||
Texas, District 25 | Roger Williams | 21% | 263,932 | Elaine M. Henderson | ||||
Arizona, District 3 | Raul Grijalva | 21.2% | 168,698 | Gabriela Saucedo Mercer | ||||
California, District 42 | Ken Calvert | 21.2% | 214,947 | Michael Williamson | ||||
Michigan, District 8 | Mike Rogers | 21.3% | 345,054 | Lance Enderle | ||||
Florida, District 8 | Bill Posey | 21.4% | 348,909 | Shannon Roberts | ||||
Oklahoma, District 5 | James Lankford | 21.4% | 261,677 | Tom Guild | ||||
Nevada, District 2 | Mark Amodei | 21.4% | 281,449 | Samuel Koepnick | ||||
Colorado, District 4 | Cory Gardner | 21.7% | 342,076 | Brandon Shaffer | ||||
Louisiana, District 3 | Charles Boustany Jr. | 21.8% | 96,584 | Jeff Landry | ||||
North Carolina, District 6 | Howard Coble | 21.8% | 364,583 | Tony Foriest | ||||
Ohio, District 4 | Jim Jordan | 21.9% | 312,998 | Jim Slone | ||||
California, District 48 | Dana Rohrabacher | 22% | 290,502 | Ron Varasteh | ||||
Ohio, District 10 | Mike Turner | 22.1% | 349,671 | Sharen Swartz Neuhardt | ||||
California, District 4 | Tom McClintock | 22.2% | 323,688 | Jack Uppal | ||||
Washington, District 2 | Rick Larsen | 22.3% | 302,291 | Dan Matthews | ||||
Virginia, District 9 | Morgan Griffith | 22.7% | 301,658 | Anthony Flaccavento | ||||
Arkansas, District 4 | Tom Cotton | 22.8% | 258,953 | Gene Jeffress | ||||
California, District 53 | Susan Davis | 22.9% | 268,307 | Nick Popaditch | ||||
Missouri, District 2 | Ann Wagner | 23% | 394,448 | Glenn Koenen | ||||
Ohio, District 15 | Steve Stivers | 23.1% | 333,462 | Pat Lang | ||||
Florida, District 27 | Ileana Ros-Lehtinen | 23.2% | 230,171 | Manny Yevancey | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 9 | Bill Shuster | 23.3% | 274,305 | Karen Ramsburg | ||||
Mississippi, District 1 | Alan Nunnelee | 23.5% | 309,177 | Brad Morris | ||||
Illinois, District 16 | Adam Kinzinger | 23.6% | 294,090 | Wanda Rohl | ||||
Missouri, District 5 | Emanuel Cleaver | 23.6% | 330,936 | Jacob Turk | ||||
California, District 22 | Devin Nunes | 23.8% | 213,941 | Otto Lee | ||||
Washington, District 5 | Cathy McMorris Rodgers | 23.8% | 308,578 | Rich Cowan | ||||
Indiana, District 6 | Luke Messer | 24% | 275,253 | Brad Bookout | ||||
Texas, District 15 | Ruben Hinojosa Sr. | 24% | 146,661 | Dale A. Brueggemann | ||||
Georgia, District 7 | Rob Woodall | 24.3% | 252,066 | Steve Reilly | ||||
Texas, District 10 | Michael McCaul | 24.3% | 264,019 | Tawana W. Cadien | ||||
Wisconsin, District 6 | Tom Petri | 24.3% | 359,745 | Joe Kallas | ||||
Texas, District 7 | John Culberson | 24.4% | 234,837 | James Cargas | ||||
Massachusetts, District 4 | Joseph Kennedy III | 24.5% | 373,114 | Sean Bielat | ||||
West Virginia, District 1 | David McKinley | 24.6% | 194,863 | Sue Thorn | ||||
Missouri, District 4 | Vicky Hartzler | 24.8% | 318,723 | Teresa Hensley | ||||
Massachusetts, District 9 | William Keating | 24.9% | 385,799 | Christopher Sheldon | ||||
Florida, District 9 | Alan Grayson | 25% | 263,747 | Todd Long | ||||
Texas, District 24 | Kenny Marchant | 25% | 243,489 | Tim Rusk | ||||
Texas, District 21 | Lamar Smith | 25.2% | 308,865 | Candace E. Duval | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 4 | Scott Perry | 25.3% | 303,980 | Harry Perkinson | ||||
Minnesota, District 7 | Collin Peterson | 25.5% | 327,576 | Lee Byberg | ||||
Virginia, District 11 | Gerald Connolly | 25.5% | 332,243 | Chris Perkins | ||||
Indiana, District 7 | André Carson | 25.7% | 257,950 | Carlos May | ||||
Texas, District 34 | Filemon Vela | 25.7% | 144,778 | Jessica Puente Bradshaw | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 5 | Glenn Thompson | 25.8% | 282,465 | Charles Dumas | ||||
Georgia, District 1 | Jack Kingston | 26% | 249,580 | Lesli Messinger | ||||
Tennessee, District 3 | Charles J. Fleischmann | 26% | 256,829 | Mary Headrick | ||||
New York, District 4 | Carolyn McCarthy | 26.1% | 299,484 | Francis Becker Jr. | ||||
Florida, District 19 | Trey Radel | 26.2% | 306,216 | Jim Roach | ||||
North Carolina, District 3 | Walter B. Jones | 26.2% | 309,885 | Erik Anderson | ||||
New Mexico, District 3 | Ben Ray Lujan | 26.2% | 264,719 | Jeff Byrd | ||||
South Carolina, District 1 | Timothy Scott | 26.3% | 290,013 | Bobbie Rose | ||||
Texas, District 31 | John R. Carter | 26.3% | 237,187 | Stephen M. Wyman | ||||
Oregon, District 1 | Suzanne Bonamici | 26.6% | 331,980 | Delinda Morgan | ||||
New York, District 17 | Nita Lowey | 26.7% | 297,379 | Joe Carvin | ||||
Michigan, District 2 | Bill Huizenga | 26.9% | 318,267 | Willie German, Jr. | ||||
Ohio, District 12 | Patrick J. Tiberi | 26.9% | 368,474 | James Reese | ||||
Kentucky, District 4 | Thomas Massie | 27.2% | 299,444 | Bill Adkins | ||||
Alabama, District 2 | Martha Roby | 27.3% | 283,953 | Therese Ford | ||||
Georgia, District 2 | Sanford Bishop | 27.6% | 255,161 | John House | ||||
Florida, District 23 | Debbie Wasserman Schultz | 27.6% | 275,430 | Karen Harrington | ||||
California, District 46 | Loretta Sanchez | 27.7% | 149,815 | Jerry Hayden | ||||
Indiana, District 4 | Todd Rokita | 27.8% | 272,268 | Tara Nelson | ||||
Michigan, District 9 | Sander Levin | 27.9% | 337,316 | Don Volaric | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 18 | Tim Murphy | 27.9% | 338,873 | Larry Maggi | ||||
California, District 27 | Judy Chu | 28% | 241,008 | Jack Orswell | ||||
Arizona, District 6 | David Schweikert | 28% | 293,177 | Matt Jette | ||||
New Jersey, District 6 | Frank Pallone Jr. | 28.1% | 239,638 | Anna Little | ||||
Alabama, District 3 | Mike Rogers | 28.2% | 273,930 | John Andrew Harris | ||||
Maine, District 1 | Chellie Pingree | 28.3% | 380,715 | Jonathan Courtney | ||||
Arizona, District 8 | Trent Franks | 28.3% | 272,791 | Gene Scharer | ||||
Wisconsin, District 3 | Ron Kind | 28.3% | 339,764 | Ray Boland | ||||
New Jersey, District 4 | Chris Smith | 28.5% | 306,247 | Brian Froelich | ||||
Utah, District 2 | Chris Stewart | 28.7% | 248,545 | Jay Seegmiller | ||||
Georgia, District 6 | Tom Price | 29% | 294,034 | Jeff Kazanow | ||||
Florida, District 11 | Richard B. Nugent | 29% | 338,663 | David Werder | ||||
Kentucky, District 3 | John Yarmuth | 29.4% | 322,656 | Brooks Wicker | ||||
Michigan, District 4 | Dave Camp | 29.5% | 312,949 | Debra Freidell Wirth | ||||
Alabama, District 5 | Mo Brooks | 30% | 291,293 | Charlie L. Holley | ||||
Louisiana, District 2 | Cedric Richmond | 30.1% | 287,354 | Gary Landrieu | ||||
Idaho, District 2 | Mike Simpson | 30.3% | 318,494 | Nicole LeFavour | ||||
Maryland, District 8 | Chris Van Hollen | 30.4% | 343,256 | Ken Timmerman | ||||
Texas, District 20 | Joaquin Castro | 30.4% | 186,177 | David Rosa | ||||
Florida, District 12 | Gus Bilirakis | 30.5% | 330,167 | Jonathan Michael Snow | ||||
Kansas, District 4 | Mike Pompeo | 30.6% | 258,922 | Robert Leo Tillman | ||||
Missouri, District 3 | Blaine Luetkemeyer | 30.6% | 338,385 | Eric C. Mayer | ||||
Massachusetts, District 3 | Niki Tsongas | 30.7% | 335,111 | Jon Golnik | ||||
Virginia, District 6 | Bob Goodlatte | 30.7% | 323,893 | Andy Schmookler | ||||
Minnesota, District 4 | Betty McCollum | 30.8% | 347,991 | Tony Hernandez | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 10 | Tom Marino | 31.2% | 273,790 | Philip Scollo | ||||
South Carolina, District 4 | Trey Gowdy | 31.2% | 266,884 | Deb Morrow | ||||
Texas, District 5 | Jeb Hensarling | 31.2% | 208,230 | Linda S. Mrosko | ||||
California, District 32 | Grace Napolitano | 31.4% | 190,111 | David Miller | ||||
Oklahoma, District 1 | Jim Bridenstine | 31.4% | 285,312 | John Olson | ||||
Delaware, At-Large, District | John C. Carney, Jr. | 31.5% | 368,154 | Thomas Kovach | ||||
Texas, District 35 | Lloyd Doggett | 31.9% | 165,179 | Susan Narvaiz | ||||
Nevada, District 1 | Dina Titus | 32% | 179,278 | Chris Edwards | ||||
Texas, District 22 | Pete Olson | 32.1% | 250,911 | Kesha Rogers | ||||
Texas, District 2 | Ted Poe | 32.1% | 246,328 | Jim Dougherty | ||||
Idaho, District 1 | Raul R. Labrador | 32.2% | 316,724 | Jimmy Farris | ||||
Florida, District 3 | Ted Yoho | 32.3% | 315,669 | Jacques Rene Gaillot, Jr. | ||||
New York, District 6 | Grace Meng | 32.4% | 186,932 | Daniel Halloran | ||||
Washington, District 4 | Doc Hastings | 32.4% | 233,689 | Mary Baechler | ||||
Missouri, District 6 | Sam Graves | 32.5% | 333,688 | Kyle Yarber | ||||
Texas, District 16 | Beto O'Rourke | 32.5% | 155,005 | Barbara Carrasco | ||||
Tennessee, District 5 | Jim Cooper | 32.5% | 263,083 | Brad Staats | ||||
Kentucky, District 2 | Brett Guthrie | 32.6% | 282,267 | David Lynn Williams | ||||
Illinois, District 9 | Jan Schakowsky | 32.7% | 293,793 | Timothy Wolfe | ||||
Missouri, District 7 | Billy Long | 33% | 318,731 | Jim Evans | ||||
South Carolina, District 3 | Jeff Duncan | 33.3% | 254,763 | Brian Doyle | ||||
Michigan, District 5 | Dan Kildee | 33.5% | 330,146 | Jim Slezak | ||||
Virginia, District 8 | Jim Moran | 34% | 351,187 | Patrick Murray | ||||
Indiana, District 3 | Marlin Stutzman | 34.1% | 280,235 | Kevin Boyd | ||||
Arizona, District 5 | Matt Salmon | 34.4% | 273,059 | Spencer Morgan | ||||
Maryland, District 2 | Dutch Ruppersberger | 34.5% | 295,940 | Nancy Jacobs | ||||
New York, District 20 | Paul Tonko | 34.5% | 317,678 | Robert Dieterich | ||||
Indiana, District 1 | Peter J. Visclosky | 34.6% | 279,034 | Joel Phelps | ||||
California, District 38 | Linda Sanchez | 35.1% | 215,087 | Benjamin Campos | ||||
Alaska, At-Large, District | Don Young | 35.3% | 289,804 | Sharon M. Cissna | ||||
Mississippi, District 4 | Steven Palazzo | 35.3% | 285,432 | Matthew Moore | ||||
California, District 50 | Duncan Hunter | 35.4% | 258,293 | David Secor | ||||
Wisconsin, District 5 | Jim Sensenbrenner | 35.7% | 369,664 | Dave Heaster | ||||
Maryland, District 1 | Andrew Harris | 35.9% | 337,760 | Wendy Rosen | ||||
Wisconsin, District 2 | Mark Pocan | 36% | 390,898 | Chad Lee | ||||
Mississippi, District 2 | Bennie Thompson | 36.2% | 320,244 | Bill Marcy | ||||
Nebraska, District 1 | Jeff Fortenberry | 36.6% | 256,095 | Korey L. Reiman | ||||
Kansas, District 3 | Kevin Yoder | 36.9% | 293,762 | Joel Balam | ||||
Illinois, District 3 | Daniel Lipinski | 37% | 246,391 | Richard Grabowski | ||||
Georgia, District 11 | Phil Gingrey | 37.1% | 287,321 | Patrick Thompson | ||||
Illinois, District 5 | Mike Quigley | 37.1% | 270,377 | Dan Schmitt | ||||
Illinois, District 15 | John Shimkus | 37.2% | 299,937 | Angela Michael | ||||
Maryland, District 3 | John Sarbanes | 37.3% | 319,859 | Eric Delano Knowles | ||||
Texas, District 28 | Henry Cuellar | 38.1% | 165,645 | William R. Hayward | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 13 | Allyson Schwartz | 38.2% | 303,819 | Joe Rooney | ||||
New Jersey, District 1 | Rob Andrews | 38.3% | 308,519 | Greg Horton | ||||
Arizona, District 4 | Paul Gosar | 38.5% | 243,760 | Johnnie Robinson | ||||
Connecticut, District 2 | Joe Courtney | 38.9% | 299,960 | Paul M Formica | ||||
Michigan, District 12 | John D. Dingell | 39% | 319,223 | Cynthia Kallgren | ||||
Michigan, District 10 | Candice Miller | 39.1% | 328,612 | Chuck Stadler | ||||
Kentucky, District 1 | Ed Whitfield | 39.3% | 287,155 | Charles Kendall Hatchett | ||||
California, District 11 | George Miller | 39.5% | 287,879 | Virginia Fuller | ||||
Oregon, District 2 | Greg Walden | 39.5% | 332,255 | Joyce Segers | ||||
Texas, District 26 | Michael Burgess | 39.6% | 258,723 | David Sanchez | ||||
West Virginia, District 2 | Shelley Moore Capito | 39.6% | 226,165 | Howard Swint | ||||
New Jersey, District 12 | Rush D. Holt, Jr. | 39.7% | 274,398 | Eric Beck | ||||
Tennessee, District 8 | Stephen Lee Fincher | 39.9% | 279,422 | Timothy Dixon | ||||
Illinois, District 2 | Jesse Jackson Jr. | 40.1% | 297,424 | Brian Woodworth | ||||
Oklahoma, District 4 | Tom Cole | 40.3% | 260,331 | Donna Marie Bebo | ||||
Florida, District 14 | Kathy Castor | 40.5% | 280,601 | Evelio Otero Jr. | ||||
California, District 18 | Anna Eshoo | 41% | 301,934 | Dave Chapman | ||||
Colorado, District 1 | Diana DeGette | 41.5% | 348,210 | Danny Stroud | ||||
Maryland, District 5 | Steny Hoyer | 41.7% | 343,820 | Anthony O'Donnell | ||||
Ohio, District 3 | Joyce Beatty | 41.9% | 295,647 | Chris Long | ||||
Connecticut, District 1 | John B. Larson | 42% | 297,061 | John Henry Decker | ||||
California, District 2 | Jared Huffman | 42.5% | 317,526 | Daniel W. Roberts | ||||
Alabama, District 6 | Spencer Bachus | 42.5% | 308,102 | Penny H. Bailey | ||||
California, District 43 | Maxine Waters | 42.5% | 200,894 | Bob Flores | ||||
Florida, District 1 | Jeff Miller | 42.5% | 342,594 | James Bryan | ||||
California, District 51 | Juan Vargas | 43% | 159,398 | Michael Crimmins | ||||
Washington, District 9 | Adam Smith | 43.2% | 268,139 | Jim Postma | ||||
Georgia, District 13 | David Scott | 43.5% | 281,538 | S. Malik | ||||
Texas, District 12 | Kay Granger | 44.2% | 247,712 | Dave Robinson | ||||
Texas, District 36 | Steve Stockman | 44.2% | 233,832 | Max Martin | ||||
Florida, District 5 | Corrine Brown | 44.5% | 269,153 | LeAnne Kolb | ||||
Texas, District 1 | Louie Gohmert | 44.5% | 249,658 | Shirley J. McKellar | ||||
Wyoming, At-Large, District | Cynthia Lummis | 45.1% | 241,205 | Chris Henrichsen | ||||
Louisiana, District 1 | Steve Scalise | 45.4% | 290,410 | Vinny Mendoza | ||||
Ohio, District 13 | Tim Ryan | 45.5% | 323,612 | Marisha Agana | ||||
Georgia, District 14 | Tom Graves | 45.9% | 219,192 | Daniel Grant | ||||
New York, District 26 | Brian Higgins | 46.2% | 304,961 | Michael Madigan | ||||
California, District 23 | Kevin McCarthy | 46.4% | 216,003 | Terry Phillips | ||||
California, District 19 | Zoe Lofgren | 46.5% | 221,613 | Robert Murray | ||||
New York, District 16 | Eliot Engel | 46.5% | 270,320 | Joseph McLaughlin | ||||
Texas, District 33 | Marc Veasey | 46.7% | 117,375 | Chuck Bradley | ||||
Utah, District 1 | Rob Bishop | 46.8% | 245,528 | Donna M. McAleer | ||||
Tennessee, District 7 | Marsha Blackburn | 47% | 257,306 | Credo Amouzouvik | ||||
Georgia, District 4 | Henry C. Johnson | 47.1% | 283,902 | J. Chris Vaughn | ||||
California, District 17 | Mike Honda | 47.1% | 216,728 | Evelyn Li | ||||
Missouri, District 8 | Jo Ann Emerson | 47.4% | 300,391 | Jack Rushin | ||||
Wisconsin, District 4 | Gwen Moore | 47.4% | 325,788 | Dan Sebring | ||||
Illinois, District 1 | Bobby Rush | 47.6% | 320,843 | Donald Peloquin | ||||
Massachusetts, District 5 | Ed Markey | 47.9% | 364,201 | Tom Tierney | ||||
California, District 29 | Tony Cardenas | 48.1% | 150,281 | David Hernandez | ||||
California, District 20 | Sam Farr | 48.1% | 233,562 | Jeff Taylor | ||||
Alabama, District 4 | Robert Aderholt | 48.1% | 269,118 | Daniel H. Boman | ||||
Illinois, District 18 | Aaron Schock | 48.3% | 329,631 | Steve Waterworth | ||||
Nebraska, District 3 | Adrian Smith | 48.3% | 252,689 | Mark Sullivan | ||||
Vermont, At-Large, District | Peter Welch | 48.7% | 289,663 | Mark Donka | ||||
Massachusetts, District 8 | Stephen Lynch | 48.9% | 371,694 | Joe Selvaggi | ||||
California, District 5 | Mike Thompson | 48.9% | 272,417 | Randy Loftin | ||||
North Carolina, District 4 | David E. Price | 48.9% | 348,485 | Tim D'Annunzio | ||||
New Jersey, District 9 | Bill Pascrell | 48.9% | 220,133 | Shmuley Boteach | ||||
Texas, District 4 | Ralph M. Hall | 48.9% | 250,343 | VaLinda Hathcox | ||||
Minnesota, District 5 | Keith Ellison | 49.3% | 351,969 | Chris Fields | ||||
Connecticut, District 3 | Rosa L. DeLauro | 49.4% | 291,299 | Wayne Winsley | ||||
Ohio, District 9 | Marcy Kaptur | 50% | 298,164 | Samuel Wurzelbacher | ||||
California, District 6 | Doris Matsui | 50.1% | 214,073 | Joseph McCray, Sr. | ||||
Louisiana, District 4 | John Fleming | 50.6% | 249,531 | Randall Lord | ||||
Tennessee, District 9 | Steve Cohen | 51.3% | 250,984 | George Flinn Jr. | ||||
Alabama, District 7 | Terri Sewell | 51.8% | 306,558 | Don Chamberlain | ||||
Georgia, District 9 | Doug Collins | 52.4% | 252,153 | Jody Cooley | ||||
Texas, District 18 | Sheila Jackson Lee | 52.4% | 194,932 | Sean Seibert | ||||
North Carolina, District 1 | G.K. Butterfield | 52.5% | 338,066 | Pete DiLauro | ||||
California, District 28 | Adam Schiff | 53% | 246,711 | Phil Jennerjahn | ||||
New York, District 10 | Jerrold Nadler | 53.2% | 236,323 | Michael Chan | ||||
Utah, District 3 | Jason Chaffetz | 53.2% | 259,547 | Soren D. Simonsen | ||||
Tennessee, District 2 | John J. Duncan, Jr. | 53.8% | 264,505 | Troy Goodale | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 14 | Michael F. Doyle | 53.8% | 327,634 | Hans Lessmann | ||||
Oregon, District 3 | Earl Blumenauer | 54.7% | 355,875 | Ronald Green | ||||
New York, District 12 | Carolyn Maloney | 54.7% | 268,287 | Christopher Wight | ||||
Oklahoma, District 3 | Frank D. Lucas | 55.3% | 268,003 | Timothy Ray Murray | ||||
Maryland, District 7 | Elijah Cummings | 55.7% | 323,818 | Frank Mirabile, Jr. | ||||
Kentucky, District 5 | Hal Rogers | 55.8% | 250,853 | Kenneth Stepp | ||||
Tennessee, District 1 | Phil Roe | 56.2% | 239,672 | Alan Woodruff | ||||
Maryland, District 4 | Donna Edwards | 56.4% | 311,512 | Faith Loudon | ||||
Texas, District 8 | Kevin Brady | 57% | 251,052 | Neil Burns | ||||
Colorado, District 5 | Doug Lamborn | 57.6% | 307,231 | Jim Pirtle | ||||
California, District 14 | Jackie Speier | 57.8% | 258,283 | Deborah Bacigalupi | ||||
New York, District 14 | Joseph Crowley | 57.9% | 170,995 | William Gibbons Jr. | ||||
Hawaii, District 2 | Tulsi Gabbard | 58.3% | 219,162 | Kawika "David" Crowley | ||||
Texas, District 9 | Al Green | 58.8% | 183,566 | Steve Mueller | ||||
New Jersey, District 8 | Albio Sires | 59.1% | 167,790 | Maria Karczewski | ||||
North Carolina, District 12 | Melvin L. Watt | 59.3% | 310,908 | Jack Brosch | ||||
Washington, District 7 | Jim McDermott | 59.3% | 374,580 | Ron Bemis | ||||
Massachusetts, District 7 | Michael Capuano | 59.5% | 285,134 | Karla Romero | ||||
Texas, District 30 | Eddie Bernice Johnson | 59.8% | 217,014 | Travis Washington, Jr. | ||||
Arkansas, District 3 | Steve Womack | 59.9% | 245,660 | Rebekah Kennedy | ||||
Texas, District 17 | Bill Flores | 59.9% | 179,262 | Ben Easton | ||||
Mississippi, District 3 | Gregg Harper | 60% | 293,322 | John Luke Pannell | ||||
Texas, District 11 | Mike Conaway | 60.1% | 226,023 | Jim Riley | ||||
Missouri, District 1 | William Lacy Clay | 60.8% | 340,583 | Robyn Hamlin | ||||
Virginia, District 3 | Robert C. Scott | 62.8% | 318,936 | Dean Longo | ||||
Louisiana, District 5 | Rodney Alexander | 63.4% | 260,216 | Ron Ceasar | ||||
Arizona, District 7 | Ed Pastor | 63.5% | 127,827 | Joe Cobb | ||||
Illinois, District 4 | Luis Gutierrez | 66% | 160,505 | Hector Concepcion | ||||
Michigan, District 14 | Gary Peters | 66.6% | 328,792 | John Hauler | ||||
New York, District 5 | Gregory Meeks | 66.8% | 224,508 | Allan Jennings Jr. | ||||
Florida, District 25 | Mario Diaz-Balart | 67.1% | 200,229 | VoteforEddie.Com | ||||
Tennessee, District 6 | Diane Black | 67.5% | 241,241 | Pat Riley | ||||
New York, District 9 | Yvette Clarke | 67.8% | 238,957 | Daniel Cavanagh | ||||
Georgia, District 5 | John Lewis | 68.8% | 277,665 | Howard Stopeck | ||||
Louisiana, District 6 | Bill Cassidy | 68.9% | 306,713 | Rufus Holt Craig,Jr | ||||
Florida, District 21 | Theodore E. Deutch | 68.9% | 284,400 | Cesear Henao | ||||
Michigan, District 13 | John Conyers, Jr. | 69.1% | 284,270 | Harry T. Sawicki | ||||
New York, District 13 | Charles Rangel | 69.8% | 233,172 | Craig Schley | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 1 | Robert Brady | 69.9% | 277,102 | John Featherman | ||||
Texas, District 19 | Randy Neugebauer | 70% | 192,063 | Richard Peterson | ||||
California, District 12 | Nancy Pelosi | 70.2% | 298,187 | John Dennis | ||||
New York, District 8 | Hakeem Jeffries | 70.4% | 236,292 | Alan Bellone | ||||
California, District 34 | Xavier Becerra | 71.2% | 140,590 | Stephen Smith | ||||
California, District 37 | Karen Bass | 72.8% | 239,580 | Morgan Osborne | ||||
California, District 13 | Barbara Lee | 73.6% | 288,582 | Marilyn M. Singleton | ||||
Illinois, District 7 | Danny K. Davis | 73.7% | 286,428 | Rita Zak | ||||
Massachusetts, District 2 | Jim McGovern | 74.5% | 342,736 | All Others | ||||
New York, District 7 | Nydia Velazquez | 74.7% | 178,825 | James Murray | ||||
Florida, District 20 | Alcee L. Hastings | 75.8% | 244,285 | Randall Terry | ||||
Florida, District 4 | Ander Crenshaw | 76% | 315,470 | Gary Koniz | ||||
Massachusetts, District 1 | Richard Neal | 76.6% | 336,555 | All Others | ||||
New Jersey, District 10 | Donald Payne Jr. | 77% | 230,060 | Brian Kelemen | ||||
Pennsylvania, District 2 | Chaka Fattah | 79.9% | 356,386 | Robert Mansfield | ||||
New York, District 15 | Jose E. Serrano | 83% | 178,645 | Frank Della Valle | ||||
Texas, District 13 | Mac Thornberry | 84.8% | 206,388 | John Robert Deek | ||||
Texas, District 29 | Gene Green | 84.8% | 95,611 | James Stanczak | ||||
South Carolina, District 6 | James Clyburn | 88.1% | 233,615 | Nammu Y Muhammad | ||||
South Carolina, District 2 | Joe Wilson | 92.5% | 203,718 | Write-In | ||||
Alabama, District 1 | Jo Bonner | 95.7% | 200,676 | N/A | ||||
Ohio, District 8 | John A. Boehner | 98.4% | 248,316 | James Condit Jr. | ||||
Georgia, District 8 | Austin Scott | 100% | 197,789 | Unopposed | ||||
Georgia, District 10 | Paul Broun | 100% | 211,065 | Unopposed | ||||
Georgia, District 3 | Lynn Westmoreland | 100% | 232,380 | Unopposed | ||||
Kansas, District 1 | Tim Huelskamp | 100% | 211,337 | Unopposed | ||||
Ohio, District 11 | Marcia L. Fudge | 100% | 258,359 | Unopposed | ||||
Texas, District 3 | Sam Johnson | 100% | 187,180 | Unopposed | ||||
Florida, District 15 | Dennis A. Ross | 100% | 01 | Unopposed | ||||
Florida, District 24 | Frederica S. Wilson | 100% | 01 | Unopposed | ||||
1Note: In Florida, if a candidate runs unopposed, then there are no votes captured in the election. Thus, the total votes counted is 0. |
Retiring incumbents
Ballotpedia staff counted 43 total current incumbents who did not run for re-election in the 2012 elections.
Name | Party | District |
---|---|---|
Barney Frank | Democratic | Massachusetts, District 4 |
Bob Filner | Democratic | California, District 51 |
Bob Turner | Republican | New York, District 9 |
Brad Miller | Democratic | North Carolina, District 13 |
Charlie Gonzalez | Democratic | Texas, District 20 |
Christopher S. Murphy | Democratic | Connecticut, District 5 |
Connie Mack | Republican | Florida, District 14 |
Dale E. Kildee | Democratic | Michigan, District 5 |
Dan Boren | Democratic | Oklahoma, District 2 |
Dan Burton | Republican | Indiana, District 5 |
David Dreier | Republican | California, District 26 |
Dennis Cardoza | Democratic | California, District 18 |
Denny Rehberg | Republican | U.S. House, Montana, At-large |
Ed Towns | Democratic | New York, District 10 |
Elton Gallegly | Republican | California, District 24 |
Gary Ackerman | Democratic | New York, District 5 |
Geoff Davis (a) | Republican | Kentucky, District 4 |
Heath Shuler | Democratic | North Carolina, District 11 |
Jay Inslee (b) | Democratic | Washington, District 1 |
Jeff Flake | Republican | Arizona, District 6 |
Jerry F. Costello | Democratic | Illinois, District 12 |
Jerry Lewis | Republican | California, District 41 |
Joe Donnelly | Democratic | Indiana, District 2 |
John Olver | Democratic | Massachusetts, District 1 |
Lynn Woolsey | Democratic | California, District 6 |
Martin Heinrich | Democratic | New Mexico, District 1 |
Maurice Hinchey | Democratic | New York, District 22 |
Mazie K. Hirono | Democratic | Hawaii, District 2 |
Mike Pence | Republican | Indiana, District 6 |
Mike Ross | Democratic | Arkansas, District 4 |
Norm Dicks | Democratic | Washington, District 6 |
Rick Berg | Republican | North Dakota, At-Large, District |
Ron Paul | Republican | Texas, District 14 |
Shelley Berkley | Democratic | Nevada, District 1 |
Steve Austria | Republican | Ohio, District 7 |
Steven C. LaTourette | Republican | Ohio, District 14 |
Sue Wilkins Myrick | Republican | North Carolina, District 9 |
Tammy Baldwin | Democratic | Wisconsin, District 2 |
Thaddeus McCotter (c) | Republican | Michigan, District 11 |
Timothy V. Johnson | Republican | Illinois, District 15 |
W. Todd Akin | Republican | Missouri, District 2 |
Todd Russell Platts | Republican | U.S. House, Pennsylvania, District 19 |
Wally Herger | Republican | California, District 2 |
- (a) - After originally announcing he would not seek re-election, Davis subsequently resigned prior to the end of the 112th Congress on July 31, 2012.
- (b) - After announcing he would run for governor rather than re-election to Congress, Inslee subsequently resigned from the House of Representatives on March 10, 2012.
- (c) - McCotter failed to file enough valid signatures to qualify for the ballot for his House seat. He subsequently resigned prior to the end of the 112th Congress on July 6, 2012.
Defeated incumbents
Primary
In 2012, a total of 13 incumbents were defeated in U.S. House primaries. They are:
Name | Party | District | Year Assumed Office |
---|---|---|---|
Benjamin Quayle | Republican | Arizona, District 3 | 2011 |
Cliff Stearns | Republican | Florida, District 6 | 1989 |
Dennis J. Kucinich | Democratic | Ohio, District 10 | 1997 |
Donald A. Manzullo | Republican | Illinois, District 16 | 1993 |
Hansen Clarke | Democratic | Michigan, District 13 | 2011 |
Jason Altmire | Democratic | Pennsylvania, District 4 | 2007 |
Jean Schmidt | Republican | Ohio, District 2 | 2005 |
John Sullivan | Republican | Oklahoma, District 1 | 2002 |
Russ Carnahan | Democratic | Missouri, District 3 | 2005 |
Sandy Adams | Republican | Florida, District 24 | 2011 |
Silvestre Reyes | Democratic | Texas, District 16 | 1997 |
Steve Rothman | Democratic | New Jersey, District 9 | 1997 |
Tim Holden | Democratic | Pennsylvania, District 17 | 1993 |
General
A total of 27 incumbents were defeated in the general election on November 6, 2012. Of those 27 incumbents, 10 were Democrats and 17 were Republicans.
U.S. House incumbents defeated in 2012 general election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Party | District | ||||||
Allen B. West | Republican | Florida, District 22 | ||||||
Ann Marie Buerkle | Republican | New York, District 25 | ||||||
Ben Chandler | Democratic | Kentucky, District 6 | ||||||
Betty Sutton | Democratic | Ohio, District 13 | ||||||
Robert T. Schilling | Republican | Illinois, District 17 | ||||||
Brian Bilbray | Republican | California, District 50 | ||||||
Charles Bass | Republican | New Hampshire, District 2 | ||||||
Chip Cravaack | Republican | Minnesota, District 8 | ||||||
Dan Lungren | Republican | California, District 3 | ||||||
David Rivera | Republican | Florida, District 25 | ||||||
Francisco Canseco | Republican | Texas, District 23 | ||||||
Frank Guinta | Republican | New Hampshire, District 1 | ||||||
Howard Berman | Democratic | California, District 28 | ||||||
Jeff Landry | Republican | Louisiana, District 3 | ||||||
Joe Baca | Democratic | California, District 43 | ||||||
Joe Walsh | Republican | Illinois, District 8 | ||||||
Judy Biggert | Republican | Illinois, District 13 | ||||||
Kathy Hochul | Democratic | New York, District 26 | ||||||
Larry Kissell | Democratic | North Carolina, District 8 | ||||||
Laura Richardson | Democratic | California, District 37 | ||||||
Leonard Boswell | Democratic | Iowa, District 3 | ||||||
Mark Critz | Democratic | Pennsylvania, District 12 | ||||||
Mary Bono Mack | Republican | California, District 45 | ||||||
Nan Hayworth | Republican | New York, District 19 | ||||||
Pete Stark | Democratic | California, District 13 | ||||||
Robert J. Dold | Republican | Illinois, District 10 | ||||||
Roscoe Bartlett | Republican | Maryland, District 6 |
Vulnerable incumbents
Across the country, media and experts published stories that chronicled the incumbents that were in danger of losing their bid for re-election. Some of those incumbents mentioned included:
- Adam Kinzinger[17]
- Ann Marie Buerkle[18]
- Ben Quayle[19][17]
- Betty Sutton[17]
- Bill Pascrell[17]
- Bobby Schilling[18][20]
- Brad Sherman[21][17]
- Charlie Bass[18]
- Chip Cravaack[18]
- Dan Burton[21][20]
- David Dreier[22][23][20]
- David Rivera[19]
- David Schweikert[17]
- Dennis Kucinich[17]
- Don Manzullo[17]
- Ed Royce[22][23]
- Gary Peters[22][23][17]
- Hansen Clarke[17]
- Heath Shuler[22][23][19][20]
- Howard Berman[21][17]
- Jason Altmire[17]
- Janice Hahn[17]
- Jeff Landry[22][23][19][18]
- James Renacci[17]
- Jim Matheson[19]
- John Barrow[18][20]
- Judy Biggert[22][23]
- Larry Kissell[22][23][18][20]
- Laura Richardson[19][18][17]
- Leonard Boswell[19][17]
- Lloyd Doggett[21]
- Lou Barletta[19]
- Mark Critz[22][23][17]
- Marcy Kaptur[17]
- Mike McIntyre[20]
- Robert Dold[22][23][20]
- Roscoe Bartlett[19][18][20]
- Russ Carnahan[22][23][18][20]
- Steve Rothman[17]
- Tom Latham[17]
Primaries
The state primaries listed by month were as follows:
This map displays the month of each Congressional primary in 2012 |
March
- Ohio, March 6
- Alabama, March 13
- Mississippi, March 13
- Illinois, March 20
April
- Maryland, April 3
- Pennsylvania, April 24
May
- Indiana, May 8
- North Carolina, May 8
- West Virginia, May 8
- Idaho, May 15
- Nebraska, May 15
- Oregon, May 15
- Arkansas, May 22
- Kentucky, May 22
- Texas, May 29
June
- California, June 5
- Iowa, June 5
- Montana, June 5
- New Jersey, June 5
- New Mexico, June 5
- South Dakota, June 5
- Maine, June 12
- Nevada, June 12
- North Dakota, June 12
- South Carolina, June 12
- Virginia, June 12
- New York, June 26
- Oklahoma, June 26
- Utah, June 26
- Colorado, June 26
July
- Georgia, July 31
August
- Tennessee, August 2
- Kansas, August 7
- Michigan, August 7
- Missouri, August 7
- Washington, August 7
- Hawaii, August 11
- Connecticut, August 14
- Florida, August 14
- Minnesota, August 14
- Wyoming, August 21
- Alaska, August 28
- Arizona, August 28
- Vermont, August 28
September
- Massachusetts, September 6
- Delaware, September 11
- New Hampshire, September 11
- Rhode Island, September 11
Candidates by state
More than 2,400 candidates filed to run for election to the U.S. House in 2012. For a list of all candidates who ran for office by state, see this page.
Democratic and Republican targets
The two political organizations that support each party's U.S. House candidates - the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee - released lists targeting various districts across the nation. Here are the organizations' lists including success rates in the 2012 election.[24][25][26]
Red to Blue
- Successful (Democratic won): 28/55 (50.9%)
- Unsuccessful (Republican won): 27/55 (49.1%)
Patriot Program
- Successful (Republican won): 18/33 (54.5%)
- Unsuccessful (Democrat won): 15/33 (45.5%)
Young Guns
- Successful (Republican won): 13/42(31.0%)
- Unsuccessful (Democrat won): 29/42 (69.0%)
Campaign finance
More than $1 billion was spent by candidates, political parties, and special interest groups during the 2012 election cycle.[27] Republican-leaning organizations spent $102 million on U.S. House races during the 2012 cycle while Democratic organizations spent $79 million.[28] According to the Sunlight Foundation, the DCCC spent $61,741,050 on the 2012 elections. Of those funds, 47.78 percent achieved the desired result, based on Sunlight Foundation analysis. The NRCC spent $64,653,292 on the 2012 elections. Of those funds, 31.88 percent achieved the desired result.[29]
After the first 15 months of the 2012 election cycle, candidates for the U.S. House had raised more than $566 million. That sum is $57 million more than the same point in 2010, and double the level at the same point in the election cycle as the 2002 races. Of that $566 million, Republicans raised $335 million while Democrats raised $221 million. The 2010 campaign set a fundraising record of $1.1 billion.[30] In April 2012, House Democrats reserved more than $32 million in ad time in districts across the country. The reservations by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee included 14 states, predominantly swing states. Headlining the spending was $8 million in Florida and $3 million in Ohio.[31] As of November 3, 2012, 26 races had seen more than $5 million in satellite spending. In 2010, there were only two such races.[32]
In September 2012, the NRCC raised $12.4 million and had $29.5 million cash on hand.[33]
In October 2012, the Campaign Finance Institute and the Brennan Center for Justice released reports detailing the high levels of independent expenditures in the election cycle. The Campaign Finance Institute report determined that between October 5-12, more than $1 million was spent by outside groups in 3 House races alone. Those races are:[34]
- Illinois-11: $1.6 million
- Massachusetts-6: $1.5 million
- Illinois-17: $1.4 million
The report from the Brennan Center for Justice at The New York University School of Law was published on October 22nd and focuses on 25 House races rated most competitive by The Cook Political Report.
List of 25 Toss Up Races from the Cook Political Report:[35] | |
---|---|
Democratic Toss Ups: Republican Toss Ups: |
Using the Federal Election Commission's October Quarterly campaign finance filings, the report examines the relative spending presence of non-candidate groups, candidates, and small donors in these races - "which will likely determine which party will control the House."[36] A number of trends were identified regarding the volume, potential weight of satellite spending and breakdown of campaign funding by party, including:
- As of the end of the most recent reporting period, less than 60% of money spent on the 25 most hotly contested races came from the candidates' campaigns on average, and over 50% of the spending for 11 of the races were from outside groups/party committees.
- The combined reported expenditures from the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) mirror the total spending by "Republican-leaning and Democratic-leaning outside groups" in the 25 races going through the second week of October.
- The role of small donations in influencing election outcomes could be eclipsed by the comparatively massive funding influence of the NRCC, DCCC, and other outside groups. "Excluding Florida's 18th District, where incumbent Allen West (R) raised a staggering $7.4 million in small donations through September 30th," Republican and Democratic candidates in the rest of the races raised only 7.6% and 12.4%, respectively, of money from donations under $200.
October
In October 2012, the House Majority PAC announced $8.4 million of ads in nine states targeting Republican candidates. The nine states were Arizona, Indiana, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Virginia, Ohio, Connecticut, and Nevada.[37] The House Majority PAC also reported raising $5.9 million in September, a number which it hoped to double in October.[38]
On October 24, 2012, the DCCC borrowed $17 million to spend during the remainder of the 2012 elections. First reported in Politico, the money was intended to balance out the bombardment of GOP ads in the media.[39] According to a report in The Washington Post, House Republicans have been able to spend more money during the election cycle.[40]
Quarterly reports
On October 15, 2012, quarterly reports were submitted by campaigns to the Federal Election Commission. The political blog Daily Kos did an analysis of the fundraising figures, specifically looking at three areas:[41]
1) Races where challengers outraised an incumbent in the third quarter: 24 races qualified -- 17 Democratic challengers and seven Republican challengers outraised their incumbent opponent.
Of the 24 races, the challenger was victorious in 11 of them, 8 D, 3 R, with 2 races still to be called.
2) Races where challengers had more cash-on-hand than the incumbent: 10 races qualified -- six Democratic challengers and four Republican challengers had more cash-on-hand than their incumbent opponent.
Of the 10 races, the challenger was victorious in 4 of them, 4 D, 0 R.
Challengers who have more cash-on-hand than their incumbent opponent in the third quarter | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
District | Challenger | Incumbent | General election winner | |||||
Name | Party | COH in QTR 3 | Name | Party | COH in QTR 3 | |||
CA-09 | Ricky Gill | $1,146,000 | Jerry McNerney | $1,038,000 | Jerry McNerney | |||
IL-08 | Tammy Duckworth | $763,000 | Joe Walsh | $592,000 | Tammy Duckworth | |||
MD-06 | John Delaney | $249,000 | Roscoe Bartlett | $221,000 | John Delaney | |||
MI-01 | Gary McDowell | $604,000 | Dan Benishek | $571,000 | Dan Benishek | |||
NH-02 | Annie Kuster | $922,000 | Charlie Bass | $752,000 | Annie Kuster | |||
NY-18 | Sean Maloney | $855,000 | Nan Hayworth | $785,000 | Sean Maloney | |||
NY-25 | Maggie Brooks | $857,000 | Louise Slaughter | $411,000 | Louise Slaughter | |||
OH-06 | Charlie Wilson | $440,000 | Bill Johnson | $388,000 | Bill Johnson | |||
RI-01 | Brendan Doherty | $510,000 | David Cicilline | $241,000 | David Cicilline | |||
UT-04 | Mia Love | $457,000 | Jim Matheson | $307,000 | Jim Matheson |
3) Races that were incumbent-vs-incumbent: Five incumbent-vs-incumbent races remain.
Incumbents vs incumbent race totals in the third quarter | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
District | Incumbent | Incumbent | General election winner | ||||||||
Name | Party | Funds in Q3 | COH in QTR 3 | Name | Party | Funds in Q3 | COH in QTR 3 | ||||
CA-30 | Howard Berman | $716,000 | $1,848,000 | Brad Sherman | $225,000 | $394,000 | Brad Sherman | ||||
CA-44 | Janice Hahn | $179,000 | $132,000 | Laura Richardson | $7,000 | $68,000 | Laura Richardson | ||||
IA-03 | Tom Latham | $487,000 | $1,510,000 | Leonard Boswell | $300,000 | $226,000 | Tom Latham | ||||
LA-03 | Charles Boustany | $602,000 | $1,268,000 | Jeff Landry | $404,000 | $755,000 | Charles Boustany | ||||
OH-16 | Betty Sutton | $594,000 | $1,214,000 | Jim Renacci | $551,000 | $1,021,000 | Jim Renacci |
DCCC
As of July 14, 2012, the DCCC had raised $96,754,717 and spent $70,064,229, leaving $27,496,113 cash on hand.[42] As of October 2012, the DCCC had raised $53.3 million from small donations during the election cycle -- which was $15 million more than during the entire 2010 election.[43]
NRCC
In October 2012, the NRCC launched 16 new ads for a total spending of more than $6 million. The purchases were in the following districts:[44]
- California's 7th District: $560,000 in the Sacramento media market for a week, attacking physician Ami Bera (D), who took on incumbent Dan Lungren (R)
- California's 9th District: $560,000 in the Sacramento media market for a week, attacking incumbent Jerry McNerney (D), who faced recent law school graduate Ricky Gill (R)
- California's 24th District: $115,000 in the Santa Barbara media market for a week, attacking incumbent Lois Capps (D), who faced former Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado (R)
- California's 52nd District: $400,000 in the Santa Diego media market for a week, attacking San Diego Port Commissioner Scott Peters, who took on incumbent Brian Bilbray (R)
- Colorado's 7th District: $560,000 in the Denver media market for a week, attacking state incumbent Joe Miklosi (D), who took on incumbent Mike Coffman (Colorado) (R)
- Georgia's 12th District: $192,000 in the Savannah and Augusta media markets for a week, attacking incumbent John Barrow (D), who faced state incumbent Lee Anderson (R)
- Illinois' 11th District: $900,000 in the Chicago media market over two weeks, attacking former representative Bill Foster (D), who took on incumbent Judy Biggert (R)
- Michigan's 1st District: $144,000 in the Marquette and Traverse City media markets for a week, attacking former state incumbent Gary McDowell (D), who took on freshman incumbent Dan Benishek (R)
- Minnesota's 8th District: $426,000 in the Minneapolis media market over two weeks, attacking former representative Rick Nolan (D), who took on freshman incumbent Chip Cravaack (R)
- Nevada's 3rd District: $426,000 in the Las Vegas media market over two weeks, attacking state Speaker John Oceguera (D), who took on freshman incumbent Joe Heck (R)
- New York's 19th District: $326,000 in the Albany media market over two weeks, attacking attorney Julian Schreibman (D), who took on freshman incumbent Chris Gibson (R)
- Ohio's 6th District: $231,000 in the Youngstown and Wheeling, W.Va. media markets for a week, attacking former representative Charlie Wilson (D), who took on freshman incumbent Bill Johnson (R)
- Ohio's 16th District: $517,000 in the Cleveland media market for a week, attacking incumbent Betty Sutton (D), who faced freshman incumbent Jim Renacci in an incumbent vs. incumbent battle
- Texas' 23rd District: $315,000 in the San Antonio media market for a week, attacking state incumbent Pete Gallego (D), who took on freshman incumbent Francisco "Quico" Canseco (R)
- Utah's 4th District: $250,000 in the Salt Lake City media market for a week, attacking incumbent Jim Matheson (D), who faced Saratoga Springs Mayor Mia Love
- Wisconsin's 7th District: $550,000 in the Minneapolis, Minn., and Wausau, Wis., media markets, attacking former state Senate President Pro Tem Pat Kreitlow (D), who took on freshman incumbent Sean Duffy
Competitive races
RealClearPolitics
The website RealClearPolitics listed 50 districts in order of likelihood to switch party on November 6. Twenty of the 50 U.S. House seats most likely to switch party control were held by Democrats. The remaining 30 belonged to Republicans. Those districts are listed in the table below.[45]
Of the 20 seats held by the Democrats, 9 flipped. Of the 30 seats held by the GOP, 17 flipped. Of the 50 seats listed, they became 28 D, 22 R.
New York Times
The New York Times rated the U.S. House races. There were five possible designations:
Solid Democratic
Lean Democratic
Tossup
Lean Republican
Solid Republican
New York Times Political Report Race Rating -- U.S. House Competitive Districts | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Solid D | Lean D | Tossup | Lean R | Solid R | Total Seats in Play | ||||
July 25, 2012[46] | 156 | 23 | 25 | 32 | 199 | 80 | ||||
Note: A total of 218 seats are needed for the majority |
Cook Political Report
Each month the Cook Political Report released race ratings for President, U.S. Senate, U.S. House (competitive only) and Governors. The races detailed below were only those considered competitive. There were six possible designations.[47]
Likely Democratic
|
R Tossup
|
Cook Political Report Race Rating -- U.S. House Competitive Districts | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Likely D | Lean D | D Tossup | R Tossup | Lean R | Likely R | Total D | Total R | Total Competitive races | |
October 30, 2012[48] | 14 | 12 | 9 | 18 | 15 | 18 | 35 | 51 | 86 | |
October 25, 2012[49] | 14 | 13 | 8 | 18 | 15 | 18 | 35 | 51 | 86 | |
October 18, 2012[50] | 14 | 12 | 8 | 19 | 14 | 19 | 34 | 52 | 86 | |
October 11, 2012[51] | 12 | 15 | 7 | 18 | 16 | 17 | 34 | 51 | 85 | |
October 5, 2012[52] | 12 | 15 | 7 | 18 | 16 | 18 | 34 | 52 | 86 | |
September 27, 2012[53] | 11 | 15 | 7 | 17 | 16 | 22 | 33 | 55 | 88 | |
September 20, 2012[54] | 10 | 16 | 7 | 17 | 17 | 21 | 33 | 55 | 88 | |
September 13, 2012[55] | 13 | 13 | 8 | 18 | 17 | 22 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
September 6, 2012[56] | 13 | 13 | 8 | 17 | 18 | 21 | 34 | 56 | 90 | |
August 20, 2012[57] | 14 | 12 | 8 | 17 | 19 | 21 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
August 15, 2012[58] | 13 | 12 | 9 | 16 | 19 | 22 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
August 12, 2012[59] | 13 | 12 | 9 | 16 | 19 | 22 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
August 2, 2012[60] | 13 | 12 | 9 | 16 | 19 | 22 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
July 26, 2012[61] | 13 | 13 | 8 | 16 | 19 | 22 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
July 12, 2012[62] | 13 | 13 | 8 | 16 | 18 | 23 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
June 28, 2012[63] | 14 | 11 | 9 | 15 | 18 | 24 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
June 14, 2012[64] | 14 | 11 | 9 | 15 | 18 | 24 | 34 | 57 | 91 | |
June 7, 2012[65] | 14 | 11 | 10 | 15 | 18 | 24 | 35 | 57 | 92 | |
May 31, 2012[66] | 14 | 11 | 10 | 16 | 18 | 24 | 35 | 58 | 93 | |
May 24,2012[67] | 14 | 12 | 10 | 15 | 18 | 24 | 36 | 57 | 93 | |
May 17, 2012[68] | 14 | 12 | 10 | 14 | 19 | 26 | 36 | 59 | 95 | |
May 3,2012[69] | 15 | 11 | 10 | 14 | 19 | 26 | 36 | 59 | 95 | |
April 26, 2012[70] | 18 | 11 | 10 | 14 | 18 | 27 | 39 | 59 | 98 | |
April 19, 2012[71] | 17 | 14 | 8 | 14 | 19 | 28 | 39 | 61 | 100 | |
April 12, 2012[72] | 17 | 14 | 8 | 14 | 19 | 27 | 39 | 60 | 99 | |
April 5, 2012[73] | 18 | 15 | 7 | 14 | 19 | 29 | 40 | 62 | 102 | |
March 23, 2012[74] | 18 | 15 | 7 | 14 | 19 | 29 | 40 | 62 | 102 | |
March 15, 2012[75] | 18 | 13 | 8 | 13 | 20 | 28 | 39 | 61 | 100 | |
March 8, 2012[76] | 18 | 13 | 8 | 13 | 21 | 28 | 39 | 62 | 101 | |
March 6, 2012[77] | 18 | 13 | 8 | 13 | 21 | 26 | 39 | 60 | 99 | |
March 5, 2012[78] | 19 | 13 | 7 | 14 | 19 | 27 | 39 | 60 | 99 |
Sabato Crystal Ball
Each month the Crystal Ball released race ratings for President, U.S. Senate, U.S. House (competitive only) and Governors. There were seven possible designations:[79]
Solid Democratic
|
Tossup |
Lean Republican
|
Sabato's Crystal Ball Race Rating -- U.S. House | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Solid D | Likely D | Lean D | Tossup | Lean R | Likely R | Solid R |
June 6, 2012[80] | 152 | 14 | 19 | 15 | 23 | 19 | 193 |
May 9, 2012[81] | 151 | 16 | 21 | 13 | 23 | 21 | 190 |
April 2, 2012[82] | 149 | 19 | 19 | 13 | 25 | 25 | 185 |
Center for Voting and Democracy
The Center for Voting and Democracy (Fairvote) released its projections in October 2012. According to the organization, there were 177 projected Republican winners, 156 projected Democratic winners, and 102 "no-projection" districts. Additionally:[83][84]
- 238 districts had a Republican-tilt in partisanship
- 189 district had a Democratic-tilt in partisanship
- 8 districts were even
According to the study, Republicans were "far better positioned than Democrats to win control of the House."[85]
Redistricting
The 2012 elections were the first using new maps drawn as a result of the 2010 Census. The breakdown of states that won and lost new seats in the Congressional reapportionment is as follows:[86]
States that Added Congressional Seats after 2010 Census | ||
---|---|---|
State | Before 2010 census | After 2010 census[87] |
Arizona | 8 | 9 (+1) |
Florida | 25 | 27 (+2) |
Georgia | 13 | 14 (+1) |
Nevada | 3 | 4 (+1) |
South Carolina | 6 | 7 (+1) |
Texas | 32 | 36 (+4) |
Utah | 3 | 4 (+1) |
Washington | 9 | 10 (+1) |
States that Lost Congressional Seats after 2010 Census | ||
---|---|---|
State | Before 2010 census | After 2010 census[88] |
Illinois | 19 | 18 (-1) |
Iowa | 5 | 4 (-1) |
Louisiana | 7 | 6 (-1) |
Massachusetts | 10 | 9 (-1) |
Michigan | 15 | 14 (-1) |
Missouri | 9 | 8 (-1) |
New Jersey | 13 | 12 (-1) |
New York | 29 | 27 (-2) |
Ohio | 18 | 16 (-2) |
Pennsylvania | 19 | 18 (-1) |
However, while population gains have generally taken place in Republican states, projections show the bulk of the increases are from minorities -- particularly in states like Arizona, Florida and Texas.[89] Minorities generally lean Democratic in elections.[90] According to an estimate by Salon.com, Republicans could have gained 15 new seats nationwide if they chose to impose "brutal" maps.[10]
Of the top 10 Congressional districts that needed to lose population -- meaning they were the fastest growing districts over the past decade in the country -- all of them were won by a Republican in the 2010 election. That implied, that Republicans would have an easier time spreading their voters across more districts while still managing to try and maintain a safe majority in those overly-populated districts. The most-populated district is the 3rd Congressional seat in Nevada, which has a population of 1,002,482. The least-populated district is the 1st Congressional seat in Nebraska, with 611,333 residents.[91]
According to Mike Shields, the National Republican Congressional Committee’s political director, redistricting "has taken a lot of seats off the table for Democrats."[92]
In 2010, the 10 closest U.S. House races were won by the following House members:[93]
- Bill Owens (1,995 votes)
- Joe Heck (1,748 votes)
- Renee Ellmers (1,483 votes)
- David McKinley (1,440 votes)
- Gerry Connolly (981 votes)
- Blake Farenthold (797 votes)
- Ann Marie Buerkle (648 votes)
- Ben Chandler (647 votes)
- Tim Bishop (593 votes)
- Joe Walsh (290 votes)
A report by the Brennan Center for Justice indicated that California's redistricting likely cost the Democrats a chance at taking control of the U.S. House.[94] According to the report, Democrats were able to draw 44 congressional seats while Republican legislatures were responsible for 173 seats.[95]
Congressional approval rating
Throughout the 112th Congress, public sentiment was critical of the performance of elected officials. On February 8, 2012, Gallup released a poll in which a record-low of 10 percent of Americans approved of Congress. Viewpoints on Democrats and Republicans were equally negative.[96] "This Congress has been judged by almost everybody as the least productive, most confrontational Congress in a very, very long period of time," said House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Maryland).[97]
Do you approve or disapprove of the way Congress is handling its job? | |||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Poll | Approve | Disapprove | No opinion | Margin of error | Sample size | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (September 6-9, 2012) | 13% | 83% | 4% | +/-4 | 1,017 | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (August 9-12, 2012) | 10% | 83% | 7% | +/-4 | 1,012 | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (March 8-11, 2012) | 12% | 82% | 6% | +/-4 | 1,024 | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (February 2-5, 2012) | 10% | 86% | 4% | +/-4 | 1,029 | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (January 5-8, 2012) | 13% | 81% | 6% | +/-4 | 1,011 | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (December 15-18, 2011) | 11% | 86% | 3% | +/-4 | 1,019 | ||||||||||||||
Gallup News Service (November 3-6, 2011) | 13% | 82% | 5% | +/-4 | 1,012 | ||||||||||||||
AVERAGES | 11.71% | 83.29% | 5% | +/-4 | 1,017.71 | ||||||||||||||
Note: The polls above may not reflect all polls that have been conducted in this race. Those displayed are a random sampling chosen by Ballotpedia staff. If you would like to nominate another poll for inclusion in the table, send an email to [email protected]. |
Generic congressional ballot
RealClearPolitics
Each week, RealClearPolitics releases a table with an aggregate of the generic congressional vote from a variety of polling organizations, including Rasmussen Reports, Politico, NPR, USA Today/Gallup and Bloomberg.[98]
Generic Congressional Ballot -- Average from RealClearPolitics | |||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Poll | Democratic | Republican | |||||||||||||||||
4/1/12 | 43.6% | 44.8% | |||||||||||||||||
5/1/12 | 41.3% | 42.5% | |||||||||||||||||
6/1/12 | 44.2% | 44.3% | |||||||||||||||||
7/1/12 | 44.3% | 43% | |||||||||||||||||
8/1/12 | 41.8% | 43% | |||||||||||||||||
9/1/12 | 44.2% | 44% | |||||||||||||||||
10/1/12 | 44% | 45% | |||||||||||||||||
AVERAGES | 43.34% | 43.8% | |||||||||||||||||
Note: The polls above may not reflect all polls that have been conducted in this race. Those displayed are a random sampling chosen by Ballotpedia staff. If you would like to nominate another poll for inclusion in the table, send an email to [email protected]. |
See also
External links
- Election Projection.com
- Politico, "2012 House Map"
- RealClearPolitics, "Battle for the House"
- Roll Call, "Casualty List: 112th Congress
- Open Secrets, "Congressional Races"
Additional reading
- Cook Political report, "Partisan Voting Index for the 113th Congress"
- Fairvote -- Center for Voting and Democracy, "Monopoly Politics 2012"
Footnotes
- ↑ USA Today, "Redistricting takes some of the 'swing' out of House fights," April 23, 2012
- ↑ Los Angeles Times, "Nationally, redistricting looks like a draw between the parties," January 14, 2012
- ↑ New York Times, "New District Maps Toughen Democrats’ Race for House," April 19, 2012
- ↑ The Republic, "New generation of Latino congressional candidates may make history in House," October 26, 2012
- ↑ ABC News, "Congressional Hispanic Caucus Elects New Chairman," November 15, 2012
- ↑ Bloomberg, "Republicans Can't Claim Mandate as Democrats Top House Vote" November 16, 2012
- ↑ Bloomberg, "Republicans Win Congress as Democrats Get Most Votes," March 18, 2013
- ↑ Ballot Access News, "Only Four U.S. House Elections in the Last Hundred Years Gave One Party a House Majority, Even Though the Other Major Party Polled More Votes for U.S. House" November 12, 2012
- ↑ Washington Post, "Partisan bias in U.S. House elections," November 15, 2012
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 Salon.com, "The House GOP can’t be beat: It’s worse than gerrymandering," January 13, 2013 Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "salon" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ The New York Times, "Election 2010," accessed March 18, 2021
- ↑ The Washington Post, "Which election was worse for Democrats: 2010 or 2014? It’s a surprisingly close call.," November 5, 2014
- ↑ Washington Post, "Why the GOP’s House majority isn’t safe," May 31, 2012
- ↑ Politico, "Democrats look to California in bid to retake House," May 17, 2012
- ↑ Businessweek, "Republicans in Strong Position to Keep U.S. House Control," October 24, 2012
- ↑ CBS News, "Control of the House and redistricting's effect," November 4, 2012
- ↑ 17.00 17.01 17.02 17.03 17.04 17.05 17.06 17.07 17.08 17.09 17.10 17.11 17.12 17.13 17.14 17.15 17.16 17.17 17.18 17.19 Washington Post, "2012 redistricting: Top 10 matchups between incumbents," January 13, 2012
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 18.6 18.7 18.8 18.9 National Journal, "Stick a fork in them?" November 23, 2011
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 19.4 19.5 19.6 19.7 19.8 National Journal ,"" October 17, 2011
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 20.5 20.6 20.7 20.8 20.9 Roll Call, "Top 10 Vulnerable: Illinois, North Carolina Top List," November 10, 2011
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 Politico, "5 primaries to watch," September 11, 2011
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 22.4 22.5 22.6 22.7 22.8 22.9 The Hill, "Five most vulnerable redistricted Dems," August 20, 2011
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 23.6 23.7 23.8 23.9 The Hill, "Most vulnerable redistricted Republicans," August 21, 2011
- ↑ NRCC "Patriot Program 2012"
- ↑ NRCC "Young Guns 2012"
- ↑ DCCC, "Red to Blue 2012"
- ↑ Arizona Daily Sun, "GOP likely to hold House after $1B campaign," November 3, 2012
- ↑ Huffington Post, "Democratic Super PACs Trim Conservative Advantage In Congressional Races," November 10, 2012
- ↑ Sunlight Foundation, "Outside spenders' return on investment," November 9, 2012
- ↑ Politico, "House candidates raise more than $566M," July 16, 2012
- ↑ Desert News, "House Democrats reserve $32 million in ad time," April 18, 2012
- ↑ Campaign Finance Institute, "INDEPENDENT SPENDING TOPS $5 MILLION IN 26 HOUSE RACES, UP FROM ONLY 2 IN 2010," November 2, 2012
- ↑ Washington Post, ,"" NRCC raises $12.4 million in September," accessed October 10, 2012
- ↑ Campaign Finance Institute, "10 Senate, 3 House Races Top $1 Million in Spending Over the Past 7 Days Alone," October 12, 2012
- ↑ The Cook Political Report, "House: Race Ratings," updated October 18, 2012
- ↑ Brennan Center for Justice, "Election Spending 2012: 25 Toss-Up House Races," October 22, 2012
- ↑ Majority PAC 2012 "EXPANDING THE SENATE MAP, MAJORITY PAC LAUNCHES $8.4 MILLION, NINE-STATE CAMPAIGN," October 2012
- ↑ The New York Times, "With Growing Willingness, Donors Come to Aid of Democratic 'Super PACs'," October 19, 2012
- ↑ Politico, "Democrats borrow $17 million for final House push," October 24, 2012
- ↑ Washington Post, "Democrats borrow $17 million for House races," October 24, 2012
- ↑ Daily Kos, "Third quarter House fundraising: who's got the cash?" October 18, 2012
- ↑ Open Secrets, "Total Raised," accessed July 14, 2012
- ↑ Washington Post, "In a super PAC world, Democrats win using small donors," accessed October 10, 2012
- ↑ Roll Call, "NRCC Launches More Than $6 Million Worth of Ads," October 14, 2012
- ↑ RealClearPolitics, "Election 2012: Senate, House & Governor Races," accessed October 5, 2012
- ↑ New York Times "Race Ratings Table," accessed July 25, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report, "Our Accuracy," accessed December 12, 2011 (dead link)
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," October 30, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," October 25, 2012
- ↑ [http://cookpolitical.com/house/charts/race-ratings/4736 Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," October 18, 2012]
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," October 11, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," October 5, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," September 27, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," September 20, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," September 13, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," September 6, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," August 20, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," August 15, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," August 12, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," August 2, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," July 26, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," July 12, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," June 28, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," June 14, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," June 7, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," May 31, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," May 24, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," May 17, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," May 3, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," April 26, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," April 19, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," April 12, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," April 5, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," March 23, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," March 15, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," March 8, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," March 6, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report "2012 HOUSE RACE RATINGS," March 5, 2012
- ↑ Cook Political Report, "Our Accuracy," accessed December 12, 2011 (dead link)
- ↑ Sabato's Crystal Ball, "2012 House Ratings," accessed June 6, 2012
- ↑ Sabato's Crystal Ball, "2012 House Ratings," accessed May 9, 2012
- ↑ Sabato's Crystal Ball, "2012 House Ratings," accessed April 2, 2012
- ↑ Huffington Post, "Winner Take All and the Great Southern Partisan Reversal, 1990-2010," October 18, 2010
- ↑ Washington Post, "How redistricting leads to a more partisan Congress — in two charts," October 16, 2012
- ↑ Center for Voting and Democracy, "Elections Projections for 2012" October 2012
- ↑ New York Times, "Census 2010:Gains and Losses in Congress," December 21, 2010
- ↑ Official 2010 Apportionment from Census
- ↑ Official 2010 Apportionment from Census
- ↑ National Journal, "Don't Believe the Reapportionment Hype," December 23, 2010
- ↑ Huffington Post, "Reapportionment not necessarily good news for Republicans," December 21, 2010
- ↑ New York Times, "Exurban growth should bolster GOP in Congressional redistricting," December 21, 2010
- ↑ National Journal, "Redistricting’s Dark Matter," March 22, 2012
- ↑ Politico, "Where 2010's 10 closest House races stand," August 24, 2011
- ↑ Sacramento Bee, "The Buzz: California redistricting may have doomed Dems' chances of retaking Congress, report suggests," October 27, 2012
- ↑ Washington Post, "Why redistricting could doom House Democrats," October 28, 2012
- ↑ Gallup News Service, "Congress' Job Approval at New Low of 10%," February 8, 2012
- ↑ Bloomberg News, "Congress exiting to campaign leaving pileup of issues," September 23, 2012
- ↑ RealClearPolitics, "Generic Congressional Vote"