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The 2024 Nebraska elections were held on November 5, 2024. Voters in Nebraska elected both of the state's members of the United States Senate, all three members of the United States House of Representatives, half of the seats in the state legislature, and seats on the Public Service Commission, State Board of Education, and Board of Regents.
Pete Ricketts, U.S. Senator from Nebraska (2023–present) [27] U.S. representatives. Mike Johnson, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives (2023–present) and LA-04 (2017–present) [28] State officials. Jim Pillen, Governor of Nebraska (2023–present) [29] Bob Evnen, Nebraska Secretary of State (2019–present) [29] State ...
Scott Peters, U.S. Representative from California's 50th congressional district, 2008 candidate for San Diego City Attorney, and former San Diego City Councilmember from District 1 (2000-2008) [8] Sara Jacobs , U.S Representative from California's 51st congressional district [ 8 ]
The state’s 2nd Congressional District, including Omaha and its suburbs, has swung toward Democrats since Trump was elected in 2016. In 2020, President Joe Biden won the district and its one ...
Nebraska has three congressional districts due to its population, each of which elects a member to the United States House of Representatives. Unlike every other U.S. state except for Maine, Nebraska apportions its Electoral College votes according to congressional district, making each district its own separate battleground in presidential ...
Although Nebraska is a reliably Republican-leaning state, its 2nd Congressional District, which surrounds Omaha, has sometimes gone for Democrats in recent presidential elections, including to ...
Nebraska's allocation method, which was adopted before the 1992 election, was long seen as an innocuous curiosity. ... While 40 states currently have a trifecta (23 Republican and 17 Democratic ...
Nebraska is a predominantly Republican state, making it a rare occurrence for a Democrat to win the state in its entirety. Since 1940, the Democratic Party has only secured the full slate of electoral votes once—during the 1964 election, when President Lyndon B. Johnson achieved a landslide victory on the national scale. [8]