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2020 United States Senate elections ← 2018 November 3, 2020 January 5, 2021 (Georgia runoffs) 2022 → 35 of the 100 seats in the United States Senate 51 [a] seats needed for a majority Majority party Minority party Leader Chuck Schumer Mitch McConnell Party Democratic Republican Leader since January 3, 2017 January 3, 2007 Leader's seat New York Kentucky Seats before 45 53 Seats after 48 ...
In the Senate, Republicans briefly held the majority at the start; however, on January 20, 2021, three new Democratic senators – Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock of Georgia and Alex Padilla of California – were sworn in, resulting in 50 seats held by Republicans, 48 seats held by Democrats, and two held by independents who caucus with the ...
36 sitting Democrats (D 1 to D 36) were not on election. 14 sitting Democrats (D 37 to D 50) were re-elected (D 50 had been appointed to fill a vacancy and is shown as an elected hold). 3 new Democrats (D 51 to D 53) held seats by replacing other Democrats. 3 new Democrats (D 54 to D 56) gained seats the Democrats did not have before.
Senate House Presidency Trifecta Democratic: 51 59 45 30 Republican: 43 36 46 22 [75] Democratic-Republican: 12 13 14 12 Federalist: 3 2 2 2 Pro-Administration: 3 2 0 2 Whig: 2 2 2 0 [76] National Republican: 1 1 0 0 Anti-Administration: 0 1 0 0 Opposition: 0 1 0 0 National Union: 0 0 2 0 Split control 2 [77] 0 1 [78] 49 Independent 0 0 5 -
117 sitting House members, 14 of whom are Republicans and 103 are Democrats; 27 sitting Senate members, 2 of whom are Republicans and 25 Democrats; 236 candidates for House and Senate, including ...
All 33 Class 1 Senate seats, and one Class 2 seat, were up for election in 2024; Class 1 currently consisted of 20 Democrats, four independents who caucus with the Senate Democrats, [e] and 10 Republicans. Burgess Everett of Politico considered the map for these Senate
Key House races. All 435 seats in the House are up for reelection on Nov. 5. Republicans hold a slim majority with 220 seats, while Democrats hold 212 seats.
Split-ticket voting played a prominent role in several battleground states during last week’s elections despite the practice becoming increasingly less common. Democrats clinched major Senate ...