U.S. Senators and Governors as of January 2019
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PolitiJunkie
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« on: October 01, 2013, 11:38:58 AM »

U.S. Senate Composition as of January 2019

Alabama:      Richard Shelby (R)
         Jeff Sessions (R)

Alaska:      Lisa Murkowski (R)
         Sarah Palin (R)1

Arizona:      Jeff Flake (R)
         Gabrielle Giffords (D)2

Arkansas:      John Boozman (R)
         Tom Cotton (R)3

California:      Kamala Harris (D)4
         Gavin Newsom (D)5

Colorado:      Mark Udall (D)
         Michael Bennet (D)

Connecticut:    Richard Blumenthal (D)
         Chris Murphy (D)

Delaware:      Chris Coons (D)
         John Carney (D)6

Florida:      Pam Bondi (R)7
         William Weatherford (R)8

Georgia:      Johnny Isakson (R)
         Jason Carter (D)9

Hawaii:       Mazie Hirono (D)
         Colleen Hanabusa (D)10

Idaho:      Jim Risch (R)
         Brad Little (R)11

Illinois:       Dick Durbin (D)
         Michelle Obama (D)12

Indiana:      Dan Coats (R)
         Sue Ellspermann (R)13

Iowa:      Bruce Braley (D)14
         David Loebsack (D)15

Kansas:      Pat Roberts (R)
         Jerry Moran (R)

Kentucky:      Alison Lundergan Grimes (D)16
         Jack Conway (D)17

Louisiana:      Mary Landrieu (D)
         David Vitter (R)

Maine:      Susan Collins (I)18
         Angus King (I)

Maryland:      Doug Gansler (D)19
         Heather Mizeur (D)20

Massachusetts:   Elizabeth Warren (D)
         Ed Markey (D)

Michigan:       Gary Peters (D)21
         Jennifer Granholm (D)22

Minnesota:    Amy Klobuchar (D)
         Al Franken (D)

Mississippi:   Thad Cochran (R)
         Roger Wicker (R)

Missouri:      Claire McCaskill (D)
         Jay Nixon (D)23

Montana:      John Walsh (D)24
         Steve Daines (R)25

Nebraska:      Deb Fischer (R)
         Dave Heineman (R)26

Nevada:      Catherine Cortez Masto (D)27
         Ross Miller (D)28

New Hampshire:    Jeanne Shaheen (D)
                 John Lynch (D)29

New Jersey:   Bob Menendez (D)
         Cory Booker (D)

New Mexico:    Tom Udall (D)
         Ben Ray Luján (D)30

New York:      Chuck Schumer (D)
         Carolyn Maloney (D)31

North Carolina:   Richard Burr (R)
         Kay Hagan (D)

North Dakota:   John Hoeven (R)
         Heidi Heitkamp (D)

Ohio:      Sherrod Brown (D)
         Rob Portman (R)

Oklahoma:   Jim Inhofe (R)
         J.C. Watts (R)32

Oregon:      Ron Wyden (D)
         Jeff Merkley (D)

Pennsylvania:   Bob Casey (D)
         Joe Sestak (D)33

Rhode Island:   Jack Reed (D)
         Sheldon Whitehouse (D)

South Carolina: Tim Scott (R)
         Vincent Sheheen (D)34

South Dakota:    John Thune (R)
         Mike Rounds (R)35

Tennessee:    Lamar Alexander (R)
         Bob Corker (R)

Texas:      Julian Castro (D)36
         Joaquín Castro (D)37

Utah:      Mike Lee (R)
         Chris Stewart (R)38

Vermont:      Bernie Sanders (I)
         Lucy Leriche (D)39

Virginia:      Mark Warner (D)
         Tim Kaine (D)

Washington:   Maria Cantwell (D)
         Jaime Herrera Beutler (R)40

West Virginia:   Joe Manchin (D)
         Shelley Moore Capito (R)41 

Wisconsin:   Tammy Baldwin (D)
         Russ Feingold (D)42

Wyoming:      Mike Enzi (R)
         John Barasso (R)

1Defeated Senator Mark Begich in his 2014 reelection bid
2Won the open seat in 2016 following John McCain's retirement
3Defeated Senator Mark Pryor in his 2014 reelection bid
4Won the open seat in 2016 following Barbara Boxer's retirement
5Won the open seat in 2018 following Dianne Feinstein's retirement
6Won the open seat in 2018 following Tom Carper's retirement
7Won the open seat in 2016 vacated by Marco Rubio to run for President
8Won the open seat in 2018 following Bill Nelson's retirement
9Won the open seat in 2014 following Saxby Chambliss's retirement
10Defeated Brian Schatz in the Democratic Primary in 2014 and won the open seat
11Won the open seat in 2016 following Mike Crapo's retirement
12After HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan resigned in 2015, President Obama appointed Mark Kirk to the position and Governor Madigan appointed Sheila Simon to his Senate seat. When Simon declined to seek a full term, Michelle Obama won the open seat
13Defeated Joe Donnelly in his 2018 reelection bid
14Won the open seat in 2014 following Tom Harkin's retirement
15Won the open seat in 2016 following Chuck Grassley's retirement
16Defeated Mitch McConnell in his 2014 reelection bid
17Defeated Rand Paul in his 2016 reelection bid
18Won reelection as an Independent after losing the 2014 Republican Primary to Paul LePage
19Won the open seat in 2016 following Barbara Mikulski's retirement
20Won the open seat in 2018 following Ben Cardin's retirement
21Won the open seat in 2014 following Carl Levin's retirement
22Won the open seat in 2018 following Debbie Stabenow's retirement
23Defeated Roy Blunt in his 2016 reelection bid
24Appointed to the Senate after incumbent Brian Schweitzer became Secretary of Agriculture in 2018; won the special election for the seat in 2018
25Defeated Jon Tester in his 2018 reelection bid
26Won the open seat in 2014 following Mike Johanns' retirement
27Won the open seat in 2016 following Harry Reid's retirement
28Defeated Dean Heller in his 2018 reelection bid
29Won the open seat in 2016 vacated by Kelly Ayotte to run for Vice President
30Defeated John Sanchez in his 2018 bid for a full term after being appointed by Governor Martinez to fill the seat vacated by Martin Heinrich to become Vice President in 2017
31Appointed to the Senate in 2017 to fill the seat vacated by Kirsten Gillibrand to become President; won election to a full term in 2018
32Won the open seat in 2016 following Tom Coburn's retirement
33Defeated Pat Toomey in his 2016 reelection bid
34After Richard Cash defeated Lindsey Graham in the Republican primary in 2014, Sheheen won the open seat
35Won the open seat in 2014 following Tim Johnson's retirement
36Defeated John Cornyn in his 2014 reelection bid
37Defeated Ted Cruz in his 2018 reelection bid
38Won the open seat in 2018 following Orrin Hatch's retirement
39Won the open seat in 2016 following Patrick Leahy's retirement
40Won the special election in 2018 to fill the seat vacated by Patty Murray after being appointed Director of the Office of Management and Budget
41Won the open seat in 2014 following Jay Rockefeller's retirement
42Defeated Ron Johnson in his 2016 reelection bid

116th United States Congress Senate Composition
Democrats: 59
Republicans: 38
Independents: 3

116th United States Congress Senate Leadership:
President Pro Tempore: Ron Wyden (D-OR)
Majority Leader: Dick Durbin (D-IL)
Majority Whip: Sherrod Brown (D-OH)
Minority Leader: Lamar Alexander (R-TN)
Minority Whip: John Thune (R-SD)
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PolitiJunkie
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« Reply #1 on: October 01, 2013, 11:39:22 AM »

U.S. Governors as of January 2019

Alabama: Robert Aderholt (R)1
Alaska: Mead Treadwell (R)2
Arizona: Richard Carmona (D)3       
Arkansas: Asa Hutchinson (R)4       
California: Hilda Solis (D)5       
Colorado: Jared Polis (D)6       
Connecticut: Jim Himes (D)7    
Delaware: Beau Biden (D)8
Florida: Adam Putnam (R)9
Georgia: John Barrow (D)10
Hawaii: Tulsi Gabbard (D)11    
Idaho: Raúl Labrador (R)12    
Illinois: Lisa Madigan (D)13       
Indiana: Mike Pence (R)      
Iowa: Tyler Olson (D)14          
Kansas: Jeff Colyer (R)15    
Kentucky: Adam Edelen (D)16    
Louisiana: Mitch Landrieu (D)17    
Maine: Chellie Pingree (D)18       
Maryland: Anthony Brown (D)19       
Massachusetts: Mike Capuano (D)20
Michigan: Mark Schauer (D)21       
Minnesota: Lori Swanson (D)22
Mississippi: Phil Bryant (R)
Missouri: Peter Kinder (R)23        
Montana: Steve Bullock (D)      
Nebraska: Charlie Janssen (R)24    
Nevada: Kate Marshall (D)25
New Hampshire: Maggie Hassan (D)
New Jersey: Kim Guadango (R)26
New Mexico: Hector Balderas (D)27
New York: Bill deBlasio (D)28    
North Carolina: Anthony Foxx (D)29
North Dakota: Jack Dalrymple (R)   
Ohio: Richard Cordray (D)30    
Oklahoma: Todd Lamb (R)31       
Oregon: Kate Brown (D)32       
Pennsylvania: Alyson Schwartz (D)33    
Rhode Island: Gina Raimondo (D)34    
South Carolina: Mick Mulvaney (R)35
South Dakota: Matt Michels (R)36    
Tennessee: Stephen Fincher (R)37       
Texas: Greg Abbott (R)38       
Utah: Gary Herbert (R)      
Vermont: Peter Shumlin (D)      
Virginia: Bill Bolling (R)39       
Washington: Jay Inslee (D)
West Virginia: David McKinley (R)40    
Wisconsin: Ron Kind (D)41       
Wyoming: Cynthia Cloud (R)42    

1Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Robert Bentley
2Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Sean Parnell
3Elected in 2014 to succeed term-limited Governor Jan Brewer; reelected in 2018
4Elected in 2014 to succeed term-limited Governor Mike Beebe; reelected in 2018
5Elected in 2014 to succeed retiring Governor Jerry Brown; reelected in 2018
6Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor John Hickenlooper
7Defeated Governor Tom Foley in his 2018 reelection bid, who had defeated Dan Malloy in his 2014 reelection bid
8Elected in 2016 to succeed term-limited Governor Jack Markell
9Defeated Governor Charlie Crist in his 2018 reelection bid, who had defeated Rick Scott in his 2014 reelection bid
10Defeated Governor Nathan Deal in his 2014 reelection bid; reelected in 2018
11Elected in 2014 after defeating Neil Abercrombie in the Democratic primary; reelected in 2018
12Elected in 2014 to succeed retiring Governor Butch Otter; reelected in 2018
13Elected in 2014 after defeating Pat Quinn in the Democratic primary; reelected in 2018
14Elected in 2014 to succeed retiring Governor Terry Branstad; reelected in 2018
15Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Sam Brownback
16Elected in 2015 to succeed term-limited Governor Steve Beshear
17Elected in 2015 to succeed term-limited Governor Bobby Jindal
18Elected in 2014 after incumbent Governor Paul LePage decided to run for Senate instead of seeking reelection; reelected in 2018
19Elected in 2014 to succeed term-limited Governor Martin O'Malley; reelected in 2018
20Defeated Scott Brown, who was elected in 2014 to succeed retiring Governor Deval Patrick, in his 2018 reelection bid
21Defeated Rick Snyder in his 2014 reelection bid; reelected in 2018
22Elected in 2018 to succeed retiring Governor Mark Dayton
23Elected in 2016 to succeed term-limited Governor Jay Nixon
24Elected in 2014 to succeed term-limited Governor Dave Heineman; reelected in 2018
25Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Brian Sandoval
26Elected in 2017 to succeed term-limited Governor Chris Christie
27Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Susana Martinez
28Elected in 2018 to succeed retiring Governor Robert Duffy, who ascended to the Governorship in 2015 after Andrew Cuomo's scandal and resignation
29Defeated Pat McCrory in his 2016 reelection bid
30Defeated John Kasich in his 2014 reelection bid; reelected in 2018
31Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Mary Fallin
32Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor John Kitzhaber
33Defeated Tom Corbett in his 2014 reelection bid; reelected in 2018
34Defeated Lincoln Chafee in his 2014 reelection bid; reelected in 2018
35Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Nikki Haley
36Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Dennis Daugaard
37Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Bill Haslam
38Elected in 2014 to succeed retiring Governor Rick Perry; reelected in 2018
39Elected in 2017 to succeed term-limited Governor Terry McAuliffe, who was elected in 2013 to succeed term-limited Governor Bob McDonnell
40Elected in 2016 to succeed term-limited Governor Earl Ray Tomblin
41Elected in 2018 to succeed retiring Governor Scott Walker
42Elected in 2018 to succeed term-limited Governor Matt Mead

Gubernatorial Composition:
Democrats: 29
Republicans: 21
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MATTROSE94
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« Reply #2 on: October 01, 2013, 11:45:41 AM »

U.S. Senate Composition as of January 2019

Alabama:      Richard Shelby (R)
         Jeff Sessions (R)

Alaska:      Lisa Murkowski (R)
         Sarah Palin (R)1

Arizona:      Jeff Flake (R)
         Gabrielle Giffords (D)2

Arkansas:      John Boozman (R)
         Tom Cotton (R)3

California:      Kamala Harris (D)4
         Gavin Newsom (D)5

Colorado:      Mark Udall (D)
         Michael Bennet (D)

Connecticut:    Richard Blumenthal (D)
         Chris Murphy (D)

Delaware:      Chris Coons (D)
         John Carney (D)6

Florida:      Pam Bondi (R)7
         William Weatherford (R)8

Georgia:      Johnny Isakson (R)
         Jason Carter (D)9

Hawaii:       Mazie Hirono (D)
         Colleen Hanabusa (D)10

Idaho:      Jim Risch (R)
         Brad Little (R)11

Illinois:       Dick Durbin (D)
         Michelle Obama (D)12

Indiana:      Dan Coats (R)
         Sue Ellspermann (R)13

Iowa:      Bruce Braley (D)14
         David Loebsack (D)15

Kansas:      Pat Roberts (R)
         Jerry Moran (R)

Kentucky:      Alison Lundergan Grimes (D)16
         Jack Conway (D)17

Louisiana:      Mary Landrieu (D)
         David Vitter (R)

Maine:      Susan Collins (I)18
         Angus King (I)

Maryland:      Doug Gansler (D)19
         Heather Mizeur (D)20

Massachusetts:   Elizabeth Warren (D)
         Ed Markey (D)

Michigan:       Gary Peters (D)21
         Jennifer Granholm (D)22

Minnesota:    Amy Klobuchar (D)
         Al Franken (D)

Mississippi:   Thad Cochran (R)
         Roger Wicker (R)

Missouri:      Claire McCaskill (D)
         Jay Nixon (D)23

Montana:      John Walsh (D)24
         Steve Daines (R)25

Nebraska:      Deb Fischer (R)
         Dave Heineman (R)26

Nevada:      Catherine Cortez Masto (D)27
         Ross Miller (D)28

New Hampshire:    Jeanne Shaheen (D)
                 John Lynch (D)29

New Jersey:   Bob Menendez (D)
         Cory Booker (D)

New Mexico:    Tom Udall (D)
         Ben Ray Luján (D)30

New York:      Chuck Schumer (D)
         Carolyn Maloney (D)31

North Carolina:   Richard Burr (R)
         Kay Hagan (D)

North Dakota:   John Hoeven (R)
         Heidi Heitkamp (D)

Ohio:      Sherrod Brown (D)
         Rob Portman (R)

Oklahoma:   Jim Inhofe (R)
         J.C. Watts (R)32

Oregon:      Ron Wyden (D)
         Jeff Merkley (D)

Pennsylvania:   Bob Casey (D)
         Joe Sestak (D)33

Rhode Island:   Jack Reed (D)
         Sheldon Whitehouse (D)

South Carolina: Tim Scott (R)
         Vincent Sheheen (D)34

South Dakota:    John Thune (R)
         Mike Rounds (R)35

Tennessee:    Lamar Alexander (R)
         Bob Corker (R)

Texas:      Julian Castro (D)36
         Joaquín Castro (D)37

Utah:      Mike Lee (R)
         Chris Stewart (R)38

Vermont:      Bernie Sanders (I)
         Lucy Leriche (D)39

Virginia:      Mark Warner (D)
         Tim Kaine (D)

Washington:   Maria Cantwell (D)
         Jaime Herrera Beutler (R)40

West Virginia:   Joe Manchin (D)
         Shelley Moore Capito (R)41 

Wisconsin:   Tammy Baldwin (D)
         Russ Feingold (D)42

Wyoming:      Mike Enzi (R)
         John Barasso (R)

1Defeated Senator Mark Begich in his 2014 reelection bid
2Won the open seat in 2016 following John McCain's retirement
3Defeated Senator Mark Pryor in his 2014 reelection bid
4Won the open seat in 2016 following Barbara Boxer's retirement
5Won the open seat in 2018 following Dianne Feinstein's retirement
6Won the open seat in 2018 following Tom Carper's retirement
7Won the open seat in 2016 vacated by Marco Rubio to run for President
8Won the open seat in 2018 following Bill Nelson's retirement
9Won the open seat in 2014 following Saxby Chambliss's retirement
10Defeated Brian Schatz in the Democratic Primary in 2014 and won the open seat
11Won the open seat in 2016 following Mike Crapo's retirement
12After HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan resigned in 2015, President Obama appointed Mark Kirk to the position and Governor Madigan appointed Sheila Simon to his Senate seat. When Simon declined to seek a full term, Michelle Obama won the open seat
13Defeated Joe Donnelly in his 2018 reelection bid
14Won the open seat in 2014 following Tom Harkin's retirement
15Won the open seat in 2016 following Chuck Grassley's retirement
16Defeated Mitch McConnell in his 2014 reelection bid
17Defeated Rand Paul in his 2016 reelection bid
18Won reelection as an Independent after losing the 2014 Republican Primary to Paul LePage
19Won the open seat in 2016 following Barbara Mikulski's retirement
20Won the open seat in 2018 following Ben Cardin's retirement
21Won the open seat in 2014 following Carl Levin's retirement
22Won the open seat in 2018 following Debbie Stabenow's retirement
23Defeated Roy Blunt in his 2016 reelection bid
24Appointed to the Senate after incumbent Brian Schweitzer became Secretary of Agriculture in 2018; won the special election for the seat in 2018
25Defeated Jon Tester in his 2018 reelection bid
26Won the open seat in 2014 following Mike Johanns' retirement
27Won the open seat in 2016 following Harry Reid's retirement
28Defeated Dean Heller in his 2018 reelection bid
29Won the open seat in 2016 vacated by Kelly Ayotte to run for Vice President
30Defeated John Sanchez in his 2018 bid for a full term after being appointed by Governor Martinez to fill the seat vacated by Martin Heinrich to become Vice President in 2017
31Appointed to the Senate in 2017 to fill the seat vacated by Kirsten Gillibrand to become President; won election to a full term in 2018
32Won the open seat in 2016 following Tom Coburn's retirement
33Defeated Pat Toomey in his 2016 reelection bid
34After Richard Cash defeated Lindsey Graham in the Republican primary in 2014, Sheheen won the open seat
35Won the open seat in 2014 following Tim Johnson's retirement
36Defeated John Cornyn in his 2014 reelection bid
37Defeated Ted Cruz in his 2018 reelection bid
38Won the open seat in 2018 following Orrin Hatch's retirement
39Won the open seat in 2016 following Patrick Leahy's retirement
40Won the special election in 2018 to fill the seat vacated by Patty Murray after being appointed Director of the Office of Management and Budget
41Won the open seat in 2014 following Jay Rockefeller's retirement
42Defeated Ron Johnson in his 2016 reelection bid

116th United States Congress Senate Composition
Democrats: 59
Republicans: 38
Independents: 3

116th United States Congress Senate Leadership:
President Pro Tempore: Ron Wyden (D-OR)
Majority Leader: Dick Durbin (D-IL)
Majority Whip: Sherrod Brown (D-OH)
Minority Leader: Lamar Alexander (R-TN)
Minority Whip: John Thune (R-SD)
Your list looks pretty accurate overall, although I think that Jeff Flake could lose reelection in 2018 and feel that Patrick Murphy or Alan Grayson could defeat Pam Bondi in 2016 if Marco Rubio runs for President. BTW, does Susan Collins caucus with the Democrats or the Republicans?
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PolitiJunkie
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« Reply #3 on: October 01, 2013, 01:40:20 PM »

This is not supposed to be predictions in any way. I was in the process of writing a timeline that I got bored with, but I had already written out 2014, 2016, and 2018 mid-term results, so I figured I'd post the cumulative results of those mid-terms by listing the January 2019 composition just for fun.

What happened in Montana is that there are two elections in 2018, like in Washington. President Gillibrand appoints Senator Schweitzer (elected in 2014) to be Secretary of Agriculture in early 2018 (Vilsack decided to stay on for an extra year), and Governor Bullock appoints his Lieutenant Governor, John Walsh, to the seat. Walsh wins the 2018 special election to remain in the seat. In the regular 2018 Senate election in Montana, Steve Daines (who opted not to run in 2014 because of Schweitzer, so he is still Montana's Representative at this time) defeats Jon Tester.

Susan Collins caucuses with the Republicans and has only pivoted a little bit to the left since becoming an independent (she endorses gay marriage in early 2015).
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hurricanehink
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« Reply #4 on: October 01, 2013, 09:42:13 PM »

I notice several people on there for 2014 that don't quite mesh. For example, would Brian Schweitzer change his mind and go for 2014? Also, Vincent Sheheen is going for governor next year in SC, not senate, would that change? All in all, an interesting list. I love the Gillibrand/Heinrich ticket for 2016 Cheesy
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Atlas Has Shrugged
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« Reply #5 on: October 01, 2013, 09:49:27 PM »

Is this supposed to be serious or just PolitiJunkie's uninformed wetdream?
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Pessimistic Antineutrino
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« Reply #6 on: October 01, 2013, 09:55:42 PM »

Is this supposed to be serious or just PolitiJunkie's uninformed wetdream?

I think a Senator Sarah Palin would be a pretty terrifying wetdream.
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PolitiJunkie
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« Reply #7 on: October 01, 2013, 10:56:17 PM »

I notice several people on there for 2014 that don't quite mesh. For example, would Brian Schweitzer change his mind and go for 2014? Also, Vincent Sheheen is going for governor next year in SC, not senate, would that change? All in all, an interesting list. I love the Gillibrand/Heinrich ticket for 2016 Cheesy

I wrote this several months ago.

Is this supposed to be serious or just PolitiJunkie's uninformed wetdream?

Neither; it's just the midterm results from a timeline I ditched. Even though at this point the numbers for Democrats are high, this is their peak performance in the TL (2018-2022ish). In the TL, the Democrats only held the House for four years (did not take it until 2018 and lost it in 2022), and Republicans won the 2024 election. I only wrote the midterms up until after the 2018 ones, which is why Democratic numbers are high.
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badgate
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« Reply #8 on: October 01, 2013, 11:05:03 PM »

Personally I think the current Democratic majority IRL will peak between 2016 and 2022 if they make it out of 2014 with the status quo mostly upheld
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Flake
JacobTiver
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« Reply #9 on: October 01, 2013, 11:55:29 PM »

Now I have to call shenanigans on Florida because we will not vote for a Governor Putnam or a Senator Weatherford
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Rocky Rockefeller
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« Reply #10 on: October 18, 2013, 02:05:13 PM »

U.S. Senate Composition as of January 2019

Nevada:      Catherine Cortez Masto (D)27
         Ross Miller (D)28



28Defeated Dean Heller in his 2018 reelection bid

If Dean Heller held on last year, I see no reason why he couldn't win in 2018, besides I see Miller as more likely to run for governor

Other than that I think it looks fine, more or less.
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PolitiJunkie
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« Reply #11 on: October 18, 2013, 02:18:05 PM »

U.S. Senate Composition as of January 2019

Nevada:      Catherine Cortez Masto (D)27
         Ross Miller (D)28



28Defeated Dean Heller in his 2018 reelection bid

If Dean Heller held on last year, I see no reason why he couldn't win in 2018, besides I see Miller as more likely to run for governor

Other than that I think it looks fine, more or less.

Once again, just to clarify, these aren't predictions at all, but thanks!
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Progressive
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« Reply #12 on: October 19, 2013, 07:26:30 PM »

Can you post the results (including primary) for Senate and Governor in NY?? Would really like to see specifics.
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PolitiJunkie
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« Reply #13 on: October 19, 2013, 10:06:45 PM »

Sure!

New York Gubernatorial Election, 2014:
Governor Andrew Cuomo: 69.3%
State SenatorGreg Ball: 30.7%

New York Senate Election, 2016:
Senator Chuck Schumer 72.4%
Nassau County Comptroller George Maragos 27.6%

United States Presidential Election in New York, 2016:
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand/Senator Martin Heinrich: 71.3%
Senator Marco Rubio/Senator Kelly Ayotte: 28.7%

New York Gubernatorial Election, 2018:
Mayor Bill de Blasio 63.3%
Former Congressman Chris Gibson 36.7%

New York Senate Election, 2018
Senator Carolyn Maloney 73.2%
State Representative Raymond Walter 26.8%
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Mr. Matt
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« Reply #14 on: November 11, 2019, 05:23:45 PM »

Sorry for the bump but it has to be tabulated for the record- looks like OP got 12 pairs of Senators and nine governors correct
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