| A | B | C | |
|---|---|---|---|
1 | Members of Congress Defeated For Renomination, 1968-2020 (by Greg Giroux) | ||
2 | Winners are noted in parenthetically. In the "Results" column, the vote percentage of the losing incumbent is listed first. Contests in BOLD text mean that both candidates were members of the House who ran against one another after changes in redistricting. If an ASTERISK appears after the winning candidate's name, he or she went on to LOSE the general election. Some defeated senators were appointed and thus were technically seeking NOMINATION rather than RENOMINATION. It doesn't include contests, like Ro Khanna's (D-CA) 2016 defeat of Rep. Mike Honda (D), in which members of the same party were opponents in the November general election. Compiled by Greg Giroux (Twitter: @greggiroux). Sources: Greg Giroux research, Vital Statistics on American Politics, Almanac of American Politics | ||
3 | 2020 (as of Aug. 4): 8 House (3 D, 5 R) | Results (%s) | First Elected |
4 | Rep. Ross Spano, R-Florida (Scott Franklin) | 49%-51% (unofficial) | 2018 |
5 | Rep. Lacy Clay, D-Missouri (Cori Bush) | 46%-49% (unofficial) | 2000 |
6 | Rep. Steve Watkins, R-Kansas (Jake LaTurner) | 34%-49% (unofficial) | 2018 |
7 | Rep. Scott Tipton, R-Colorado (Lauren Boebert) | 45.4%-54.6% | 2010 |
8 | Rep. Eliot Engel, D-New York (Jamaal Bowman) | 40.6%-55.4% | 1988 |
9 | Rep. Denver Riggleman, R-Virginia (Bob Good) | 42%-58% (convention) | 2018 |
10 | Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa (Randy Feenstra) | 36%-46% | 2002 |
11 | Rep. Dan Lipinski, D-Illinois (Marie Newman) | 45%-47% | 2004 |
12 | 2018: 4 House (2 D, 2 R) | Results (%s) | First Elected |
13 | Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Massachusetts (Ayanna Pressley) | 41.3-58.5 | 1998 |
14 | Rep. Joe Crowley, D-New York (Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez) | 43-57 | 1998 |
15 | Rep. Mark Sanford, R-South Carolina (Katie Arrington*) | 46-51 | 2013 (previously served 1995-2001) |
16 | Rep. Robert Pittenger, R-North Carolina (Mark Harris-2018 general election never certified) | 46.2-48.5 | 2012 |
17 | 2017: 1 Senate (1 R) | Results (%s) | First Elected |
18 | Sen. Luther Strange, R-Alabama (Roy Moore*); Luther appointed, defeated for nomination | 45.4-54.6 | 2017 (appointed) |
19 | 2016: 5 House (2 D, 3 R) | Results (%s) | First Elected |
20 | Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Florida (Al Lawson) | 39-48 | 1992 |
21 | Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kansas (Roger Marshall) | 43.4-56.6 | 2010 |
22 | Rep. Randy Forbes, R-Virginia (Scott Taylor) | 41-53 | 2001 |
23 | Rep. Renee Ellmers, R-North Carolina (Rep. George Holding) | 24-53 (Greg Brannon 23) | 2010 |
24 | Rep. Chaka Fattah, D-Pennsylvania (Dwight Evans) | 34-42 | 1994 |
25 | 2014: 4 House (1 D, 3 R) | Results (%s) | First Elected |
26 | Rep. Ralph Hall, R-Texas (John Ratcliffe) | 47-53 (runoff), 45-29 (primary) | 1980 |
27 | Rep. Eric Cantor (Majority Leader), R-Virginia (Dave Brat) | 44.5-55.5 | 2000 |
28 | Rep. Kerry Bentivolio, R-Michigan (David Trott) | 34-66 | 2012 |
29 | Rep. John Tierney, D-Massachusetts (Seth Moulton) | 40-51 | 1996 |
30 | |||
31 | 2012: 13 House (7 D, 6 R), 1 Senate (1 R) | Results (%s) | First Elected |
32 | Sen. Richard G. Lugar, R-Indiana (Richard Mourdock*) | 39-61 | 1976 |
33 | Rep. Jean Schmidt, R-Ohio (Brad Wenstrup) | 43-49 | 2005 |
34 | Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio (Rep. Marcy Kaptur) | 40-56 | 1996 |
35 | Rep. Donald Manzullo, R-Illinois (Rep. Adam Kinzinger) | 46-54 | 1992 |
36 | Rep. Jason Altmire, D-Pennsylvania (Rep. Mark Critz*) | 49-51 | 2006 |
37 | Rep. Tim Holden, D-Pennsylvania (Matt Cartwright) | 43-57 | 1992 |
38 | Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-Texas (Beto O'Rourke) | 44-50 | 1996 |
39 | Rep. Steven Rothman, D-New Jersey (Rep. Bill Pascrell) | 39-61 | 1996 |
40 | Rep. John Sullivan, R-Oklahoma (Jim Bridenstine) | 46-54 | 2002 |
41 | Rep. Russ Carnahan, D-Missouri (Rep. Lacy Clay) | 34-63 | 2004 |
42 | Rep. Hansen Clarke, D-Michigan (Rep. Gary Peters) | 35-47 | 2010 |
43 | Rep. Sandy Adams, R-Florida (Rep. John Mica) | 39-61 | 2010 |
44 | Rep. Cliff Stearns, R-Florida (Ted Yoho) | 33-34 | 1988 |
45 | Rep. Ben Quayle, R-Arizona (Rep. David Schweikert) | 48.5-51.5 | 2010 |
46 | |||
47 | 2010: 4 House (2 D, 2 R), 3 Senate (1 D, 2 R) | Results | First Elected |
48 | Sen. Robert F. Bennett, R-Utah (Mike Lee), lost at nominating convention | 27-37-36 (Bennett came in 3rd) | 1992 |
49 | Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska (Joe Miller*) | 49-51 | 2002 (appointed) |
50 | Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pennsylvania (Joe Sestak*) | 46-54 | 1980 |
51 | Rep. Alan B. Mollohan, D-West Virginia (Mike Oliverio*) | 44-56 | 1982 |
52 | Rep. Parker Griffith, R-Alabama (Mo Brooks) | 33-51 | 2008 |
53 | Rep. Bob Inglis, R-South Carolina (Trey Gowdy) | 29-71 (runoff), 27-39 (primary) | 2004 (previously served 1993-1999) |
54 | Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, D-Michigan (Hansen Clarke) | 41-47 | 1996 |
55 | |||
56 | At the Utah Senate Republican convention in May, Tim Bridgewater led Lee, 37 percent to 36 percent, in a round of voting that eliminated Bennett. Bridgewater also outpolled Lee, 57 percent to 43 percent, in a final convention vote that advanced both candidates to a primary. Lee defeated Bridgewater, 51 percent to 49 percent, in the June primary election to become the Republican nominee. | ||
57 | Murkowski was re-elected in November 2010 as a write-in candidate. | ||
58 | |||
59 | 2008: 4 House (1 D, 3 R) | Results | First Elected |
60 | Rep. Wayne T. Gilchrest, R-Maryland (Andy Harris*) | 33-43 | 1990 |
61 | Rep. Albert R. Wynn, D-Maryland (Donna Edwards) | 37-59 | 1992 |
62 | Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah (Jason Chaffetz) | 40-60 | 1996 |
63 | Rep. David Davis, R-Tennessee (Phil Roe) | 49-50 | 2006 |
64 | |||
65 | 2006: 2 House (1 D, 1 R), 1 Senate (1 D) | Results | First Elected |
66 | Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, D-Connecticut (Ned Lamont*) | 48-52 | 1988 |
67 | Rep. Cynthia A. McKinney, D-Georgia (Hank Johnson) | 41-59 (runoff), 47-44 (primary) | 2004 (previously served 1993 to 2003) |
68 | Rep. Joe Schwarz, R-Michigan (Tim Walberg) | 47-53 | 2004 |
69 | |||
70 | 2004: 2 House (2 D) | Results | First Elected |
71 | Rep. Chris Bell, D-Texas (Al Green) | 31-66 | 2002 |
72 | Rep. Ciro D. Rodriguez, D-Texas (Henry Cuellar) | 49.8-50.2 | 1997 (later served 2007-11) |
73 | |||
74 | 2002: 8 House (6 D, 2 R), 1 Senate (1 R) | Results | First Elected |
75 | Sen. Robert C. Smith, R-New Hampshire (John E. Sununu) | 45-53 | 1990 |
76 | Rep. Bob Barr, R-Georgia (Rep. John Linder) | 36-64 | 1994 |
77 | Rep. Gary A. Condit, D-California (Dennis Cardoza) | 39-53 | 1989 |
78 | Rep. Earl F. Hilliard, D-Alabama (Artur Davis) | 44-56 (runoff), 46-43 (primary) | 1992 |
79 | Rep. Brian Kerns, R-Indiana (Rep. Steve Buyer) | 30-55 | 2000 |
80 | Rep. Frank Mascara, D-Pennsylvania (Rep. John P. Murtha) | 36-64 | 1994 |
81 | Rep. Cynthia A. McKinney, D-Georgia (Denise Majette) | 42-58 | 1992 |
82 | Rep. Tom Sawyer, D-Ohio (Tim Ryan) | 27-41 | 1986 |
83 | Rep. Lynn Rivers, D-Michigan (Rep. John D. Dingell) | 41-59 | 1994 |
84 | |||
85 | 2000: 3 House (2 D, 1 R) | Results | First Elected |
86 | Rep. Michael Forbes, D-New York (Regina Seltzer*) | 49.9-50.1 | 1994 |
87 | Rep. Matthew G. Martinez, D-California (Hilda L. Solis) | 31-69 | 1982 |
88 | Rep. Merrill Cook, R-Utah (Derek W. Smith*) | 41-59 | 1996 |
89 | |||
90 | 1998: 1 House (1 R) | Results | First Elected |
91 | Rep. Jay Kim, R-California (Gary G. Miller) | 26-48 | 1992 |
92 | |||
93 | 1996: 2 House (1 D, 1 R), 1 Senate (1 R) | Results | First Elected |
94 | Sen. Sheila Frahm, R-Kansas (Sam Brownback); Frahm was appointed & lost nomination | 42-55 | 1996 (appointed) |
95 | Rep. Barbara-Rose Collins, D-Michigan (Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick) | 31-51 | 1990 |
96 | Rep. Greg Laughlin, R-Texas (Ron Paul) | 46-54 (runoff), 43-32-24 (primary) | 1988 |
97 | |||
98 | 1994: 4 House (3 D, 1 R) | Results | First Elected |
99 | Rep. Lucien Blackwell, D-Pennsylvania (Chaka Fattah) | 42-58 | 1991 |
100 | Rep. David A. Levy, R-New York (Dan Frisa) | 49-51 | 1992 |
101 | Rep. Mike Synar, D-Oklahoma (Virgil R. Cooper*) | 49-51 (runoff), 47-26 (primary) | 1978 |
102 | Rep. Craig Washington, D-Texas (Sheila Jackson-Lee) | 37-63 | 1989 |
103 | |||
104 | 1992: 19 House (14 D, 5 R), 1 Senate (1 D) | Results | First Elected |
105 | Sen. Alan J. Dixon, D-Illinois (Carol Moseley-Braun) | 35-38 | 1980 |
106 | Rep. Bill Alexander, D-Arkansas (Blanche Lincoln) | 39-61 | 1968 |
107 | Rep. Beryl Anthony, Jr., D-Arkansas (Bill McCuen*) | 49-51 (runoff), 40-30 (primary) | 1978 |
108 | Rep. Chester G. Atkins, D-Massachusetts (Martin T. Meehan) | 35-65 | 1984 |
109 | Rep. Terry L. Bruce, D-Illinois (Rep. Glenn Poshard) | 38-62 | 1984 |
110 | Rep. Beverly B. Byron, D-Maryland (Thomas Hattery*) | 44-56 | 1978 |
111 | Rep. Mickey Edwards, R-Oklahoma (Ernest Istook) | 26-32-37 (Edwards finished 3rd) | 1976 |
112 | Rep. Charles Hatcher, D-Georgia (Sanford D. Bishop Jr.) | 47-53 (runoff), 40-22 (primary) | 1980 |
113 | Rep. Charles A. Hayes, D-Illinois (Bobby L. Rush) | 39-42 | 1983 |
114 | Rep. Carroll Hubbard Jr., D-Kentucky (Tom Barlow) | 45-48 | 1974 |
115 | Rep. Ben Jones, D-Georgia (Don Johnson) | 30-53 | 1988 |
116 | Rep. Joe Kolter, D-Pennsylvania (Ron Klink) | 19-45-22 | 1982 |
117 | Rep. Robert J. Lagomarsino, R-California (Michael Huffington) | 43-49 | 1974 |
118 | Rep. Clarence E. Miller, R-Ohio (Rep. Bob McEwen*) | 49.8-50.2 | 1966 |
119 | Rep. Dick Nichols, R-Kansas (Eric R. Yost*) | 34-45 | 1990 |
120 | Rep. Marty Russo, D-Illinois (Rep. William O. Lipinski) | 37-58 | 1974 |
121 | Rep. Gus Savage, D-Illinois (Mel Reynolds) | 37-63 | 1980 |
122 | Rep. Stephen J. Solarz, D-New York (Nydia M. Velazquez) | 28-33 | 1974 |
123 | Rep. Harley O. Staggers Jr., D-West Virginia (Rep. Alan B. Mollohan) | 38-62 | 1982 |
124 | Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Michigan (Peter Hoekstra) | 40-46 | 1966 |
125 | |||
126 | 1990: 1 House (1 R) | Results | First Elected |
127 | Rep. Donald E. “Buz” Lukens, R-Ohio (John A. Boehner) | 17-49-32 (Lukens finished third) | 1986 (previously served 1967-1971) |
128 | |||
129 | 1988: 1 House (1 R) | Results | First Elected |
130 | Rep. Ernest L. Konnyu, R-California (Tom Campbell) | 42-58 | 1986 |
131 | |||
132 | 1986: 2 House (1 D, 1 R)^ | Results | First Elected |
133 | Rep. Mark D. Siljander, R-Michigan (Fred Upton) | 45-55 | 1981 |
134 | Rep. Alton R. Waldon Jr., D-New York (Floyd H. Flake) | 41-49 | 1986 (won June special election, lost to Flake in September primary) |
135 | |||
136 | ^List does not include Neil Abercrombie, D-Hawaii, who lost to Mufi Hannemann, 39 percent to 40 percent, in a primary election held the same day Abercrombie won a special election to complete the remainder of the House term originally won by Democratic Representative Cecil Heftel, who had resigned | ||
137 | |||
138 | 1984: 3 House (3 D) | Results | First Elected |
139 | Rep. Katie Hall, D-Indiana (Peter J. Visclosky) | 33-34 | 1982 |
140 | Rep. Frank Harrison, D-Pennsylvania (Paul E. Kanjorski) | 43-47 | 1982 |
141 | Rep. Abraham Kazen Jr., D-Texas (Albert Bustamante) | 37-59 | 1966 |
142 | |||
143 | 1982: 10 House (6 D, 4 R) | Results | First Elected |
144 | Rep. Don Bailey, D-Pennsylvania (Rep. John P. Murtha) | 38-52 | 1978 |
145 | Rep. Edward Derwinski, R-Illinois (Rep. George M. O'Brien) | 47-53 | 1958 |
146 | Rep. Billy Lee Evans, D-Georgia (Roy Rowland) | 42-58 (runoff), 42-48 (primary) | 1976 |
147 | Rep. David W. Evans, D-Indiana (Rep. Andrew Jacobs Jr.) | 35-60 | 1974 |
148 | Rep. John G. Fary, D-Illinois (William O. Lipinski) | 36-61 | 1975 |
149 | Rep. Wayne Grisham, R-California (Rep. David Dreier) | 43-57 | 1978 |
150 | Rep. Gary A. Lee, R-New York (Rep. George C. Wortley) | 46-47 | 1978 |
151 | Rep. Ron Mottl, D-Ohio (Ed Feighan) | 47-49 | 1974 |
152 | Rep. Tom Railsback, R-Illinois (Kenneth G. McMillan*) | 49-51 | 1966 |
153 | Rep. Joseph F. Smith, D-Pennsylvania (Rep. Thomas M. Foglietta) | 48-52 | 1981 |
154 | |||
155 | 1980: 4 Senate (3 D, 1 R), 6 House (4 D, 2 R) | Results | |
156 | Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Alaska (Clark S. Gruening*) | 44-55 | 1968 |
157 | Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-New York (Alfonse M. D'Amato) | 44-56 | 1956 (to Senate) |
158 | Sen. Donald Stewart, D-Alabama (Jim Folsom Jr.*) | 49-51 (runoff), 49-36 (primary) | 1978 |
159 | Sen. Richard Stone, D-Florida (Bill Gunter*) | 48-52 (runoff), 32-30 (primary) | 1974 |
160 | Rep. John Buchanan, R-Alabama (Albert Lee Smith Jr.) | 45-55 | 1964 |
161 | Rep. Robert Duncan, D-Oregon (Ron Wyden) | 40-60 | 1974 (previously served 1963-67) |
162 | Rep. Richard Kelly, R-Florida (Bill McCollum) | 18-43-39 (Kelly finished third; McCollum won runoff vs Vince Fechtel) | 1974 |
163 | Rep. Edward Stack, D-Florida (Alan Becker*) | 42-58 | 1978 |
164 | Rep. Bennett Stewart, D-Illinois (Harold Washington) | 17-48-19 (Stewart finished third; Ralph Metcalfe Jr. came in second w/ 19%) | 1978 |
165 | Rep. Charles Wilson, D-California (Mervyn M. Dymally) | 15-49-24 (Wilson finished third; Mark Hannaford came in second w/ 24%) | 1962 |
166 | |||
167 | 1978: 3 Senate (2 D, 1 R), 5 House (5 D) | Results | |
168 | Sen. Maryon P. Allen, D-Alabama (Donald Stewart) | 43-57 (runoff), 45-35 (primary) | 1978 (appointed June) |
169 | Sen. Clifford Case, R-New Jersey (Jeff Bell*) | 49-51 | 1954 |
170 | Sen. Paul Hatfield, D-Montana (Max Baucus) | 19-65 | 1978 (appointed January) |
171 | Rep. John Breckinridge, D-Kentucky (Tom Easterly*) | 49-50 | 1972 |
172 | Rep. Dale Milford, D-Texas (Martin Frost) | 45-55 | 1972 |
173 | Rep. Robert Nix, D-Pennsylvania (William H. Gray III) | 40-58 | 1958 |
174 | Rep. Theodore Risenhoover, D-Oklahoma (Mike Synar) | 46-54 | 1974 |
175 | Rep. John Young, D-Texas (Joseph P. Wyatt Jr.) | 44-56 (runoff), 38-42 (primary) | 1956 |
176 | |||
177 | 1976: 3 House (2 D, 1 R) | Results | |
178 | Rep. Andrew Hinshaw, R-California (Robert E. Badham) | 7-33-32-17 (Hinshaw finished 4th) | 1972 |
179 | Rep. Ray Madden, D-Indiana (Adam Benjamin Jr.) | 34-56 | 1942 |
180 | Rep. Otto Passman, D-Louisiana (Jerry Huckaby) | 47-53 | 1946 |
181 | |||
182 | 1974: 2 Senate (2 D), 8 House (5 D, 3 R) | Results | |
183 | Sen. William Fulbright, D-Arkansas (Dale Bumpers) | 35-65 | 1944 |
184 | Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum, D-Ohio (John Glenn); Metzenbaum was appointed | 46-54 | 1974 (appointed January); later served 1976-1995 |
185 | Rep. Glenn Davis, R-Wisconsin (Bob Kasten) | 43-57 | 1964 (previously served 1947-1957) |
186 | Rep. John W. Davis, D-Georgia (Larry McDonald) | 48-52 | 1960 |
187 | Rep. Orval Hansen, R-Idaho (George V. Hansen) | 48-52 | 1968 |
188 | Rep. Bertram L. Podell, D-New York (Stephen J. Solarz) | 34-44 | 1968 |
189 | Rep. John Rarick, D-Lousiana (Jeff LaCaze*) | 48-52 | 1966 |
190 | Rep. Frank Stubblefield, D-Kentucky (Carroll Hubbard Jr.) | 49-51 | 1958 |
191 | Rep. Robert O. Tiernan, D-Rhode Island (Edward P. Beard) | 48-52 | 1967 |
192 | Rep. Lawrence Williams, R-Pennsylvania (Stephen J. McEwen Jr.*) | 46-49 | 1966 |
193 | |||
194 | 1972: 2 Senate (2 D), 13 House (11 D, 2 R) | Results | |
195 | Sen. David Gambrell, D-Georgia (Sam Nunn); Gambrell was appointed | 46-54 (runoff), 31-23 (primary) | 1971 (appointed) |
196 | Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D-North Carolina (Nick Galifianakis*) | 45-55 (runoff), 44-49 (primary) | 1958 (appointed) |
197 | Rep. Bella Abzug, D-New York (Rep. William F. Ryan)^ | 31-69 | 1970 |
198 | Rep. Wayne Aspinall, D-Colorado (Alan Merson*) | 47-53 | 1948 |
199 | Rep. Walter Baring, D-Nevada (James H. Bilbray*) | 46-52 | 1956 (previously served 1949-1953) |
200 | Rep. James Byrne, D-Pennsylvania (Rep. William J. Green III) | 39-58 | 1952 |
201 | Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-New York (Elizabeth Holtzman) | 43-45 | 1922 |
202 | Rep. Cornelius E. Gallagher, D-New Jersey (Rep. Dominick V. Daniels) | 15-51-32 (Gallagher finished 3rd) | 1958 |
203 | Rep. G. Elliott Hagan, D-Georgia (Bo Ginn) | 45-55 (runoff), 43-39 (primary) | 1960 |
204 | Rep. James Kee, D-West Virginia (Rep. Ken Hechler) | 26-52 | 1964 |
205 | Rep. Jack H. McDonald, R-Michigan (Rep. William S. Broomfield) | 41-59 | 1966 |
206 | Rep. John McMillan, D-South Carolina (John Jenrette*) | 49-51 (runoff), 44-29 (primary) | 1938 |
207 | Rep. George P. Miller, D-California (Pete Stark) | 21-56 | 1944 |
208 | Rep. James Scheuer, D-New York (Rep. Jonathan Bingham) | 45-55 | 1964 (later served 1975-1993) |
209 | Rep. John G. Schmitz, R-California (Andrew Hinshaw) | 43-46 | 1970 (special election) |
210 | |||
211 | GA: Gambrell and Nunn competed in a special primary balloting that coincided with the general primary, won by Nunn in a runoff. Gambrell led Nunn in the special primary, 34 percent to 23 percent, but lost the special runoff 48 percent to 52 percent | ||
212 | ^NY: Ryan died in September after defeating Abzug, who became the Democratic nominee after Ryan's death and was elected | ||
213 | List doesn't include William Conover (R-PA), who won a special election and lost a full-term primary on same day | ||
214 | |||
215 | 1970: 1 Senate (1 D), 10 House (9 D, 1 R) | Results | |
216 | Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D-Texas (Lloyd Bentsen) | 47-53 | |
217 | Rep. Jeffery Cohelan, D-California (Ronald V. Dellums) | 45-55 | |
218 | Rep. Glenn Cunningham, R-Nebraska (John Y. McCollister) | 44-56 | |
219 | Rep. George Fallon, D-Maryland (Paul S. Sarbanes) | 45-51 | |
220 | Rep. Leonard Farbstein, D-New York (Bella S. Abzug) | 45-55 | |
221 | Rep. Michael Feighan, D-Ohio (James V. Stanton) | 33-58 | |
222 | Rep. Samuel Friedel, D-Maryland (Parren J. Mitchell) | 35-35 | |
223 | Rep. Jacob Gilbert, D-New York (Rep. James H. Scheuer) | 43-57 | |
224 | Rep. Philip Philbin, D-Massachusetts (Robert F. Drinan) | 36-46 | |
225 | Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-New York (Charles B. Rangel) | 32-33 | |
226 | Rep. Byron Rogers, D-Colorado (Craig Barnes*) | 49.97-50.03 | |
227 | |||
228 | 1968: 4 Senate (3 D, 1 R), 4 House (3 D, 1 R) | Results | |
229 | Sen. Ernest Gruening, D-Alaska (Mike Gravel) | 47-53 | 1958 |
230 | Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, R-California (Max Rafferty*) | 47-50 | |
231 | Sen. Frank Lausche, D-Ohio (John J. Gilligan*) | 45-55 | |
232 | Sen. Edward Long, D-Missouri (Thomas F. Eagleton) | 33-37 | |
233 | Rep. William Henry Harrison, R-Wyoming (John Wold) | 47-49 | |
234 | Rep. Edna Kelly, D-New York (Rep. Emanuel Celler) | 32-56 | |
235 | Rep. Barratt O'Hara, D-Illinois (Abner J. Mikva) | 26-61 | |
236 | Rep. Edwin Willis, D-Louisiana (Patrick T. Caffery) | 42-58 (runoff), 47-39 (primary) | |
237 | |||
238 | |||
239 | |||
240 | |||
241 | |||
242 | |||
243 | |||
244 | |||
245 | |||
246 | |||
247 | |||
248 | |||
249 | COMPILED BY GREG GIROUX | ||