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Republican Party. Candidate, U. Official website. Official Facebook. Official Twitter. Official Instagram. Personal Facebook. Personal LinkedIn. Voted Yea on: Agriculture and Nutrition Act of Conference report HR 2 Bill Passed on December 12, Proposed providing funding for commodity support, conservation, trade and international food aid, nutrition assistance, farm credit, rural development, research and extension activities, forestry, horticulture, and crop insurance through fiscal year Voted Yea on: Agriculture and Nutrition Act of HR 2 second vote Bill Passed on June 21, Proposed providing funding for commodity support, conservation, trade and international food aid, nutrition assistance, farm credit, rural development, research and extension activities, forestry, horticulture, and crop insurance.
It also proposed modifying the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, previously known as the food stamp program. Voted Yea on: Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act HR 36 Bill Passed on October 3, Proposed amending the federal criminal code to make it a crime for any person to perform or attempt to perform an abortion if the probable post-fertilization age of the fetus was 20 weeks or more.
The bill provided exceptions for an abortion: 1 that was necessary to save the life of the pregnant woman, or 2 when the pregnancy was the result of rape or incest. Voted Yea on: Kate's Law HR Bill Passed on June 29, Proposed increasing criminal penalties for individuals in the country illegally who were convicted of certain crimes, deported, and then re-entered the U.
Voted Yea on: No Sanctuary for Criminals Act HR Bill Passed on June 29, Proposed withholding federal funds from states and localities that chose not to follow federal immigration laws. HR Bill Passed on January 22, Proposed providing further continuing appropriations through February 8, HR Bill Passed on January 18, Proposed providing further continuing appropriations through February 16, Voted Yea on: Making further continuing appropriations for fiscal year , and for other purposes HJ Res Bill Passed on December 7, Proposed funding the government until December 22, This bill proposed adopting the Senate's budget resolution.
It combined 12 appropriations bills. Voted Nay on: Disaster Relief Appropriations Act, Included amendments to suspend the debt ceiling and fund the government HR Bill Passed on September 8, Proposed suspending the debt ceiling and funding the government until December 8, , and providing funding for Hurricanes Harvey and Irma relief efforts.
Voted Yea on: Department of Defense Appropriations Act, HR Bill Passed on January 30, Proposed providing appropriations for military functions administered by the Department of Defense and for other purposes, for the fiscal year ending September 30, Voted Yea on: Make America Secure Appropriations Act, HR Bill Passed on July 27, Proposed making appropriations for defense, military construction, Veterans Affairs, the Legislative Branch, energy and water development, and for other purposes for the fiscal year ending on September 30, It did not provide budget authority.
Note: At this time, Ballotpedia is combining all declared candidates for this election into one list under a general election heading. As primary election dates are published, this information will be updated. Before the candidate filing deadline passes, Ballotpedia will separate these candidates into their respective primaries as appropriate.
General election for U. Democratic primary for U. Republican primary for U. Libertarian primary for U. Don Bacon. Search Google News for this topic. Officeholder U. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source. Spending," accessed March 22, Nebraska's current delegation to the United States Congress. Deb Fischer R. Ben Sasse R. District 1. Jeffrey Fortenberry R. Adrian Smith R. Republican Party 5. Categories : U. House candidate, U.
House candidates Marquee, general candidate, Nebraska Republican Party incumbent primary winner general election winner U. House candidate, Marquee, general candidate, incumbent primary winner general election winner U. House candidate, incumbent potential candidate th Congress th Congress th Congress Current member, U.
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Learn about Foreign Leader Addresses. Featured Search the People of the House. Majority Leaders. Bean Soup! Featured Black Americans in Congress. Featured Mace of the U. House of Represen- tatives.
House Trivia Timeline. Featured Resources for National History Day Party Divisions of the House of Representatives, to Present Political parties have been central to the organization and operations of the U. Unconditional Unionists 16 , Unionists 9 , Independent Republicans 2. Conservatives 2 , Conservative Republican 1 , Independent Republican 1. Independent Republicans 2 , Labors 2 , Independent 1 , National 1. Progressive 6 , Independent 1 , Prohibitionist 1 , Socialist 1.
Progressives 3 , Independent Republican 1 , Prohibitionist 1 , Socialist 1. The special election was called after Marcia Fudge D-Ohio was confirmed as secretary of housing and urban development in President Joe Biden's D administration. The Senate voted to confirm Fudge on March 10, Fudge's district, Ohio's 11th Congressional District , was rated Solid Democratic during the general election. Carey and Russo won their respective primaries on August 3, , to advance to the special general election on November 2, The seat did not change party control as a result of the special election.
The two advanced from a candidate special election on May 1, Susan Wright is Ronald Wright's widow. Rick Perry R , who served in Trump's cabinet, endorsed Ellzey.
Patrick Svitek of The Texas Tribune reported that in statements and interviews in the days following the special election, the candidates "[agreed] that they do not have many — if any — policy differences. In his interview with Davis, Ellzey blamed any divisiveness in the election on Club for Growth , which ran ads against Ellzey. Following the special election, David McIntosh , president of the Club for Growth, called on Ellzey to drop out of the race and endorse Wright.
The district was more competitive in both presidential and congressional elections from to Midterm elections in the district followed the same trend. The following special elections have been called to fill vacancies opened by Biden administration appointments. As of November , 54 special elections to the United States Congress were held during the th through th Congresses.
During that time, special elections were called for 18 seats vacated by Democrats and 36 vacated by Republicans. The table below details how many congressional seats changed parties as the result of a special election between and The numbers on the left side of the table reflect how many vacant seats were originally held by each party, while the numbers on the right side of the table show how many vacant seats each party won in special elections.
The table below presents the results of special elections to Congress from to Contact Ballotpedia at editor ballotpedia. Ballotpedia features , encyclopedic articles written and curated by our professional staff of editors, writers, and researchers.
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Senate special election partisan change from special elections, th Congress to th Congress Party As of special election After special election Democrats 4 7 Republicans 6 3 Total 10 10 U. House special election partisan change from special elections, th Congress to th Congress Party As of special election After special election Democrats 14 16 Republicans 30 28 Total 44 To see a list of all the Congressional special elections referenced in the table above, click [show] at the right.
Categories : Congress elections, Special elections by Congress. Hidden category: Pages with reference errors. Voter information What's on my ballot? Where do I vote? How do I register to vote? How do I request a ballot? When do I vote? When are polls open? Who Represents Me? Congress special elections Governors State executives State legislatures Ballot measures State judges Municipal officials School boards. How do I update a page?
Election results. Privacy policy About Ballotpedia Disclaimers Login. Special elections to the th Congress, Senate Elections U. House Elections. Louisiana's 2nd Congressional District. Cedric Richmond. Troy Carter. Louisiana's 5th Congressional District. Ralph Abraham [6]. Julia Letlow. New Mexico's 1st Congressional District. Debra Haaland. Melanie Ann Stansbury. Texas' 6th Congressional District. Ronald Wright. Jake Ellzey. Ohio's 11th Congressional District. Marcia Fudge. Shontel Brown.
Ohio's 15th Congressional District. Steve Stivers. Mike Carey. Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. Robin Kelly. South Carolina's 1st Congressional District. Tim Scott. Mark Sanford. Missouri's 8th Congressional District. Jo Ann Emerson. Jason Smith. Senate in Massachusetts. John Kerry. Ed Markey. Senate in New Jersey. Frank Lautenberg. Cory Booker.
Rodney Alexander. Vance McAllister. Massachusetts' 5th Congressional District. Katherine Clark. Alabama's 1st Congressional District. Jo Bonner. Bradley Byrne. Florida's 13th Congressional District. Bill Young. David Jolly. Florida's 19th Congressional District.
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