Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Appointments by governors  





2 List of special elections  





3 See also  





4 Notes  





5 References  





6 External links  














List of special elections to the United States Senate







Add links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikimedia Commons
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Special elections to the United States Senate are held to fill the vacancies that occur when a senator dies or resigns before the completion of their six-year term. Winners of these special elections typically serve the remainder of the term of the senator who has caused the vacancy. General elections to the U.S. Congress are held in November of even-numbered years. New Congresses convened on March 4 of the following year until 1934, and since then, new Congresses have begun on January 3 of the following year.

Because of the cost of conducting a special election,[1] most states hold elections to fill a Senate vacancy in conjunction with the next general election, while some states, such as Alabama[2] and Texas, allow for special elections to the Senate to be held before a general election (similar to special elections to the U.S. House of Representatives, though special elections are on a state-wide basis). Special elections can alter the balance of power in the Senate,[3] as can temporary appointments.

Appointments by governors[edit]

Prior to ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, most state legislatures elected senators (Sen.), as well as replacement senators. Some states empowered their governor to make temporary appointments until the legislature was in session.

The Seventeenth Amendment now requires the governor (Gov.) of the state to issue a writ for a special election to fill a vacant Senate seat, but no timeframe is specified in the provision for when the special election is to be held. State legislatures may also empower the governor to fill a vacancy by a temporary appointment until the winner of the special election is certified. The constitution does not set out how the temporary appointee is to be selected (e.g., there is no federal requirement that the appointee be of the same party, as happened most recently in New Jersey in 2013), and the state legislature can legislate as to how the replacement is to be selected.

North Dakota, Oregon and Wisconsin do not empower their governor to make temporary appointments and require special elections.[4][5] Between 2004 and 2008, Massachusetts denied the power of the governor to appoint a replacement; in 2004, the Democratic-controlled legislature wanted to limit the power of the Republican governor (Gov. Mitt Romney) to appoint a successor to then-senator John Kerry if he were elected president that year. With the death of Sen. Ted Kennedy, the legislature chose to revert the rules to allow the Democratic governor (Gov. Deval Patrick) to appoint a temporary replacement senator while awaiting the results of a special election to complete the existing term. Hawaii allows the governor to appoint an interim senator "who serves until the next regularly-scheduled general election, chosen from a list of three prospective appointees that the prior incumbent's political party submits". Alaska in 2004 enacted conflicting legislation and a separate ballot referendum law that took effect on the same day. It is uncertain if the Alaska governor may successfully appoint an interim senator to serve until the mandated special election occurs 60 to 90 days after the vacancy happens. The ballot-approved law fails to specifically authorize the governor to appoint, though the legislative law does.[5] Since 2021, Oklahoma permits its governor again to appoint a successor who is of the same party as the previous senator for at least the preceding five years when the vacancy arises in an even-numbered year, only after the appointee has taken an oath not to run in either a regular or special Senate election.[6]

List of special elections[edit]

This is an incomplete list of special elections to the United States Senate. The list only includes vacancies that were filled by special election. Not included are those situations in which vacancies were only filled by appointment or general election, or new seats.

  • 1800
  • 1820
  • 1830
  • 1840
  • 1850
  • 1860
  • 1870
  • 1880
  • 1890
  • 1900
  • 1910
  • 1920
  • 1930
  • 1940
  • 1950
  • 1960
  • 1970
  • 1980
  • 1990
  • 2000
  • 2010
  • 2020
  • State (Class) Original Appointee Election winner
    Senator Vacancy event Senator Date Senator Date
    Virginia
    (Class 1)
    William Grayson (AA) Died March 12, 1790 John Walker (PA) March 31, 1790 James Monroe (AA) November 9, 1790
    New Jersey
    (Class 2)
    William Paterson (PA) Resigned November 13, 1790 No appointment Philemon Dickinson (PA) November 23, 1790
    Connecticut
    (Class 3)
    William S. Johnson (PA) Resigned March 4, 1791 No appointment Roger Sherman (PA) June 13, 1791
    Virginia
    (Class 2)
    Richard Henry Lee (AA) Resigned October 8, 1792 No appointment John Taylor (AA) October 18, 1792
    Maryland
    (Class 1)
    Charles Carroll (PA) Resigned November 30, 1792 No appointment Richard Potts (PA) January 10, 1793
    Pennsylvania
    (Class 1)
    Vacant Failure to elect by March 4, 1791 No appointment Albert Gallatin (AA) February 28, 1793
    Connecticut
    (Class 3)
    Roger Sherman (PA) Died July 23, 1793 No appointment Stephen Mitchell (PA) December 2, 1793
    New York
    (Class 3)
    Rufus King (F) Resigned May 23, 1796 No appointment John Laurance (F) November 9, 1796
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Philip Schuyler (F) Resigned January 3, 1798 No appointment John Sloss Hobart (F) January 11, 1798
    New York
    (Class 1)
    John Sloss Hobart (F) Resigned April 16, 1798 William North (F) May 5, 1798 James Watson (F) August 17, 1798
    New York
    (Class 1)
    James Watson (F) Resigned March 19, 1800 No appointment Gouverneur Morris (F) April 3, 1800
    New York
    (Class 3)
    John Laurance (F) Resigned August 1800 No appointment John Armstrong Jr. (DR) November 6, 1800
    New York
    (Class 3)
    John Armstrong Jr. (DR) Resigned February 5, 1802 No appointment DeWitt Clinton (DR) February 9, 1802
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Theodorus Bailey (DR) Resigned January 16, 1804 No appointment John Armstrong Jr. (DR) February 3, 1804
    New York
    (Class 3)
    John Armstrong Jr. (DR) Resigned February 23, 1804 No appointment John Smith (DR)
    New York
    (Class 1)
    John Armstrong Jr. (DR) Resigned June 30, 1804 No appointment Samuel L. Mitchill (DR) November 9, 1804
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    John Williams Walker (DR) Resigned December 12, 1822 No appointment William Kelly (DR) December 12, 1822
    Delaware
    (Class 2)
    Nicholas Van Dyke (F) Failure to elect by March 4, 1823 No appointment Nicholas Van Dyke (F) January 8, 1824
    Delaware
    (Class 1)
    Caesar A. Rodney (DR) Resigned January 29, 1823 No appointment Thomas Clayton (F)
    Louisiana
    (Class 3)
    James Brown (DR) Resigned December 10, 1823 No appointment Josiah S. Johnston (DR) January 15, 1824
    Louisiana
    (Class 2)
    Henry Johnson (DR) Resigned May 27, 1824 No appointment Charles Bouligny (DR) November 19, 1824
    Illinois
    (Class 3)
    Ninian Edwards (DR) Resigned March 4, 1824 No appointment John McLean (DR) November 24, 1824
    Georgia
    (Class 2)
    Nicholas Ware (DR) Died January 29, 1823 No appointment Thomas W. Cobb (F) December 6, 1824
    Virginia
    (Class 2)
    John Taylor (DR) Died August 21, 1824 No appointment Littleton Tazewell (DR) December 7, 1824
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    Henry H. Chambers (DR) Died January 24, 1826 Israel Pickens (DR) February 17, 1826 John McKinley (J) November 27, 1826
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Martin Van Buren (DR) Resigned December 20, 1828 No appointment Charles E. Dudley (D) January 15, 1829
    New York
    (Class 3)
    William L. Marcy (D) Resigned January 1, 1833 No appointment Silas Wright (D) January 4, 1833
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    John McKinley (D) Resigned April 22, 1837 Clement Comer Clay (D) June 19, 1837 Arthur P. Bagby (D) November 24, 1841
    Arkansas
    (Class 2)
    William S. Fulton (D) Died August 15, 1844 No appointment Chester Ashley (D) November 8, 1844
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (W) Resigned June 17, 1844 Daniel S. Dickinson (D) November 30, 1844 Daniel S. Dickinson (D) January 18, 1845
    New York
    (Class 3)
    Silas Wright (D) Resigned November 26, 1844 Henry A. Foster (D) November 30, 1844 John Adams Dix (D) January 18, 1845
    Arkansas
    (Class 2)
    Chester Ashley (D) Died April 29, 1848 William K. Sebastian (D) May 12, 1848 William K. Sebastian (D) November 17, 1848
    Alabama
    (Class 2)
    Dixon Hall Lewis (D) Died October 24, 1848 Benjamin Fitzpatrick (D) November 25, 1848 Jeremiah Clemens (D) November 30, 1849
    Massachusetts
    (Class 2)
    Daniel Webster (W) Resigned July 22, 1850 Robert Charles Winthrop (W) July 30, 1850 Robert Rantoul Jr. (D) January 14, 1851
    New Hampshire
    (Class 3)
    James Bell (R) Died May 26, 1857 No appointment Daniel Clark (R) June 26, 1857
    Tennessee
    (Class 1)
    Vacant Failure to elect by March 4, 1857 No appointment Andrew Johnson (D) October 8, 1857
    South Carolina
    (Class 3)
    Andrew Butler Died May 25, 1857 No appointment James Henry Hammond (D) December 6, 1857
    North Carolina
    (Class 3)
    Asa Biggs Resigned May 5, 1858 Thomas Lanier Clingman (D) May 7, 1858 Thomas Lanier Clingman (D) November 23, 1858
    California
    (Class 3)
    David C. Broderick (D) Died September 16, 1859 Henry P. Haun (D) November 3, 1859 Milton S. Latham (D) January 11, 1860
    California
    (Class 1)
    Eugene Casserly (D) Resigned November 29, 1873 No appointment John S. Hager (D) December 23, 1873
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    George S. Houston (D) Died December 31, 1879 Luke Pryor (D) January 7, 1880 James L. Pugh (D) November 24, 1880
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Thomas C. Platt (R) Resigned May 16, 1881 No appointment Warner Miller (R) July 16, 1881
    New York
    (Class 3)
    Roscoe Conkling (R) Resigned May 16, 1881 No appointment Elbridge G. Lapham (R) July 22, 1881
    Arkansas
    (Class 2)
    Augustus Garland (D) Resigned March 6, 1885 No appointment James H. Berry (D) March 20, 1885
    California
    (Class 1)
    John Franklin Miller (R) Died March 8, 1886 George Hearst (D) March 23, 1886 Abram P. Williams (R) August 4, 1886
    California
    (Class 1)
    George Hearst (D) Died February 28, 1891 No appointment Charles N. Felton (R) March 19, 1891
    California
    (Class 3)
    Leland Stanford (R) Died June 21, 1893 George C. Perkins (R) July 26, 1893 George C. Perkins (R) January 22, 1895
    Mississippi
    (Class 2)
    Edward C. Walthall (D) Resigned January 24, 1894 No appointment Anselm J. McLaurin (D) February 7, 1894
    Louisiana
    (Class 3)
    Edward D. White (D) Resigned March 12, 1894 Newton C. Blanchard (D) March 12, 1894 Newton C. Blanchard (D) May 16, 1894
    Georgia
    (Class 2)
    Alfred H. Colquitt (D) Died March 26, 1894 Patrick Walsh (D) April 2, 1894 Patrick Walsh (D) November 2, 1894
    North Carolina
    (Class 3)
    Zebulon B. Vance Died April 14, 1894 Thomas J. Jarvis (D) April 19, 1894 Jeter C. Pritchard (D) January 23, 1895
    Michigan
    (Class 1)
    Francis B. Stockbridge (R) Died April 3, 1894 John Patton Jr. (R) May 5, 1894 Julius C. Burrows (R) January 24, 1895
    Montana
    (Class 1)
    Vacant Failure to elect by March 4, 1893 No appointment Lee Mantle (R) January 16, 1895
    Wyoming
    (Class 1)
    Vacant Failure to elect by March 4, 1893 No appointment Clarence D. Clark (R) January 23, 1895
    Washington
    (Class 1)
    Vacant Failure to elect by March 4, 1893 No appointment John L. Wilson (R) February 19, 1895
    Mississippi
    (Class 2)
    Edward C. Walthall (D) Died April 21, 1898 William V. Sullivan (D) May 31, 1898 William V. Sullivan (D) January 16, 1900
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    Edmund Pettus (D) Died July 27, 1907 No appointment Joseph F. Johnston (D) August 6, 1907
    Pennsylvania
    (Class 1)
    Philander C. Knox (R) Resigned March 4, 1909 No appointment George T. Oliver (R) March 17, 1909
    Mississippi
    (Class 2)
    Anselm J. McLaurin (D) Died December 22, 1909 James Gordon (D) December 27, 1909 LeRoy Percy (D) February 22, 1910
    Louisiana
    (Class 3)
    Samuel D. McEnery (D) Died June 28, 1910 John Thornton (D) August 27, 1910 John Thornton (D) December 6, 1910
    North Dakota
    (Class 3)
    Martin N. Johnson (R) Died October 12, 1909 Fountain L. Thompson (D) November 10, 1909 – Jan. 31, 1910 (resigned) Asle Gronna (R) February 1, 1911
    William E. Purcell (D) February 1, 1910
    West Virginia
    (Class 2)
    Stephen Benton Elkins (R) Died January 4, 1911 Davis Elkins (R) January 9, 1911 Clarence Wayland Watson (D) February 1, 1911
    Iowa
    (Class 3)
    Jonathan P. Dolliver (R) Died October 15, 1910 Lafayette Young (R) November 4, 1910 William S. Kenyon (R) April 11, 1911
    Georgia
    (Class 3)
    Alexander S. Clay (D) Died November 13, 1910 Joseph M. Terrell (D) November 17, 1910 M. Hoke Smith (D) July 12, 1911
    Maine
    (Class 2)
    William P. Frye (R) Died August 8, 1911 No appointment Obadiah Gardner (D) April 2, 1912
    Colorado
    (Class 3)
    Charles J. Hughes Jr. (D) Died January 11, 1911 No appointment Charles S. Thomas (D) January 15, 1913
    Tennessee
    (Class 2)
    Robert Love Taylor (D) Died March 31, 1912 Newell Sanders (R) April 11, 1912 William R. Webb (D) January 23, 1913
    Nevada
    (Class 1)
    George S. Nixon (R) Died June 5, 1912 William A. Massey (R) July 1, 1912 Key Pittman (D) January 23, 1913
    Texas
    (Class 2)
    Joseph Weldon Bailey (D) Resigned January 3, 1913 Rienzi Melville Johnston (D) January 4, 1913 Morris Sheppard (D) January 23, 1913
    Arkansas
    (Class 2)
    Jeff Davis Died January 3, 1913 John N. Heiskell (D) January 6, 1913 William Marmaduke Kavanaugh (D) January 23, 1913
    Idaho
    (Class 3)
    Weldon B. Heyburn (R) Died October 17, 1912 Kirtland Irving Perky (D) November 18, 1912 James H. Brady (R) January 24, 1913
    Illinois
    (Class 3)
    William Lorimer (R) Election invalidated July 13, 1912 No appointment Lawrence Yates Sherman (R) March 26, 1913
    Seventeenth Amendment ratified April 8, 1913. All subsequent Senate elections are by popular vote.
    Maryland
    (Class 1)
    Isidor Rayner (D) Died November 25, 1912 William P. Jackson (R) November 29, 1912 Blair Lee (D) November 4, 1913
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    Joseph F. Johnston (D) Died August 8, 1913 No appointment Francis S. White (D) May 11, 1914
    Georgia
    (Class 2)
    Augustus Octavius Bacon (D) Died February 14, 1914 William S. West (D) March 1, 1914 Thomas W. Hardwick (D) November 3, 1914
    Kentucky
    (Class 3)
    William O. Bradley (R) Died May 23, 1914 Johnson N. Camden (D) June 16, 1914 Johnson N. Camden (D) November 3, 1914
    Maine
    (Class 2)
    Edwin C. Burleigh (R) Died June 16, 1916 No appointment Bert M. Fernald (R) September 11, 1916
    Indiana
    (Class 3)
    Benjamin F. Shively (D) Died March 14, 1916 Thomas Taggart (D) March 20, 1916 James Eli Watson (R) November 7, 1916
    Arkansas
    (Class 3)
    James Paul Clarke (D) Died October 1, 1916 No appointment William F. Kirby (D) November 7, 1916
    Wisconsin
    (Class 3)
    Paul O. Husting (D) Died October 21, 1917 No appointment Irvine L. Lenroot (R) April 18, 1918
    Oregon
    (Class 2)
    Harry Lane (D) Died May 23, 1917 Charles L. McNary (R) May 29, 1917 Frederick W. Mulkey (R) November 5, 1918
    Nevada
    (Class 3)
    Francis G. Newlands (D) Died December 24, 1917 Charles B. Henderson (D) January 12, 1918 Charles B. Henderson (D) November 5, 1918
    Idaho
    (Class 3)
    James H. Brady (R) Died January 13, 1918 John F. Nugent (D) January 22, 1918 John F. Nugent (D) November 5, 1918
    New Jersey
    (Class 2)
    William Hughes (D) Died January 30, 1918 David Baird (R) February 23, 1918 David Baird (R) November 5, 1918
    Louisiana
    (Class 3)
    Robert F. Broussard (D) Died April 12, 1918 Walter Guion (D) April 22, 1918 Edward Gay (D) November 5, 1918
    Missouri
    (Class 3)
    William J. Stone (D) Died April 14, 1918 Xenophon P. Wilfley (D) April 30, 1918 Selden P. Spencer (R) November 5, 1918
    South Carolina
    (Class 2)
    Benjamin R. Tillman (D) Died July 3, 1918 Christie Benet (D) July 6, 1918 William P. Pollock (D) November 5, 1918
    New Hampshire
    (Class 3)
    Jacob H. Gallinger (R) Died August 17, 1918 Irving W. Drew (R) September 2, 1918 George H. Moses (R) November 5, 1918
    Virginia
    (Class 2)
    Thomas S. Martin (D) Died November 12, 1919 Carter Glass (D) November 18, 1919 Carter Glass (D) November 2, 1920
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    John H. Bankhead (D) Died March 1, 1920 B. B. Comer (D) March 5, 1920 J. Thomas Heflin (D) November 2, 1920
    New Mexico
    (Class 2)
    Albert B. Fall (R) Resigned March 3, 1921 Holm O. Bursum (R) March 11, 1921 Holm O. Bursum (D) September 20, 1921
    Delaware
    (Class 1)
    Josiah O. Wolcott (D) Resigned July 2, 1921 T. Coleman du Pont (R) July 7, 1921 Thomas F. Bayard Jr. (D) November 7, 1922
    Pennsylvania
    (Class 1)
    Philander C. Knox (R) Died October 12, 1921 William E. Crow (R) October 17, 1921 – August 2, 1922 (died) David A. Reed (R) November 7, 1922
    David A. Reed (R) August 8, 1922
    Pennsylvania
    (Class 3)
    Boies Penrose (R) Died December 31, 1921 George W. Pepper (R) January 9, 1922 George W. Pepper (R) November 7, 1922
    Iowa
    (Class 2)
    William S. Kenyon (R) Resigned February 24, 1922 Charles A. Rawson (R) February 24, 1922 Smith W. Brookhart (R) November 7, 1922
    Georgia
    (Class 3)
    Thomas E. Watson (D) Died September 26, 1922 Rebecca Felton (D) November 21, 1922 Walter F. George (D) November 7, 1922
    Colorado
    (Class 2)
    Samuel D. Nicholson (R) Died March 24, 1923 Alva B. Adams (D) May 17, 1923 Rice W. Means (R) November 4, 1924
    Connecticut
    (Class 3)
    Frank B. Brandegee (R) Died October 14, 1924 No appointment Hiram Bingham III (R) December 16, 1924
    Idaho
    (Class 3)
    Frank Gooding (R) Died June 24, 1928 John Thomas (D) June 30, 1928 John Thomas (R) November 6, 1928
    Ohio
    (Class 3)
    Frank B. Willis (R) Died March 30, 1928 Cyrus Locher (D) April 5, 1928 Theodore E. Burton (R) November 6, 1928
    Ohio
    (Class 3)
    Theodore E. Burton (R) Died October 28, 1929 Roscoe C. McCulloch (R) November 5, 1929 Robert J. Bulkley (D) November 4, 1930
    Arkansas
    (Class 3)
    Thaddeus H. Caraway (D) Died November 6, 1931 Hattie Caraway (D) December 9, 1931 Hattie Caraway (D) January 12, 1932
    New Jersey
    (Class 2)
    Dwight Morrow (R) Died October 5, 1931 William Warren Barbour (R) December 1, 1931 William Warren Barbour (R) November 8, 1932
    Georgia
    (Class 3)
    William J. Harris (D) Died April 18, 1932 John S. Cohen (D) April 25, 1932 Richard Russell Jr. (D) November 8, 1932
    Vermont
    (Class 3)
    Porter H. Dale (R) Died October 6, 1933 Ernest W. Gibson (R) November 21, 1933 Ernest W. Gibson (R) January 16, 1934
    Montana
    (Class 3)
    Thomas J. Walsh (D) Died March 4, 1933 John E. Erickson (D) March 13, 1933 James E. Murray (D) November 6, 1934
    Tennessee
    (Class 2)
    Cordell Hull (D) Resigned March 4, 1933 Nathan L. Bachman (D) March 4, 1933 Nathan L. Bachman (D) November 6, 1934
    New Mexico
    (Class 2)
    Sam G. Bratton (D) Resigned June 24, 1933 Carl A. Hatch (D) October 10, 1933 Carl A. Hatch (D) November 6, 1934
    Louisiana
    (Class 2)
    Huey Long (D) Died September 10, 1935 Rose Long (D) January 31, 1936 Rose Long (D) April 21, 1936
    Florida

    (Class 1)

    Park Trammell Died May 8, 1936 Scott Loftin (D) May 26, 1936 Charles O. Andrews (D) November 3, 1936
    Florida

    (Class 3)

    Duncan U. Fletcher Died June 17, 1936 William Luther Hill (D) July 1, 1936 Claude Pepper (D) November 3, 1936
    Arkansas
    (Class 3)
    Joseph T. Robinson (D) Died July 14, 1937 No appointment John E. Miller (ID)[a] November 15, 1937
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    Hugo Black (D) Resigned August 19, 1937 Dixie Graves (D) August 20, 1937 – Jan. 10, 1938 (resigned) Lister Hill (D) April 26, 1938
    Lister Hill (D) January 11, 1938
    Tennessee
    (Class 2)
    Nathan L. Bachman (D) Died April 23, 1937 George L. Berry (D) May 6, 1937 Tom Stewart (D) April 26, 1938
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Royal Copeland (D) Died June 17, 1938 No appointment James M. Mead (D) November 8, 1938
    South Dakota
    (Class 3)
    Herbert E. Hitchcock (D) Resigned November 8, 1938 No appointment Gladys Pyle (R) November 9, 1938
    Texas
    (Class 2)
    Morris Sheppard (D) Died April 9, 1941 Andrew Houston (D) April 21, 1941 W. Lee O'Daniel (D) June 28, 1941
    Mississippi
    (Class 2)
    Pat Harrison (D) Died June 22, 1941 James Eastland (D) June 30, 1941 Wall Doxey (D) September 23, 1941
    South Carolina
    (Class 2)
    James F. Byrnes (D) Resigned July 17, 1941 Alva Lumpkin (D) July 22, 1941 – August 1, 1941 (died) Burnet Maybank (D) November 5, 1941
    Roger Peace (D) August 5, 1941
    Colorado
    (Class 3)
    Alva B. Adams (D) Died December 1, 1941 Eugene Millikin (R) December 20, 1941 Eugene Millikin (R) November 3, 1942
    West Virginia
    (Class 2)
    Matthew M. Neely (D) Resigned January 12, 1941 Joseph Rosier (D) January 13, 1941 Hugh Ike Shott (R) November 3, 1942
    Nevada
    (Class 1)
    Key Pittman (D) Died November 10, 1940 Berkeley Bunker (D)[b] November 27, 1940 James G. Scrugham (D) November 3, 1942
    Indiana
    (Class 3)
    Frederick Van Nuys (D) Died January 25, 1944 Samuel D. Jackson (D) January 28, 1944 William E. Jenner (R) November 7, 1944
    Oregon
    (Class 2)
    Charles L. McNary (R) Died February 25, 1944 Guy Cordon (R) March 4, 1944 Guy Cordon (R) November 7, 1944
    New Jersey
    (Class 1)
    William Warren Barbour (R) Died November 22, 1943 Arthur Walsh (D) November 26, 1943 H. Alexander Smith (R) November 7, 1944
    Massachusetts
    (Class 2)
    Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R) Resigned February 3, 1944 Sinclair Weeks (R) February 8, 1944 Leverett Saltonstall (R) November 7, 1944
    North Dakota
    (Class 2)
    John Moses (D) Died March 3, 1945 Milton Young (R) March 12, 1945 Milton Young (R) June 25, 1946
    Alabama
    (Class 2)
    John H. Bankhead II (D) Died June 12, 1946 George R. Swift (D) June 15, 1946 John Sparkman (D) November 5, 1946
    California
    (Class 1)
    Hiram Johnson (R) Died August 6, 1945 William F. Knowland (R) August 26, 1945 William F. Knowland (R) November 5, 1946
    Connecticut
    (Class 1)
    Francis T. Maloney (D) Died January 16, 1945 Thomas C. Hart (R) February 15, 1945 Raymond E. Baldwin (R) November 5, 1946
    Idaho
    (Class 2)
    John Thomas (R) Died November 10, 1945 Charles C. Gossett (D) November 17, 1945 Henry Dworshak (R) November 5, 1946
    Kentucky
    (Class 2)
    Happy Chandler (D) Resigned November 1, 1945 William A. Stanfill (R) November 19, 1945 John Sherman Cooper (R) November 5, 1946
    Ohio
    (Class 1)
    Harold H. Burton (R) Resigned September 30, 1945 James W. Huffman (D) October 8, 1945 Kingsley A. Taft (R) November 5, 1946
    Virginia
    (Class 2)
    Carter Glass (D) Died May 28, 1946 Thomas G. Burch (D) May 31, 1946 A. Willis Robertson (D) November 5, 1946
    Mississippi
    (Class 1)
    Theodore G. Bilbo (D) Died August 24, 1947 No appointment John C. Stennis (D) November 5, 1947
    New York
    (Class 3)
    Robert F. Wagner (D) Resigned June 28, 1949 John Foster Dulles (R) July 7, 1949 Herbert H. Lehman (D) November 8, 1949
    North Carolina
    (Class 2)
    J. Melville Broughton (D) Died March 6, 1949 Frank Porter Graham (D) March 29, 1949 Willis Smith (D) November 7, 1950
    Kansas
    (Class 3)
    Clyde M. Reed (R) Died November 8, 1949 Harry Darby (R) December 2, 1949 Frank Carlson (R) November 7, 1950
    Idaho
    (Class 2)
    Bert H. Miller (D) Died October 8, 1949 Henry Dworshak (R) October 14, 1949 Henry Dworshak (R) November 7, 1950
    Connecticut
    (Class 3)
    Brien McMahon (D) Died July 28, 1952 William A. Purtell (R) August 29, 1952 Prescott Bush (R) November 4, 1952
    Kentucky
    (Class 2)
    Virgil Chapman (D) Died March 8, 1951 Thomas R. Underwood (D) March 19, 1951 John Sherman Cooper (R) November 4, 1952
    Michigan
    (Class 1)
    Arthur Vandenberg (R) Died April 18, 1951 Blair Moody (D) April 23, 1951 Charles E. Potter (R) November 4, 1952
    Nebraska
    (Class 2)
    Kenneth S. Wherry (R) Died November 29, 1951 Fred A. Seaton (R) December 10, 1951 Dwight Griswold (R) November 4, 1952
    California
    (Class 3)
    Richard Nixon (R) Resigned January 1, 1953
    Elected as vice president
    Thomas Kuchel (R) January 2, 1953 Thomas Kuchel (R) November 2, 1954
    North Carolina
    (Class 2)
    Willis Smith (D) Died June 26, 1953 Alton Lennon (D) July 15, 1953 Kerr Scott (D) November 2, 1954
    North Carolina
    (Class 3)
    Clyde R. Hoey (D) Died May 12, 1954 Sam Ervin (D) June 5, 1954 Sam Ervin (D)
    Nebraska
    (Class 1)
    Hugh Butler (R) Died July 1, 1954 Sam Reynolds (R) July 7, 1954 Roman Hruska (R) November 2, 1954
    Nebraska
    (Class 2)
    Dwight Griswold (R) Died April 12, 1954 Eva Bowring (R) April 26, 1954 Hazel Abel (R)
    Kentucky
    (Class 2)
    Alben Barkley (D) Died April 30, 1956 Robert Humphreys (D) June 25, 1956 John Sherman Cooper (R) November 6, 1956
    West Virginia
    (Class 1)
    Harley M. Kilgore (D) Died February 28, 1956 William Laird III (D) March 13, 1956 Chapman Revercomb (R) November 6, 1956
    South Carolina
    (Class 2)
    Strom Thurmond (D) Resigned April 4, 1956 Thomas A. Wofford (D) April 5, 1956 Strom Thurmond (D) November 6, 1956
    Texas
    (Class 1)
    Price Daniel (D) Resigned January 14, 1957 William Blakley (D) January 17, 1957 Ralph Yarborough (D) April 2, 1957
    Wisconsin
    (Class 1)
    Joseph McCarthy (R) Died May 2, 1957 No appointment William Proxmire (D) August 27, 1957
    West Virginia
    (Class 2)
    Matthew M. Neely (D) Died January 18, 1958 John D. Hoblitzell Jr. (R) January 25, 1958 Jennings Randolph (D) November 4, 1958
    North Carolina
    (Class 2)
    W. Kerr Scott (D) Died April 16, 1958 B. Everett Jordan (D) April 19, 1958 B. Everett Jordan (D) November 4, 1958
    North Dakota
    (Class 1)
    William Langer (R) Died November 8, 1959 Clarence Brunsdale (R) November 19, 1959 Quentin Burdick (D-NPL) June 28, 1960
    Missouri
    (Class 1)
    Thomas C. Hennings Jr. (D) Died September 13, 1960 Edward V. Long (D) September 23, 1960 Edward V. Long (D) November 8, 1960
    Oregon
    (Class 2)
    Richard Neuberger (D) Died March 9, 1960 Hall Lusk (D) March 16, 1960 Maurine Neuberger (D) November 8, 1960
    Texas
    (Class 2)
    Lyndon Johnson (D) Resigned January 3, 1961
    Elected as vice president
    William Blakley (D) January 3, 1961 John Tower (R) May 27, 1961
    Massachusetts
    (Class 1)
    John F. Kennedy (D) Resigned December 22, 1960
    Elected as president
    Benjamin A. Smith II (D) December 27, 1960 Ted Kennedy (D) November 6, 1962
    New Hampshire
    (Class 2)
    Styles Bridges (R) Died November 26, 1961 Maurice J. Murphy Jr. (R) December 7, 1961 Thomas McIntyre (D) November 6, 1962
    Kansas
    (Class 2)
    Andrew Schoeppel (R) Died January 21, 1962 James Pearson (R) January 31, 1962 James Pearson (R) November 6, 1962
    Idaho
    (Class 2)
    Henry Dworshak (R) Died July 23, 1962 Len Jordan (R) August 6, 1962 Len Jordan (R) November 6, 1962
    Wyoming
    (Class 2)
    Edwin Keith Thomson (R)[c] Died December 9, 1960 John J. Hickey (D) January 3, 1961 Milward Simpson (R) November 6, 1962
    New Mexico
    (Class 1)
    Dennis Chavez (D) Died November 18, 1962 Edwin Mechem (R) November 30, 1962 Joseph Montoya (D) November 3, 1964
    Oklahoma
    (Class 2)
    Robert S. Kerr (D) Died January 1, 1963 J. Howard Edmondson (D) January 6, 1963 Fred R. Harris (D) November 3, 1964
    Tennessee
    (Class 2)
    Estes Kefauver (D) Died August 10, 1963 Herbert Walters (D) August 20, 1963 Ross Bass (D) November 3, 1964
    South Carolina
    (Class 3)
    Olin Johnston (D) Died April 18, 1965 Donald Russell (D) April 22, 1965 Fritz Hollings (D) November 8, 1966
    Virginia
    (Class 1)
    Harry F. Byrd Sr. (D) Resigned November 10, 1965 Harry F. Byrd Jr. (D) November 12, 1965 Harry F. Byrd Jr. (D) November 8, 1966
    Alaska
    (Class 2)
    Bob Bartlett (D) Died December 11, 1968 Ted Stevens (R) December 24, 1968 Ted Stevens (R) November 3, 1970
    Illinois
    (Class 3)
    Everett Dirksen (R) Died September 7, 1969 Ralph Tyler Smith (R) September 17, 1969 Adlai Stevenson III (D) November 3, 1970
    Vermont
    (Class 1)
    Winston L. Prouty (R) Died September 10, 1971 Robert Stafford (R) September 16, 1971 Robert Stafford (R) January 7, 1972
    Georgia
    (Class 2)
    Richard Russell Jr. (D) Died January 21, 1971 David H. Gambrell (D) February 1, 1971 Sam Nunn (D) November 7, 1972
    New Hampshire
    (Class 3)
    Failure to elect by January 3, 1975[d] Norris H. Cotton (R) August 8, 1975 John A. Durkin (D) September 16, 1975
    Minnesota
    (Class 1)
    Hubert Humphrey (D) Died January 13, 1978 Muriel Humphrey (D) January 25, 1978 David Durenberger (R) November 7, 1978
    Alabama
    (Class 3)
    James Allen (D) Died June 1, 1978 Maryon Pittman Allen (D) June 8, 1978 Donald Stewart (D) November 7, 1978
    Washington
    (Class 1)
    Henry M. Jackson (D) Died September 1, 1983 Daniel J. Evans (R) September 8, 1983 Daniel J. Evans (R) November 8, 1983
    North Carolina
    (Class 3)
    John Porter East (R) Died June 29, 1986 Jim Broyhill (R) July 14, 1986 Terry Sanford (D) November 8, 1986
    Indiana
    (Class 3)
    Dan Quayle (R) Resigned January 3, 1989
    Elected as vice president
    Dan Coats (R) January 3, 1989 Dan Coats (R) November 6, 1990
    Hawaii
    (Class 1)
    Spark Matsunaga (D) Died April 15, 1990 Daniel Akaka (D) May 16, 1990 Daniel Akaka (D) November 6, 1990
    Pennsylvania
    (Class 1)
    H. John Heinz III (R) Died April 4, 1991 Harris Wofford (D) May 9, 1991 Harris Wofford (D) November 5, 1991
    California
    (Class 1)
    Pete Wilson (R) Resigned January 7, 1991 John Seymour (R) January 10, 1991 Dianne Feinstein (D) November 3, 1992
    North Dakota
    (Class 1)
    Quentin Burdick (D) Died September 8, 1992 Jocelyn Burdick (D) September 16, 1992 Kent Conrad (D) December 4, 1992
    Texas
    (Class 1)
    Lloyd Bentsen (D) Resigned January 20, 1993 Bob Krueger (D) January 21, 1993 Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) June 5, 1993
    Tennessee
    (Class 2)
    Al Gore (D) Resigned January 3, 1993
    Elected as vice president
    Harlan Mathews (D) January 3, 1993 Fred Thompson (R) November 8, 1994
    Oklahoma
    (Class 2)
    David Boren (D) Resigned November 15, 1994 No appointment[e] Jim Inhofe (R) November 8, 1994
    Oregon
    (Class 3)
    Bob Packwood (R) Resigned October 1, 1995 No appointment Ron Wyden (D) January 30, 1996
    Kansas
    (Class 3)
    Bob Dole (R) Resigned June 11, 1996 Sheila Frahm (R) June 11, 1996 Sam Brownback (R) November 5, 1996
    Georgia
    (Class 3)
    Paul Coverdell (R) Died July 18, 2000 Zell Miller (D) July 24, 2000 Zell Miller (D) November 7, 2000
    Missouri
    (Class 1)
    Mel Carnahan (D)[c] Died October 16, 2000 Jean Carnahan (D) January 3, 2001 Jim Talent (R) November 5, 2002
    Wyoming
    (Class 1)
    Craig L. Thomas (R) Died June 4, 2007 John Barrasso (R) June 25, 2007 John Barrasso (R) November 4, 2008
    Mississippi
    (Class 1)
    Trent Lott (R) Resigned December 18, 2007 Roger Wicker (R) December 31, 2007 Roger Wicker (R) November 4, 2008
    Massachusetts
    (Class 1)
    Ted Kennedy (D) Died August 25, 2009 Paul G. Kirk (D) September 24, 2009 Scott Brown (R) January 19, 2010
    Illinois
    (Class 3)
    Barack Obama (D) Resigned November 16, 2008
    Elected as president
    Roland Burris (D) January 12, 2009 Mark Kirk (R) November 2, 2010
    Delaware
    (Class 2)
    Joe Biden (D) Resigned January 15, 2009
    Elected as vice president
    Ted Kaufman (D) January 16, 2009 Chris Coons (D) November 2, 2010
    New York
    (Class 1)
    Hillary Clinton (D) Resigned January 21, 2009 Kirsten Gillibrand (D) January 27, 2009 Kirsten Gillibrand (D) November 2, 2010
    West Virginia
    (Class 1)
    Robert Byrd (D) Died June 28, 2010 Carte Goodwin (D) July 20, 2010 Joe Manchin (D) November 2, 2010
    Massachusetts
    (Class 2)
    John Kerry (D) Resigned February 1, 2013 Mo Cowan (D) February 1, 2013 Ed Markey (D) June 25, 2013
    New Jersey
    (Class 2)
    Frank Lautenberg (D) Died June 3, 2013 Jeffrey Chiesa (R) June 10, 2013 Cory Booker (D) October 16, 2013
    South Carolina
    (Class 3)
    Jim DeMint (R) Resigned January 1, 2013 Tim Scott (R) January 2, 2013 Tim Scott (R) November 4, 2014
    Hawaii
    (Class 3)
    Daniel Inouye (D) Died December 17, 2012 Brian Schatz (D) December 26, 2012 Brian Schatz (D) November 4, 2014
    Oklahoma
    (Class 3)
    Tom Coburn (R) Resigned January 3, 2015 No appointment[f] James Lankford (R) November 4, 2014
    Alabama
    (Class 2)
    Jeff Sessions (R) Resigned February 8, 2017 Luther Strange (R) February 9, 2017 Doug Jones (D) December 12, 2017
    Minnesota
    (Class 2)
    Al Franken (D) Resigned January 2, 2018 Tina Smith (D) January 3, 2018 Tina Smith (D) November 6, 2018
    Mississippi
    (Class 2)
    Thad Cochran (R) Resigned April 1, 2018 Cindy Hyde-Smith (R) April 2, 2018 Cindy Hyde-Smith (R) November 6, 2018
    Arizona
    (Class 3)
    John McCain (R) Died August 25, 2018 Jon Kyl (R) September 4, 2018 –
    December 31, 2018 (resigned)
    Mark Kelly (D) November 3, 2020
    Martha McSally (R) January 3, 2019
    Georgia
    (Class 3)
    Johnny Isakson (R) Resigned December 31, 2019 Kelly Loeffler (R) January 6, 2020 Raphael Warnock (D) January 5, 2021
    California
    (Class 3)
    Kamala Harris (D) Resigned January 18, 2021
    Elected as vice president
    Alex Padilla (D) January 20, 2021 Alex Padilla (D) November 8, 2022
    Oklahoma
    (Class 2)
    Jim Inhofe (R) Resigned January 3, 2023 No appointment[g] Markwayne Mullin (R) November 8, 2022
    Nebraska
    (Class 2)
    Ben Sasse (R) Resigned January 8, 2023 Pete Ricketts (R) January 12, 2023 TBD November 5, 2024
    California
    (Class 1)
    Dianne Feinstein (D) Died September 29, 2023 Laphonza Butler (D) October 3, 2023 TBD November 5, 2024
    State Senator Vacancy event Senator Date Senator Date
    Original Appointee Election winner

    See also[edit]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Though he ran as an independent, Miller was so clearly a Democrat that most records indicate both Miller and his special election opponent as Democrats, including the Official Congressional Directory.[7]
  • ^ Senator Bunker was appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the November 10, 1940, death of Key Pittman, who had just won re-election. Bunker was appointed both to complete the term that would end on January 3, 1941, and to begin the term that would end on January 3, 1947.
  • ^ a b Senator-elect
  • ^ The 1974 election result was contested. Eventually, the Senate declared the seat vacant. Norris Cotton, who had retired at the election, was subsequently appointed to the seat until a special election could be held.[8]
  • ^ The 1994 election in Oklahoma was held while David Boren was still in office; Boren had announced his resignation in May 1994.
  • ^ The 2014 election in Oklahoma was held while Tom Coburn was still in office; Coburn had announced his resignation in January 2014.
  • ^ The 2022 election in Oklahoma was held while Jim Inhofe was still in office; Inhofe had announced his resignation in February 2022.
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ "No special election to replace Sessions; Bentley says move could save $16 million". Al.com. January 5, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  • ^ "Governor Ivey Moves US Senate Special Election to Adhere with State Law". Office of the Governor of Alabama. April 18, 2017. Retrieved April 18, 2017.
  • ^ "Alabama Senate race: Trump records message for Roy Moore". BBC. December 12, 2017.
  • ^ "Filling vacancies in the U.S. Senate". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2022-12-10.
  • ^ a b Neale, Thomas H. (March 10, 2009). "Filling U.S. Senate Vacancies: Perspectives and Contemporary Developments" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 19, 2011.
  • ^ "House approves appointment process for U.S. Senate vacancies". OCPA. Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs. May 27, 2021. Retrieved September 30, 2022.
  • ^ Compiled by C.B. Deane (December 21, 1937). Official Congressional Directory (1st ed.). Washington, DC: Joint Committee on Printing, Office of Congressional Directory; Government Printing Office. p. 6. OCLC 1114304889. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • ^ "Closest election in Senate history". Senate Historical Office.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_special_elections_to_the_United_States_Senate&oldid=1198336199"

    Categories: 
    United States Senate special elections
    Lists of United States Senate elections
    Lists of by-elections
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 errors: periodical ignored
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Articles using small message boxes
    Incomplete lists from August 2008
     



    This page was last edited on 23 January 2024, at 21:21 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki