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US midterm elections results 2022: live

This article is more than 1 year old

Full live results of the Congressional midterms, seat by seat. The House of Representatives remains undecided, but Democrats have retained control of the Senate

Updating ...
Latest results
House
11 hours ago
Republicans win Oregon 5th
House
a day ago
Democrats win California 26th
Senate
a day ago
Democrats hold Nevada
House
a day ago
Democrats win California 35th
House
a day ago
Democrats win Washington 3rd
House
a day ago
Democrats win California 15th
House
2 days ago
Democrats win Arizona 4th
Senate
2 days ago
Democrats hold Arizona
House
2 days ago
Democrats win California 38th
Governors
2 days ago
Republicans flip Nevada
House
2 days ago
Democrats win Nevada 3rd
House
2 days ago
Democrats win Nevada 4th
House
2 days ago
Democrats win Nevada 1st
House
3 days ago
Democrats win Maryland 6th
House
3 days ago
Democrats win New York 18th
House
3 days ago
Republicans win Arizona 2nd
House
3 days ago
Republicans win California 40th
House
3 days ago
Democrats win California 46th
House
3 days ago
Democrats win Washington 8th
Governors
3 days ago
Democrats hold Oregon
House
3 days ago
Democrats win Oregon 4th
House
4 days ago
Democrats win California 37th
House
4 days ago
Democrats win California 29th
House
4 days ago
Democrats win California 16th
House
4 days ago
Democrats win Illinois 17th
House
4 days ago
Republicans win California 23rd
House
4 days ago
Democrats win New Mexico 2nd
House
4 days ago
Republicans win Montana 1st
House
4 days ago
Democrats win Connecticut 5th
House
4 days ago
Republicans win New Jersey 7th
Overview
Senate
Democrats*
50+1
Republicans
-148
51 to win***includes independents**vice-president (Dem) has casting vote***Alaska not called but winner will be Republicanno electionno election34 of 35 races called ***
House
Democrats
203-8
Republicans
+7212
218 to win415 of 435 races called
Battlegrounds
Democrat
Republican
Independent/Other
Seat changed hands

Many seats in United States elections always go to the same party. So control of the Senate and House of Representatives depends on a relatively small number of competitive seats, or "battlegrounds". Election experts rank the competitive seats as more or less likely to return a Republican or Democrat. This gives a clue to how the election is evolving overall; if Democrats are winning seats that were thought likely to go Republican, it may be an indication they will do well overall. Simplistically, blue shapes on the right of the following charts signal a good night for Biden and the Democrats, and red shapes on the left signal the opposite.

Democrat
Republican
Independent/Other
Seat changed hands
Senate

After flipping a Senate seat in Pennsylvania, the Democrats hampered Republican hopes of controlling the upper house. This could depend on the December election in Georgia after the Senate race there advanced to a run-off.

Likely Democrat

COWA

Lean Democrat

NH

Toss-up

AZGANVPAWI

Lean Republican

NCOH

Likely Republican

FLIAUT
no result
House

The House looks set to flip to the Republicans but a 'red wave' has failed to materialise. Key seats include Iowa's 3rd district and Colorado's 8th.

Likely Democrat

Lean Democrat

Toss-up

Lean Republican

Likely Republican

no result
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How do the elections work?

All 435 seats in the lower chamber of the federal congress, the House of Representatives, are re-elected every two years. (There are no term limits, and incumbents are often returned, so there is substantial continuity in the membership). House seats are broadly proportional to population, so California has lots of seats but Montana only a few.

The upper chamber, the Senate, has 100 seats; two for each state, however populous. In every even-numbered year, roughly one-third of senators are elected for a six-year term. Legislation has to pass both chambers to become law. Senators have some additional responsibilities compared with their colleagues in the House; chiefly these have to do with confirming (or not) presidential appointments.

Governors are not part of Congress. Their impact is mostly local to their own state, but because they can affect electoral law or practice, they can affect future federal elections.

Going into the election the Democratic party of the president, Joe Biden, controlled both chambers of Congress, but by very narrow margins. In the Senate, a 50-50 split would mean a casting vote went to the vice-president, Kamala Harris. (In practice the casting vote more often went to Joe Manchin, a Democratic senator representing a largely Republican state).

These elections are called midterms because they happen in the middle of a four-year presidential term. They are difficult for sitting presidents because the presidential party often does badly in them, and because losing control of Congress makes it more difficult for the president to pursue his or her agenda.

About these results

The results are provided by the Associated Press, or AP, who have rigorous criteria for “calling” election races; that is, for reporting a winner. Redrawing of House districts this year following the 2020 census mean AP is not reporting “flips”, or seats where the sitting party changes. The redistricting means that in a few seats there are two incumbent representatives competing for a new district. It may also impact the change figures seen on the House results summary bar. It is possible that some seats will count 100% of votes without a winner becoming apparent because of laws that trigger an automatic recount in races that are very close. The seat totals for each party may not align with the seats called totals because in some seats the winning party will be known before the winning candidate is identified; this is particularly the case in California which has primary elections to whittle the candidates down to two, who may both be from the same party.

More on this story

More on this story

  • New York congressman-elect admits lying about college and work history

  • Kyrsten Sinema goes independent days after Democrats secure Senate majority

  • Republicans scrape back control of US House

  • ‘It’s powerful’: how John Fetterman’s hoodie won the popular vote in Pennsylvania

  • The winner of the midterms is not yet clear – but the loser is Donald Trump

  • Democrats beating expectations as John Fetterman wins crucial US Senate race – as it happened

  • Future of Congress hangs in balance as many races still too close to call

  • The future of American democracy is at stake in the midterm elections

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