- United States Senate elections, 2010
Elections to the
United States Senate will be held onNovember 2 ,2010 , with 34 of the 100 seats in the Senate being contested. Since Senators are elected for six-year terms, those elected will serve fromJanuary 3 ,2011 untilJanuary 3 ,2017 . They will join Senate Class III, which traces its roots back to the Senators who served full six-year terms fromMarch 4 ,1789 untilMarch 3 ,1795 . Current Class III Senators, who were elected in 2004, will seek reelection or retire in 2010. The House elections will occur on the same date, as well as some state and local elections.The composition of the Senate going into the 2010 election will depend on the results of the 2008 elections. Of the seats up for election, 19 are held by Republicans and 15 by Democrats.
There may be some additional changes of incumbent to the list below if Senators die or resign. If Senators in other classes die or resign in 2009 or 2010, there may be additional special elections in 2010.
Overview of races
Retiring Senators
am Brownback (R) of Kansas
Elected in 1996 to the Senate seat once held by
Bob Dole and a former candidate for his party's presidential nomination in 2008, incumbent conservative RepublicanSam Brownback has stated he will not run in 2010 because of self-imposed term limits.Kansas is one of the most Republican states in the nation, as no Democrat has been elected to serve the Sunflower State since 1938. Brownback currently has a 50% approval rating. [ [http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=3a1c3cb4-9fe1-4133-bc82-f2c26e8a9f35] ] Possible successors to Brownback include Republican CongressmenJerry Moran ,Todd Tiahrt , Secretary of State Ron Thornburgh, Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger, State Representative Lee Tafanelli, State Senator Derek Schmidt. For the Democrats, popular GovernorKathleen Sebelius , who is restricted from running for reelection because of term limits, would be the strongest candidate, but Railroad Engineer Lee Jones and former Congressman Dan Glickman are also possible candidates.Possible retiring Senators
Christopher Dodd (D) of Connecticut
First elected in 1980,
Christopher Dodd , the longest-serving U.S. Senator inConnecticut history, announced in a letter to theFederal Election Commission onJanuary 17 ,2007 that he is no longer a candidate for re-election to the U.S. Senate in 2010. However, this is just a technicality in order to transfer funds to his presidential campaign as the declaration could be reversed at any time. A Dodd spokesman said, "It's a legality that isn't an indication of future plans." [cite news |title=Dodd: About His "Retirement" Announcement |url=http://hotlineblog.nationaljournal.com/archives/2007/01/dodd_about_his.html |work=The Hotline |publisher=National Journal |date=2007-02-20 |accessdate=2007-03-07] Dodd's campaign for the presidency was not successful, so it is possible that he will run for the Senate again. According to Republican Lieutenant GovernorMichael Fedele , Republican GovernorJodi Rell is likely running for re-election in 2010, so it is unlikely that either will run for the Senate.cite news |title=Rell likely to seek re-election, lieutenant governor says |url=http://journalinquirer.com/articles/2008/04/12/news/doc48002edd1f3c3517200520.txt |publisher=Journal Inquirer |date=2008-04-12 |accessdate=2008-04-27]Dodd's previously unassailable electoral position in Connecticut may have deteriorated for two reasons since his last re-election. His poor performance in his bid for the 2008 Democratic Presidential nomination appears to have soured local voters. [ [http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x1296.xml?ReleaseID=1163] ] . That poll, showing Dodd's job approval at 51% was taken before revelations that Dodd received mortgage loans as part of the "Friends of Angelo" program run by subprime mortgage lender
Countrywide Financial . TheHartford Courant has reported Dodd has taken a "major credibility hit" from this scandal. A later poll in September 2008 showed Dodd's job approval declining to 43%, with 46% terming his job performance as "fair" or "poor". [ [http://www.courant.com/news/politics/hc-ctpoll0926.artsep26,0,4404922.story] ]Should Dodd seek re-election in 2010 despite the scandal, possible Republican candidates other than Rell or Fedele would include Congressman
Chris Shays ; former CongressmanRob Simmons ; Associate U.S. Attorney GeneralKevin J. O'Connor ; State SenatorJohn P. McKinney ; State SenatorSam Caligiuri , or House Minority LeaderLawrence F. Cafero .Democratic Incumbent Races
Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas
Incumbent Senator
Blanche Lincoln was reelected with 56% of the vote in 2004, a year when PresidentGeorge W. Bush carried the state easily and GOP candidates nationwide won in what was termed as a GOP year. Lincoln is popular inArkansas and is well known. Former GovernorMike Huckabee , who was a 2008 Presidential candidate, may run, since he remains a relatively well-liked figure. Regardless of Huckabee's position, Arkansas has elected only one Republican Senator since Reconstruction, who was defeated in a GOP landslide year of 2002.Barbara Boxer of California
The chairwoman of the Environment and Public Works Committee,
California DemocratBarbara Boxer announced onFebruary 19 ,2007 , that she will seek a fourth term in 2010. Boxer will turn 70 one week after election night in 2010. She is one of the most liberal members of the U.S. Senate, and is the first Democratic senator to officially announce plans for the 2010 race. It is unlikely that she will face any major opposition in the Democratic primary. Because of her very liberal positions and outspoken style, she may face an actual challenge from the Republicans.Republican Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger may seek the seat, as he would be ineligible to run again in the Gubernatorial race due to term limits.David Dreier , the ranking member of the House Rules Committee, could also seek the seat for Republicans, as could Rep.Darrell Issa . However, most members of the California GOP House delegation are regarded as too conservative for the state as a whole.It remains to be seen whether conservative State Senator
Tom McClintock will consider a run for the seat, as he is experienced in statewide contests (including a third-place finish in the 2003 California gubernatorial recall election). Currently, McClintock is running for Congress in a northeastern California district, to which he moved to make his congressional run.Ken Salazar of Colorado
Ken Salazar narrowly defeatedPete Coors in 2004.Colorado has experienced a shift in politics, with the Democratic Party making significant gains throughout the state in 2006. There has been talk by activists on the left of launching a primary challenge to the centrist Salazar. Republican Former GovernorBill Owens , who won't run in 2008 for the Senate, may run this time around, as might retired football quarterback, RepublicanJohn Elway , who hinted at a future run for office despite choosing not to run in 2008. Other possibilities would be former Republican Presidential Candidate and sitting CongressmanTom Tancredo , Secretary of StateMike Coffman and former Lieutenant GovernorJane Norton .Daniel Inouye of Hawaii
Veteran Democrat
Daniel Inouye will be 86 in 2010 and will have served eight terms in the Senate and compiled a career in Washington spanning over two generations fromHawaii 's first years of statehood to the present day. If Inouye were to retire, the seat would still favor the Democrats, who have traditionally dominated the Hawaii delegation; Hawaii last elected a Republican Senator in 1970, and its delegation currently consists entirely of Democrats. However, althoughSenator John Kerry (D) won the state in 2004, the margin was smaller than in the past. Hawaiians also have elected popular Republican GovernorLinda Lingle in two successive elections.Republican Governor
Linda Lingle and Republican US Senate Hawaii Candidate, 2006 Eddie Pirkowski may run for the seat if Inouye retires. RepresentativesMazie Hirono andNeil Abercrombie and former RepresentativeEd Case would all be potential Democratic candidates.Barack Obama of Illinois
Senator
Barack Obama is the Democratic presidential nominee in 2008. If he becomes president, GovernorRod Blagojevich will appoint Obama's successor in the Senate who will serve the remainder of Obama's term. That appointee could choose to seek election in his or her own right in 2010 or could choose to retire. In either instance, a competitive Democraticprimary election could occur. Potential Democratic candidates include state Attorney GeneralLisa Madigan ; U.S. representativesJesse Jackson Jr. andBobby Rush ; State TreasurerAlexi Giannoulias ; and Lieutenant Governor Pat Quinn. AlthoughIllinois is considered a Democratic stronghold state, Republicans still have some potential candidates, including U.S. representativesMark Kirk andJohn Shimkus .Evan Bayh of Indiana
Evan Bayh , a former two-term Governor of Indiana and now in his second Senate term, was originally considering running for President in 2008, but pulled out in December 2006. He has not yet indicated whether he will seek a third term in 2010, but he is very popular and won reelection with 62% of the vote in 2004.Should he retire, possible successors on the Democratic side include Congressman
Pete Visclosky , former Indianapolis MayorBart Peterson , and Former Congressman and9/11 Commission memberTim Roemer .Potential Republican challengers could be Congressmen
Mark E. Souder ,Stephen Buyer , andMike Pence . Former CongressmanMike Sodrel could be a candidate, Secretary of State Todd Rokiat and Lt. GovernorBecky Skillman . GovernorMitch Daniels , who is expected to win re-election in 2008, has indicated he will not run for Senate or any other office.Barbara Mikulski of Maryland
The dean of women in the United States Senate, Democrat
Barbara Mikulski may retire. Mikulski will be 73 in November 2010. Mikulski has often been elected by large margins, which is no surprise givenMaryland 's traditional Democratic politics. Former GovernorRobert Ehrlich , former Lieutenant GovernorMichael Steele , who ran for Senate in 2006, 2004 challenger, andE. J. Pipkin . Anyone of these could be among the GOP's candidates, while Democratic RepresentativesJohn Sarbanes ,Dutch Ruppersberger andChris Van Hollen ; former congressman and NAACP presidentKweisi Mfume ; and Lt. Gov.Anthony G. Brown could be some of the Democratic candidates for the seat.Harry Reid of Nevada
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will seek a fifth term. In 2004, he was reelected with 61% of the vote. That year, Republicans did not put up a formidable challenger. Potential Republican candidates include former GovernorKenny Guinn , RepresentativesJon Porter andDean Heller , or 2004 candidate Richard Ziser. Guinn might be the strongest challenger to Reid but will be 74 in 2010, three years Reid's senior. Porter is the more likely to run as he has been interested since 2004 and been planning a run.Reid may be the least popular incumbent in the 2010 cycle. Since becoming Minority Leader (in 2004), his approval ratings have dropped into the under 50 territory. A November 2007 poll showed Reid's approval at 39%, with 49% disapproving. [ [http://www.kren.com/Global/story.asp?S=7396859&nav=menu616_2_4] ]
Chuck Schumer of New York
Chuck Schumer , current chairman of the DSCC, is expected to seek a third term. In 2004, he handily defeated Assemblyman Howard Mills, 71-24%. New York is considered a Democratic stronghold. However, there are a few Republicans who could challenge Schumer, including former governorGeorge Pataki and former New York City mayorRudolph W. Giuliani . Unless such a prominent opponent were to run, Schumer would be strongly favored for re-election.Byron Dorgan of North Dakota
Three term Senator
Byron Dorgan may retire. He will be 68 years old in 2010. Dorgan, who represents the conservative state ofNorth Dakota , may be vulnerable if he runs for reelection. Potential Republican candidates areGovernor John Hoeven , Attorney GeneralWayne Stenehjem , and his brother, State Senate Majority LeaderBob Stenehjem . All have very high approval ratings, including Dorgan.Ron Wyden of Oregon
Ron Wyden is expected to win reelection easily in Oregon, a state whose congressional delegation has a 4-1 Democratic majority despite the state splitting its Presidential votes almost 50/50 in 2000 and 2004.Patrick Leahy of Vermont
Six-term
Vermont SenatorPatrick Leahy may retire from the Senate; he will be 70 in 2010. However, as Leahy is now the chairman of the powerfulSenate Judiciary Committee , it is unlikely. Former governor and 2004 presidential candidate and current DNC ChairmanHoward Dean may seek the seat should Leahy retire, as might RepresentativePeter Welch , a Democrat, and GovernorJim Douglas , a Republican.Patty Murray of Washington
Patty Murray defeated Rep.George Nethercutt by 10 percent in 2004. She may face a credible challenge in 2010 from Nethercutt's successor,Cathy McMorris Rodgers (WA-5). As the Seattle area has grown, no Washington Senator has come from the eastern part of the state since 1934. Other Republican candidates may include Rep.Dave Reichert (WA-8), who has been able to win in a Democratic-leaning district in the suburbs of Seattle, or Washington Attorney GeneralRob McKenna .Russ Feingold of Wisconsin
In 2004,
Russ Feingold won a third term by double-digits, outperforming the Democratic nominee for President substantially. Despite this, he won narrowly in both of his previous elections in Democratic years. A potential GOP candidate could be the 2006 Governor candidate, former Rep.Mark Green , the current U.S. Ambassador toTanzania , CongressmenPaul Ryan andJim Sensenbrenner .Republican Incumbent Races
Richard Shelby of Alabama
Richard Shelby , a former Democrat who switched parties in 1994 when Republicans took control of both the House and Senate, may retire. He will be 76 in 2010. AlthoughAlabama is a solidly Republican state in presidential elections, Democrats control majorities in theAlabama Legislature and have some high-profile officeholders that would be strong candidates for Shelby's seat should it come up, as it is unlikely any of them will challenge for the seat if Shelby decides to run for a fifth term. However, Rep.Artur Davis (AL-7) is openly considering running against Shelby. He may opt to run in Alabama's open gubernatorial race instead, as Gov.Bob Riley is term limited.Lisa Murkowski of Alaska
Lisa Murkowski only narrowly defeated former GovernorTony Knowles in 2004, in an election that included charges ofnepotism , as Murkowski was appointed by her father, GovernorFrank Murkowski . Alaska trends Republican. Knowles, one of the state's strongest Democrats, has been defeated two statewide elections in a row.Due to her father's record and the nepotism charge, Murkowski's greatest challenge will probably come from the reform wing of the
Republican Party of Alaska . Possible Republican primary challengers include Lieutenant GovernorSean Parnell and State RepresentativeGabrielle Ledoux (who both ran forAlaska's At-large congressional district in the Republican primary against incumbent RepublicanDon Young , but lost), or current GovernorSarah Palin (who is the vice presidential nominee andJohn McCain 's running mate in the 2008 presidential election). [ [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/23/AR2006082300246.html] ]John McCain of Arizona
On
March 5 ,2008 McCain won the Republican Nomination to run for the presidency. [ [http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/] ] McCain will be 74 in 2010 and has previously struggled with cancer. It is likely that 2008 will be his last chance to become president. Should he fail to do so, he may choose to retire from politics at the end of his current Senate term. Possible Democratic contenders for McCain's open seat include Arizona GovernorJanet Napolitano , Attorney GeneralTerry Goddard and 8th District CongresswomanGabrielle Giffords . It is possible that wealthy real estate developerJim Pederson , who unsuccessfully challenged Sen.Jon Kyl in 2006, may also be interested.Conservative congressman
Jeff Flake is interested in the seat if McCain does not run again. Several other Republican Congressmen includingJohn Shadegg [cite news | title=Shadegg eyes McCain seat |url=http://www.politickeraz.com/alexisenstadt/1794/shadegg-eyes-mccain-seat |publisher=Political Ticker AZ | date=2008-07-31 |accessdate=2008-07-31] are likely to be interested if an open seat presents itself.{| class="wikitable"
- valign=bottom! Poll Source! Dates Administered! Republican: George Voinovich! Democrat: Jennifer Brunner
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[http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/PPP_Release_Ohio_721.pdf Public Policy Polling]
align=center|July 17 -20,2008
align=center| 38%
align=center| 42%Tom Coburn of Oklahoma
Tom Coburn was elected in 2004 by a 53% to 42% margin, running well behind President Bush's 66% showing. He could face a serious challenge in 2010. The Democrats have several strong potential candidates to challenge in Oklahoma, including GovernorBrad Henry , CongressmanDan Boren , and state Attorney GeneralDrew Edmondson .Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania
Longtime moderate Republican
Arlen Specter will be 80 in 2010. He announced onMarch 19 ,2007 that he will seek a sixth term in 2010. In spite of that, there is still some speculation that he will change his mind. The five-termPennsylvania n, following the 2006 elections, lost his chairmanship of the powerfulSenate Judiciary Committee . In 2005, Specter underwent chemotherapy forHodgkin's lymphoma , one year after a hotly contested race pitting him against RepresentativesPat Toomey (R) andJoe Hoeffel (D) in the primary and general elections, respectively.There is a slight possibility that Specter will face a primary challenge as he did in 2004 from Rep.
Pat Toomey , but no Republicans have made their intention known. He defeated his Democratic opponent, Joe Hoeffel, 53%-42% in the general election in 2004. RepresentativeAllyson Schwartz might run; she has been noted for raising vasts amount of money in short time periods. CongressmenPatrick Murphy ,Joe Sestak ,Tim Holden ,Jason Altmire ,Bob Brady ,Chaka Fattah ,Chris Carney , DemocraticMSNBC commentator andHardball hostChris Matthews , and Philadelphia MayorMichael Nutter would all be Democratic possibilities for Specter's seat.Governor
Ed Rendell ruled out a run when he announced that his reelection campaign in 2006 would be the last one of his career, however party sources have indicated that he may run.Jim DeMint of South Carolina
Jim DeMint was elected in 2004 with 54 percent of the vote, defeating DemocratInez Tenenbaum . In 2010 he is unlikely to face a serious challenge, as there are only one or two Democrats left in South Carolina who could give him a race. These are State Education SuperintendentJim Rex , the only Democrat who currently holds statewide elected office in the Palmetto State, and Joe Erwin, the wealthy former state Democratic Party chairman.John Thune of South Dakota
John Thune narrowly defeated Senate Minority LeaderTom Daschle in 2004, and he could face a strong challenge in 2010. RepresentativeStephanie Herseth Sandlin is a possible Democratic contender, though she is also mentioned as a potential candidate for Governor.Thune has been mentioned as a candidate for
Governor of South Dakota in 2010. Should he run for governor, he will be unable to seek reelection, and will retire from the Senate when his term ends in 2011. If Thune does retire, Republican GovernorMike Rounds could be a contender for the seat.Bob Bennett of Utah
Former entrepreneur-turned-Republican-Senator Bob Bennett may retire. He will have served three terms in the Senate and will be 77 in 2010.
Utah has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1970, when Frank Moss won his third term; he was unseated in 1976 by RepublicanOrrin Hatch , who continues to hold the state's other Senate seat.There are still a handful Democrats who could be strong contenders, including
U.S. Representative Jim Matheson , whose popularity in the very Republican 2nd district and experience with difficult campaigns would make him a strong Democratic candidate for the state. Another Democratic possibility would be former Utah Attorney General Jan Graham. Matheson's congressional colleagues,Rob Bishop andChris Cannon , would be strong contenders for the Republican nomination should Bennett step down. It should be noted thatChris Cannon was defeated in his primary, and will not be returning to Congress in 2009. [ [http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?parm1=5&docID=news-000002904749] ] Republican GovernorJon Huntsman could be a contender, but he is up for re-election in 2008, and his term would go through 2012, which means he would have to resign asGovernor of Utah .enate contests in 2010
References
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