- This article discusses only 'races that resulted in a
seat's party switch in the U.S. House of
Representatives in the November 2006 (mid-term) election.
For complete list of the races in all districts, but
without the commentary below, see
United States House of Representatives elections, 2006 - complete
list. For a complete list of competitive races
with commentary, see United States
House elections, 2006 notable races.
The 2006 US House election was held on November 7, 2006 to elect
members to the
United States House of
Representatives. All of the 435 seats in the House were up for
election. Those elected are serving in the
110th United States Congress
from January 3, 2007 until January 3, 2009. The incumbent majority
party, the Republican Party had controlled the house since the 1994
election and was defeated by the Democrats who won a majority in
the House ending 12 years in opposition.
On election day, Democrats gained 31 seats in the House, enough to
take control, and Republicans became the minority party after 12
years of control. In addition, two seats went to December runoffs,
and one seat was still unresolved at the opening of the new
Congress.
In one Louisiana
runoff, a Democratic incumbent defeated a
Democratic challenger. In a Texas
runoff, a
Democratic challenger defeated a Republican incumbent. The
Republican candidate in the Florida 13th was eventually certified
as the winner, and was seated by the House pending judicial and
congressional investigation into voting machine
irregularities.
Democratic sweep
The final result was a thirty-one-seat pickup for the Democrats,
including the pickup of the Vermont At-Large seat, previously held
by Independent
Bernie Sanders who
caucused with the Democrats. Democrats defeated twenty-two
Republican incumbents and won eight open Republican-held
seats.
Republicans won no seats previously held by Democrats in either the
House or the Senate for the first time since the party's founding,
and it was the largest seat gain for the Democrats since the
1974
elections.
Among the new Democrats were the first Muslim in Congress (
Keith Ellison) and the first two
Buddhists (
Mazie Hirono and
Hank Johnson).
As a result of the Democratic victory,
Nancy Pelosi became the first woman, first
Italian-American, and the first
Californian elected
Speaker of
the House.
House of Representatives prior to the election
As of November 7, 2006, the U.S. House of the 109th Congress was
composed of 229
Republicans, 201
Democrats and 1
Independent (who caucuses with the
Democrats). There were also four vacancies. Republicans held a 28
seat advantage, and Democrats needed to pick up 15 seats to take
control of the House, which had had a Republican majority since
January 1995.
Predictions
A number of organizations and individuals made predictions about
the election, some for the House as a whole and some for both that
and individual races. For the predictions just before the election
occurred,
see United States
House elections, 2006 - predictions.
[[Image:110 us house changes.svg|thumb| {{Information |Summary of
party changes
]]
Open seats

Winning Margins in all House
Races
In the election, there were 32 open seats: 28 incumbents not
seeking re-election and four vacancies. Of the 28 incumbents, 18
were Republicans, 9 Democrats, and 1 an independent.
The four vacancies were , to be filled at the same time as the
general election with the winner taking office in November
immediately after the votes were certified; , with a separate
special election on the same day; and and , which did not have
special elections to fill the vacancies before January 2007. had
been held by Democrat
Bob Menendez,
Texas's 22nd
congressional district had been held by Republican
Tom DeLay,
Ohio's 18th congressional
district had been held by Republican
Robert Ney, and
Florida's 16th
congressional district had been held by Republican
Mark Foley.
In addition to the open seats, two incumbents, (Democrat
Cynthia McKinney in and Republican
Joe Schwarz in ), were defeated in their party's
respective primaries, adding two seats to the number of races where
the incumbent was not up for re-election in November.
Seats that changed party
Thirty Republican seats were picked up by Democrats, and one seat
held by an independent was picked up by a Democrat. No Democratic
seats were picked up by Republicans. This marked the first time
since
1948 that a party did not lose any of its
seats.
Arizona
- — Early in the cycle, incumbent J.D. Hayworth (R)
appeared on his way to an easy reelection. However, his seat may
have become more competitive after the Congressional Page scandal broke.
Democrats
fielded a locally well-known candidate in State Senator Harry Mitchell, a former Mayor of Tempe
. Mitchell has been a political force in his
home town, one of the largest communities in the district, and
Democrats became enthusiastic about his candidacy. The 5th leans
Republican, but not overwhelmingly. The district includes, in addition to
Tempe, Scottsdale
, the prime real estate of the Phoenix area.
On election night, Mitchell defeated Hayworth, 50% to 46%.
Campaign signs including for Graf (R), Giffords (D) and Quick
(I)
- — Incumbent Jim Kolbe (R) announced on
November 23, 2005 that he would not seek re-election in 2006. His district, located in Southeastern Arizona
and based in the suburbs of Tucson
, is
Republican-leaning, but competitive: President Bush won the
district with 53% of the vote in 2004 (although only 50% in
2000). The Democratic primary in September was won by former
State Senator Gabrielle Giffords,
who resigned from the Arizona
Legislature on December 1, 2005 in preparation for the
campaign. Randy Graf, a former state
Representative who lost to Kolbe in the 2004 primary, won the
September 2006 Republican primary. He defeated current state
Representative Steve Huffman, whom
both Kolbe and the National Republican Congressional Committee
supported. The NRCC reportedly became concerned that Graf (a
supporter of the Minuteman
Project, and a sponsor of an unsuccessful bill that would let
patrons carry guns into bars and restaurants), was too conservative
to win the district. The NRCC committed $122,000 for a television
ad in support of Huffman, which ran the week before the primary.
The Democratic party shared that assessment — prior to the primary,
it spent nearly $200,000, "a large part of that for advertisements
critical of Mr. Huffman in an effort to help Mr. Graf's candidacy."
In late September, the national GOP canceled about $1 million in
advertising support. Libertarian David Nolan and independent
Jay Quick also ran for the seat. Giffords went on to win by a 54%
to 42% margin. (For details, see Arizona 8th
congressional district election, 2006.)
California
- — Longtime incumbent Richard Pombo
(R) won reelection in 2004 by a reasonably comfortable 61% to 39%
margin. However, Pombo became associated with the ethical and legal
scandals revolving around Jack Abramoff and became the subject of
an investigation, which eroded his popular support. In addition,
Rolling Stone listed him as one of the
ten worst congressmen. The Democratic candidate who garnered the
39% in 2004, Jerry McNerney, joined
that race as a write-in candidate two weeks before the primary
election. In 2006, McNerney was challenged in the primary by
Steve Filson. Filson was backed by the
Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee but was upset by McNerney in
the primary. Pombo was challenged for the Republican nomination by
former Representative Pete McCloskey.
Pombo won 63% of the primary vote to 32% for McCloskey. McCloskey
eventually endorsed McNerney. The eleventh district is largely composed of
Oakland
suburbs and leans Republican. McNerney
defeated Pombo 53% to 47% on election night.
Colorado
- — Incumbent Bob Beauprez (R) was
reelected to a second term in 2004 with 55% of the vote, after
winning his first term by only 121 votes. His retirement to make an
unsuccessful run for Governor of
Colorado made this seat highly competitive. The 7th District is
located in the northern and eastern Denver
suburbs. State education chairman Rick O'Donnell was
unopposed for the Republican nomination, while State Senator
Ed Perlmutter won a three-way
Democratic primary. On election night, Perlmutter won Beauprez's
old seat as expected, 55% to 42%. (For details, see Colorado 7th
congressional district election, 2006.)
Connecticut
- —
Incumbent Rob Simmons (R), a Vietnam War veteran and former CIA agent, won reelection by 54% to 46% in 2004, in a
Democratic-leaning district encompassing eastern Connecticut,
including Norwich
and New London
. The 2002 nominee, former state
Representative Joe
Courtney, decided to make another run. Even though in the past
Simmons had been able to win elections in the Democratic-leaning
district by painting himself as a moderate, the seat is perennially
competitive. The results were so close on election night that the
race was not settled until a week later. A recount was completed on
November 14, 2006, with the final results giving Joe Courtney an
83-vote victory over Rob Simmons.[129527] It was the closest house race of 2006.
- — Although incumbent Nancy Johnson (R) won with at
least 60% of the vote in 2004 and faced a difficult challenge
(running against a fellow incumbent in a redrawn district) in 2002,
winning with just 54%, she was still a Republican in a swing
district. While the 5th is Connecticut's most conservative region,
John Kerry won the district by about 1100 votes in 2004 and Al Gore won it when Johnson represented it as the
6th District in 2000. The district is
located in Northwestern Connecticut and includes a large portion of
Waterbury
, Danbury
, the wealthy western suburbs of Hartford
, and small rural towns. Johnson faced a
credible challenge from state Senator Chris Murphy. She was popular in
the district, but with Bush's rating in New England at rock bottom,
a Democratic victory was possible. Early in the cycle, this race
was considered the least competitive of the three Republican-held
seats in Connecticut, but Murphy defeated Johnson on election
night, winning 56% to 44%.
Florida
- —
This Republican-leaning South Florida district, which includes
West Palm
Beach
, Port St. Lucie
on the state's east coast and Port
Charlotte
on the west coast, was represented by Mark Foley, head of the Missing and Exploited
Children's Caucus. However, Foley resigned September 29,
2006 due to revelations of inappropriate contacts of a sexual
nature with underage male congressional pages. The scandal
immediately ballooned to include the Republican leadership's
involvement in a possible cover-up, and it soon brought down
Republicans nationwide. Florida law bars state parties from
replacing candidates on the ballot. Within the district, the
scandal created strong backlash against any Republican replacement
due to Foley's name remaining on the ballot, and, by extension,
made the race, which had earlier been written off by most as a
"safe" Republican seat, highly competitive. Businessman Tim Mahoney, a surprisingly well-funded
challenger in a seemingly uncompetitive race, quickly became
favored to win. The Republican replacement, businessman Joe Negron, ran an effective "Punch Foley for
Negron" campaign, but lost in a closer than expected race, with 48%
to Mahoney's 49%.
- — Republican E. Clay Shaw had been in Congress since 1981,
and had represented the 22nd District since 1993. The district
voted for John Kerry over George Bush in 2004, but re-elected Shaw
with 63% against a last minute replacement Democrat. In 2000, Shaw
won a close race by 599 votes in a district that Al Gore won by 4%,
but in 2002, he was redistricted into a slightly less Democratic
district and scored an easy victory. The district includes
wealthy areas of Palm Beach County
and Broward County including Boca
Raton
and parts of Fort Lauderdale
The revelation that Shaw was being treated for a
second time for lung cancer may have affected his re-election
chances. This year, Shaw faced a challenge from well-funded
state senator Ron Klein. Klein won on
election day 51% to 47%.
Indiana
- — Chris Chocola (R) was first
elected in 2002 by a 50% to 46% margin. Democrat Joe Donnelly, who lost to Chocola 54% to 45% in
2004, ran again in 2006. Democrats blamed Donnelly's 2004 loss on a
lack of funding from the national party that allowed Chocola to
outspend Donnelly by a two-to-one margin. President Bush
visited the South
Bend
-centered district seven times between 2000 and
2006, suggesting that Chocola was vulnerable. Chocola's
popularity was also affected by the unpopularity of GOP Governor
Mitch Daniels; among other things,
Daniels decided to lease a toll road that runs through the district
to a foreign corporation. Daniels also pushed to move the entire
state to daylight saving time,
which was opposed by local residents. In the campaign, Chocola
attacked Donnelly for being delinquent in paying property taxes. On
election night, Donnelly defeated Chocola 54% to 46%.
- —
John Hostettler (R), who had only a
34% approval rating, was challenged by Vanderburgh
County
Sheriff Brad
Ellsworth in this swing district that includes Evansville
and Terre Haute
. Hostettler had a history of winning tough
reelections, but Ellsworth was considered to be his strongest
opponent. The district has been nicknamed "The Bloody Eighth" due
to its frequent ousting of incumbent congressmen, which has
occurred in 1958, 1966, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1994, and 2006. Despite
the competitive nature of the district, Hostettler was
traditionally slow to raise money and lagged far behind his
opponent in fundraising totals throughout the election. Rumors
circulated in September that Hostettler had essentially given up on
his campaign when he failed to hold any events on Labor Day weekend, the traditional kickoff of the
campaign season. In the end, Ellsworth defeated Hostettler by a
61%-39% margin, the most lopsided loss for a House incumbent since
1994.
- — In 2004, incumbent Mike Sodrel (R)
defeated then-incumbent Baron Hill by
only 1,425 votes, the smallest winning percentage in any
congressional race that year. Hill ran in 2006 to reclaim his seat in this
Southeast Indiana district that includes Bloomington
and New Albany
. He defeated anti-war challenger Gretchen Clearwater in the May 2 primary. Factors cited in the race included
Sodrel being a self-described staunch Republican Party loyalist in
an evenly divided district, Hill lacking the advantages of
incumbency in 2006, and (according to Democrats) Hill's superior
constituent service compared to Sodrel's. Hill defeated Sodrel 50%
to 46%.
Iowa
- — Incumbent Jim Nussle (R) left his
seat in congress to run for governor. This district is
Democratic-leaning, and of the open seats was one of the most
likely to change hands. It contains most of northeastern Iowa
including
large cities such as Dubuque
, the Quad
Cities
and Waterloo
. Nussle had been reelected in 2000 and 2004
with 55% of the vote but Al Gore and John Kerry won the district in
those same years. In 2006, businessman Mike
Whalen won the Republican nomination while attorney Bruce Braley was the Democratic nominee. Braley
defeated Whalen 55 percent to 43 percent. (For details, see
Iowa 1st
congressional district election, 2006.)
- — Incumbent Jim Leach (R) received 59%
of the vote in 2004. Before the election, this was the most
Democratic seat held by a Republican, as measured by presidential
candidates' performances in the district. However, Leach had
consistently won here since 1976, helped by his reputation for
strong integrity. Also helping him was his status as one of the
most liberal Republicans in the House. As a result, Leach
traditionally won large numbers of crossover votes from Democrats
and was expected to do so again. The Democrats nominated David Loebsack, a political science professor
at small Cornell
College
in Mount Vernon, Iowa
. Despite Leach's appeal and seniority,
Loebsack prevailed on election night by a 51% to 49% margin.
Leach's defeat made him the most senior House member to lose
re-election in 2006 and the most senior member to lose re-election
since 36-year incumbent Phil Crane lost
in 2004 in an upset to Melissa
Bean.
Kansas
- — Incumbent Jim Ryun (R), a leading
conservative, won re-election by 56% to 41% in 2004 and had held
his seat for five terms. This year, Ryun faced a rematch with
Democrat Nancy Boyda, who also ran
against him in 2004. The district is home to Topeka
, Manhattan
(location of Kansas State University
), Leavenworth
, Pittsburg
, and half of the liberal college town of Lawrence
, home of the University of Kansas
. Despite being held by Ryun, the seat had a
history of electing Democrats and before 1994, Democrats held the
seat for 20 out of 24 years. However, gerrymandering had made the seat tilt more
Republican, and Ryun was thought to be secure. However, Ryun faced
controversy over a Washington, D.C. real estate purchase, and in
the wake of scandals that rocked Washington, D.C., this had a major
effect on local voters, far more than had been expected. Boyda was
also helped by the reelection of popular Democratic Governor
Kathleen Sebelius. Boyda defeated
the incumbent Ryun 51% to 47%, in one of the most shocking results
of the night.
Kentucky
- —
Incumbent Anne Northup (R) had been a
target for the Democrats since her election in 1996; in 2004 and
2000, John Kerry and Al Gore both won her Louisville
-centered congressional district by two percent, and
Bill Clinton won the district by
double-digit margins during the 1990s. While Northup had
generally run close races, she won 60% of the vote in the 2004
election. Redistricting after the 2000
census added a few more suburban Republicans to the district,
according to Congressional
Quarterly. The Democratic candidate was John Yarmuth, the founder of local free
publication LEO. In
spite of Northup's electoral success, excellent constituent
services, and popularity among blue-collar voters in southern
Louisville, Democrats saw this race as winnable, calling attention
to Northup's 91% lockstep voting record with an unpopular President
Bush. Northup led in most polls until October, when Yarmuth began
to gain. By election night, the race had become highly competitive.
House Majority Leader John Boehner
referred to Northup as the Republicans' "canary in the coal mine",
meaning that her fortunes would portend the outcome of House
elections nationwide. This proved to be a correct assessment, as on
election night, Yarmuth defeated Northup 51% to 48% and Republicans
lost control of the House.
Minnesota
- — Incumbent Gil Gutknecht (R) was
reelected in his Southern Minnesota district with 60% of the vote
in 2004. A member of the 1994 Republican Revolution, Gutknecht had
promised not to run for a seventh term when first elected. Though
not expected to be significant, the broken promise proved to be a
factor in his defeat. Geography teacher Tim
Walz was the Democratic nominee and ran a much stronger
campaign than expected, helped by the massive decline in President
George W. Bush's popularity in Minnesota. Walz defeated Gutknecht
53%-47%.[129528]
New Hampshire
- — Republican incumbent Jeb Bradley
was seeking a third term. Rochester Democratic chair Carol Shea-Porter won the nomination in a
major upset against better funded and party-favored state House
Democratic Leader Jim Craig. Although this was the
one house district in New
England
Bush carried in 2004, and Bradley had won it
handily in the past, the President was highly unpopular throughout
New England, which gave Democrats an opening. Still, most
thought that Bradley was the strong favorite to win. Shea-Porter
defeated Bradley 52% to 48% in the most shocking upset of the
night, along with the victories of David
Loebsack and Nancy Boyda.
- — Incumbent Charles Bass (R) won
reelection in 2004 with 58% percent of the vote, even as his
district was won by John Kerry 52% to 47%. Bass, a political
moderate, easily defeated primary challenges from Berlin
Mayor Bob Danderson
and Mary Maxwell. The Democratic
nominee, Paul Hodes, an attorney, was
also the 2004 Democratic nominee. In late September, a top Bass
staffer resigned after news stories that a U.S. Government computer
in Bass's DC office had been used to post anonymous concern troll messages to NH blogs. In these
messages, "IndyNH" claimed to be a supporter of Paul Hodes who was
discouraged by Bass's unbeatable lead. Hodes defeated Bass on
election day, 53% to 46%.
New York
- — Incumbent Sue Kelly (R) had rarely
faced stiff competition since her initial election in 1994, but the
Democratic primary attracted six contenders in 2006, two of whom
dropped out before the primary. Former Ulster County Legislator
John Hall, who was once a
member of the popular rock band, Orleans, won the Democratic nomination with
49% of the vote in a multi-candidate primary. An October 26 Majority-Watch poll had him leading
49% to 47% [129529]. Several factors played into Kelly's
defeat, including the extremely weak GOP showing in the senatorial
and gubernatorial races, her reluctance to answer questions about
the Mark Foley Page Scandal (notoriously, she literally ran away
from television cameras at one point), and Hall's quirky campaign
style, which included an appearance on the satirical Comedy Central program The Colbert Report. Hall defeated Kelly
51% to 49%. Following Hall's election, Stephen Colbert took credit for the victory
and attributed it entirely to Hall's appearance on the show. Hall
appeared several days later to satirically thank the host for his
seat in Congress.
- — Incumbent John E. Sweeney (R) had never faced a particularly
competitive election until 2006. His competitive district fueled a
strong challenge from attorney Kirsten Gillibrand. In April 2006,
Sweeney was allegedly sighted intoxicated at a fraternity
party.[129530] On October
31, a week before the election, a police report surfaced that
documented a 911 call from his wife asking for help because her
husband was "knocking her around the room". Despite denials from
both Sweeney and his wife, the report proved to be a turning point
and Gillibrand was victorious on election night, 53% to 47%. (For
details, see New York
20th congressional district election, 2006.)
- — Incumbent Sherwood Boehlert
(R) announced his retirement after 24 years, making this a seat of
considerable focus for the Democrats in the run up to the mid
terms. Boehlert is considered a moderate Republican, and the
district is considered to be competitive. George Bush won by 53% in
the 2004 election, but by only 3,000 votes in the 2000 presidential
election. The Republican nominee was state Senator
Ray Meier, while the Democratic nominee
was Oneida
County
District Attorney Mike
Arcuri. Both were locally popular and proven
vote-getters and the race was a toss-up. Arcuri defeated Meier 54%
to 45%.
North Carolina
Ohio
- — Bob Ney (R), the incumbent since 1995,
part of the Jack
Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal, withdrew from the race in
early August 2006, before pleading guilty a month later to criminal
charges. Zack Space, the
law director of the city of Dover
, was the
surprise winner of the Democratic nomination. Ney's formal
withdrawal on August 14 resulted in a
special election to choose his replacement; Ohio state Senator
Joy Padgett won with about 65% of the
vote. Her candidacy was subsequently damaged by news reports about
her business and personal bankruptcies. Space defeated Padgett, 62%
to 38%.
Pennsylvania
- —
Jason Altmire (D) upset incumbent
Republican Melissa Hart in a surprise
victory for the Democrats in this suburban Pittsburgh
district. Altmire's background was in health
care policy and legislative relations; he was overseer of the
University of
Pittsburgh Medical Center's Office of Charitable Giving before
leaving to run for office in June 2005. Hart had seemed untouchable
only a few months before the election, and was still generally
expected to win on Election Day. Hart blamed her defeat on
Altmire's campaign ads that tied her with the locally unpopular
president. Altmire defeated Hart, 52% to 48%.
- —
Curt Weldon (R) won reelection with 59%
of the vote in 2004, but represents a Democratic-leaning district
that incorporates much of Delaware County
in suburban Philadelphia. He faced retired
Navy Vice
Admiral Joe Sestak (D). On October
13, it was reported that Weldon and his daughter are being
investigated by the FBI, and two days later the FBI raided his
daughter's residence. Between Sestak's fundraising abilities, and
the investigation of Weldon and his daughter, Sestak defeated
Weldon, 56% to 44%.
- —
Mike Fitzpatrick (R) won election
for the first time in 2004 by a wide 56-42 margin over Virginia
"Ginny" Schrader, but his district, based in suburban Bucks County
, is politically moderate, having voted for
Democratic presidents and Republican congressmen since 1992.
His Democratic opponent in 2006 was retired Captain Patrick Murphy, an Iraq War veteran of the Army's
82nd Airborne. The Iraq War was the
major issue of the campaign. In 2005, Murphy proposed a plan for
phased withdrawal; Fitzpatrick stood by President Bush's
stay-the-course policy through most of the campaign, before calling
for a new plan. Ultimately, Murphy defeated Fitzpatrick by 1,518
votes.
- — Don Sherwood (R) had strong
backing as a result of redistricting in this heavy GOP district.
The Democrats didn't even field a candidate to run against him in
2002 and 2004. But in 2005 details were made public regarding a
five-year affair between Sherwood and Cynthia Ore, who sued Sherwood for $5.5 million
alleging physical abuse. On November 8, 2005, the two settled out
of court for an undisclosed amount. Sherwood was expected to win
the Republican primary easily over teacher Kathy Scott, as she had
very little money or campaign staff, but she polled a surprising
44% of the vote against him. His Democratic opponent was professor
and U.S. Naval Reserve officer Chris Carney. Carney led in the polls for most
of the fall. Carney defeated Sherwood 53% to 47%. For details, see
Pennsylvania
10th congressional district election, 2006.
Texas
- — Incumbent former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R) won the
primary, then retired, leaving his seat vacant, and dropped out of
the re-election race. These events followed a number of corruption
charges that made DeLay the focus of a September 28, 2005
indictment by a grand jury in Travis County
(which includes Austin
) over his
campaign finances related to Texans for a Republican
Majority (TRMPAC) and another political action committee,
ARMPAC.
In 2004, DeLay won 55% of the vote against a relatively unknown
Democrat, environmental lawyer Richard
Morrison, even though George W. Bush carried the suburban
Houston district with 64% of the vote. Democrats sued to keep Delay
as the Republican nominee when he withdrew, citing a lack of proof
of residence outside the district, since Texas law does not allow a
party to replace its nominee unless the candidate cannot run due to
extraordinary circumstances or if he or she moves away. The
Democrats won the suit, and Delay was forced to remain on the
ballot or leave his party without a nominee. Republicans quickly
rallied around Shelley
Sekula-Gibbs to run a write-in campaign to defeat Nick Lampson the Democratic nominee. Lampson
defeated Sekula-Gibbs 52%-42%.
- — In 2004, incumbent Henry Bonilla
(R) received nearly 70% of the vote. However, his
district, which includes several heavily Republican suburbs of San
Antonio, as well as Big Bend National Park
and much of Texas' border with Mexico, had to be
changed after a mid-2006 U.S.
Supreme Court
ruling that the redistricting efforts of the Texas
Legislature violated Voting Rights
Act protection of minorities — largely Hispanic Laredo
was in the 23rd District until the
redistricting. On August 4, a
federal court redrew the district and removed the portion of Webb
County that was in the district, eliminating the possibility of a
rematch with Cuellar, and added a heavily Democratic portion of San
Antonio, the home base of liberal former congressman Ciro Rodriguez. Rodriguez ran against Bonilla
in the all-candidate primary on November
7. [129532]. The winner of the now somewhat
irrelevant Democratic primary, Vietnam
War Combat Veteran Rick Bolanos, also ran in the November 7 election. The realigned district is
less Republican than the previous version, but Bonilla was still
favored against the crowded field of six Democrats, including
Rodriguez and Bolanos, and one Independent candidate. A majority
was required in this special election to avoid a runoff between the
top two contenders. Bonilla won the November
7 election with 49% of the vote, but failed to get the needed
50% of the vote to avoid the runoff. In that runoff, he faced
Rodriguez, who got 20% of the special election vote. Bonilla was
seen as being the favorite. He ignored Rodriguez until the final
days, then ran TV ads portraying him as politically aligned with
some Islamic terror supporters, which backfired. In the special
election however, Rodriguez was able to portray himself as part of
an incoming majority, which would help retain federal funding for
programs in the district. Rodriguez defeated Bonilla in the runoff
54% to 46%.
Vermont
- —
Incumbent Bernie Sanders (I), a
democratic socialist who
represented the entire state of Vermont
, ran for the Senate seat being vacated by Senator
Jim Jeffords. Vermont state Senate
President Pro Tempore Peter Welch
(D-Windsor
County
), the Democratic nominee, faced former Vermont
Adjutant General Martha Rainville,
Major General, USANG (ret.), the Republican nominee. Welch
was helped when state Representative David Zuckerman decided not to wage a
third-party campaign. Keith Stern, a businessman and zoning board
member from Springfield, ran as an Independent; Jane Newton, a
retired nurse, ran on the socialist Liberty Union line; and Jerry
Trudell [129533] ran as an Independent. Welch defeated
Rainville 53% to 45%.
Wisconsin
See also
References
- ABC News: ABC News
- In Cost and Vitriol, Race in Arizona Draws Notice -
New York Times
- California's 11th district primary election
results
- [1]
-
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2006/pages/results/states/FL/H/16/index.html>
Official results from Florida Secretary of
State
- http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/15059501.htm
-
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Congressman-Withdraws.html
- kdka.com - Altmire Pulls Off Upset Against Melissa
Hart
- Maryclaire Dale, "FBI raids home of Weldon's daughter, friend in
influence probe", Associated Press, October 16,
2006.
-
http://www.cqpolitics.com/2006/10/navy_vet_sestak_coming_closer.html
External links