Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2016 West Virginia House of Delegates election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2016 West Virginia House of Delegates election
← 2014
November 8, 2016
2018 →
 
PartyRepublicanDemocratic

District colors:

     Democratic (1+)     Republican (1+)
     Democratic (1)     Republican (1)

     Split delegation

Elections to theWest Virginia House of Delegates took place on November 8, 2016.[1] All 100 seats in theWest Virginia House of Delegates were up for election, with 13 Republican and 8 Democratic incumbents not running for re-election.[2] TheRepublican majority sustained a net loss of 1 seat, decreasing the majority from 64 seats to 63.[3] This soon changed whenDemocratRupert Phillips Jr. switched party affiliation to Independent in January 2017, and then to Republican in May 2017 reestablishing the 64–36 majority from 2014.[4]

Members

[edit]
DistrictRepresentatives
District 1 (2 seats)Pat McGeehan (Republican)

Mark Zatezalo (Republican)

District 2Phil Diserio (Democratic)
District 3 (2 seats)Erikka Lynn Storch (Republican)

Shawn Fluharty (Democratic)

District 4 (2 seats)Joe Canestraro (Democratic)

Michael Ferro (Democratic)

District 5Dave Pethtel (Democratic)
District 6William Romine (Republican)
District 7Jason Harshbarger (Republican)
District 8Bill Anderson (Republican)
District 9Ray Hollen (Republican)
District 10 (3 seats)Vernon Criss (Republican)

John R. Kelly (Republican)

Frank Deem (Republican)

District 11Martin Atkinson III (Republican)
District 12Steve Westfall (Republican)
District 13 (2 seats)Joshua Higginbotham (Republican)

Scott Brewer (Democratic)

District 14Jim Butler (Republican)
District 15Geoff Foster (Republican)
District 16 (3 seats)Sean Hornbuckle (Democratic)

Carol Miller (Republican)

Chuck Romine (Republican)

District 17 (2 seats)Matthew Rohrbach (Republican)

Chad Lovejoy (Democratic)

District 18Kelli Sobonya (Republican)
District 19 (2 seats)Kenneth Hicks (Democratic)

Robert Thompson (Democratic)

District 20Justin Marcum (Democratic)
District 21Mark Dean (Republican)
District 22 (2 seats)Zack Maynard (Republican)

Jeff Eldridge (Democratic)

District 23Rodney Miller (Democratic)
District 24 (2 seats)Ralph Rodighiero (Democratic)

Rupie Phillips (Democratic)

District 25Tony Paynter (Republican)
District 26Ed Evans (Republican)
District 27 (3 seats)Joe Ellington (Republican)

John Shott (Republican)

Marty Gearheart (Republican)

District 28 (2 seats)Roy Cooper (Republican)

John O'Neal (Republican)

District 29Rick Moye (Democratic)
District 30Mick Bates (Democratic)
District 31Lynne Arvon (Republican)
District 32 (3 seats)Tom Fast (Republican)

Kayla Kessinger (Republican)

Shirley Love (Democratic)

District 33Roger Hanshaw (Republican)
District 34Brent Boggs (Democratic)
District 35 (4 seats)Moore Capito (Republican)

Eric Nelson (Republican)

Andrew Byrd (Democratic)

Charlotte Lane (Republican)

District 36 (3 seats)Andrew Robinson (Democratic)

Larry Rowe (Democratic)

Brad White (Republican)

District 37Mike Pushkin (Democratic)
District 38Nancy Reagan Foster (Republican)
District 39Ronald Walters (Republican)
District 40Tim Armstead (Republican)
District 41Jordan Hill (Republican)
District 42 (2 seats)George Ambler (Republican)

Stephen Baldwin (Democratic)

District 43 (2 seats)William G. Hartman (Democratic)

Phil Isner (Democratic)

District 44Dana Lynch (Democratic)
District 45William Hamilton (Republican)
District 46Patrick S. Martin (Republican)
District 47Danny Wagner (Republican)
District 48 (4 seats)Danny Hamrick (Republican)

Ben Queen (Republican)

Richard Iaquinta (Democratic)

Timothy Miley (Democratic)

District 49Amy Summers (Republican)
District 50 (3 seats)Mike Caputo (Democratic)

Linda Longstreth (Democratic)

Guy Ward (Republican)

District 51 (5 seats)Barbara Fleischauer (Democratic)

Rodney Pyles (Democratic)

John Williams (Democratic)

Cindy Frich (Republican)

Joe Statler (Republican)

District 52Terri Funk Sypolt (Republican)
District 53Tony Lewis (Republican)
District 54Allen Evans (Republican)
District 55Isaac Sponaugle (Democratic)
District 56Gary Howell (Republican)
District 57Ruth Rowan (Republican)
District 58Daryl Cowles (Republican)
District 59Saira Blair (Republican)
District 60S. Marshall Wilson (Republican)
District 61Jason Barrett (Democratic)
District 62John Overington (Republican)
District 63Michael Folk (Republican)
District 64Eric Householder (Republican)
District 65Jill Upson (Republican)
District 66Paul Espinosa (Republican)
District 67Riley Moore (Republican)

Results by district

[edit]
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(October 2025)

District 35

[edit]
West Virginia House of Delegates District 35 election, 2016
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanMoore Capito14,82216.67%
DemocraticAndrew Byrd (incumbent)13,54615.23%
RepublicanEric Nelson (incumbent)11,88113.36%
RepublicanCharlotte Lane10,50511.81%
RepublicanKeith Pauley10,25111.53%
DemocraticBen Adams9,89911.13%
DemocraticThornton Cooper9,40410.57%
DemocraticBenjamin M. Sheridan8,6289.70%
Total votes88,936100.00%
Republicanhold
Democratichold
Republicanhold
Republicanhold

References

[edit]
  1. ^"West Virginia Election Results 2016: House Live Map by District, Real-Time Voting Updates".Election Hub. Retrieved2025-09-04.
  2. ^"West Virginia House of Delegates elections, 2016".Ballotpedia. Retrieved2025-09-04.
  3. ^"West Virginia House of Delegates elections, 2016".Ballotpedia. Retrieved2021-01-06.
  4. ^Johnson, Shauna (2017-01-26)."Logan County delegate leaves Democratic Party".WV MetroNews. Retrieved2021-01-06.
U.S.
President
U.S.
Senate
U.S.
House

(Election
ratings
)
Governors
Attorneys
general
State
legislatures
Mayors
Local
Statewide
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2016_West_Virginia_House_of_Delegates_election&oldid=1315520224"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp