Election results, 2020
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In the 2020 elections,Joe Biden (D) won the presidential election. Biden received 306 electoral votes andDonald Trump (R) received 232 electoral votes. In the national popular vote, Biden received 81.2 million votes and Trump received 74.2 million votes.
Democrats woncontrol of the U.S. Senate following two runoff elections in Georgia on January 5, 2021. As a result of the runoffs, Democrats and Republicans split the chamber 50-50, with Vice PresidentKamala Harris (D) having the tie-breaking vote. Democratsmaintained a majority in the U.S. House as a result of the 2020 elections. Democrats won 222 seats to Republicans' 212.
Thirteen states heldelections for one or more top-four state executive offices (governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, and secretary of state) in 2020. Eleven states held elections for governor, including seven with a Republican governor and four with a Democratic governor. Nine incumbents (six Republicans and three Democrats) ran for re-election, all of whom were elected to a new term.
Nine states held elections for lieutenant governor. This includes four states where the lieutenant governor runs on a ticket with the governor and five where the office is elected separately. The only state where partisan control of the office changed was Vermont. DemocratMolly Gray won the election to succeed incumbentDavid Zuckerman (VPP).
Two trifectas flipped from divided government to Republican trifecta control. Republicans won the governorship in Montana and flipped the New Hampshire state House and state Senate.
State legislative elections were held for seats in 86 chambers in 44 states. Heading into the election, Republicans held majorities in 59 state legislative chambers, Democrats held majorities in 39, and the Alaska House was under a power-sharing agreement.Republicans won control of both chambers of the New Hampshire state legislature.
On this page, you will find:
- Detailed results - a detailed chart showing results from called races
- Election help desk - links to articles to help you understand how election results are processed and reported and how election disputes are handled
- Congressional or state executive offices and chambers that changed parties - a listing of congressional and state executive offices and chambers that changed parties
- Ballot measure election results - results for statewide ballot measures
- Elections by state - a clickable map with links to state-by-state election coverage
- Links to further election analysis - links to more detailed analyses of 2020 state and local elections
Election updates
This section was updated in reverse-chronological order. All times are Eastern Standard Time.
January 20, 2021
January 7, 2021
- A joint session of Congress met to certify theElectoral College results.
December 14
- 7:30 p.m.: Former Vice PresidentJoe Biden (D) won theElectoral College with 306 votes to PresidentDonald Trump's (R) 232 votes.
November 24
- 9:00 a.m.: Election results are scheduled to be certified today in five states—Indiana, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio—and the District of Columbia.
November 23
- 6:00 p.m.: The General Services Administration (GSA)ascertained the results of the presidential election, identifyingJoe Biden as the apparent winner and granting him access to resources and funding to aid with the transition. The decision allows the Biden administration to coordinate with Trump administration departments related to the transfer of power.[2]
- 10:00 a.m.: A consensus of five media outlets has determined thatYoung Kim (R) won the general election inCalifornia's 39th Congressional District over incumbentGil Cisneros (D). Cisneros was first elected in 2018. The race was one of 56U.S. House rematches from 2018.
- 9:00 a.m.: Election results are scheduled to be certified today in four states—Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, and Pennsylvania.
November 21
- 3:00 p.m.: PresidentDonald Trump's campaign requested a recount of presidential election results inGeorgia. That recount will be conducted by rescanning ballots through tabulation machines, in contrast with the hand-count audit that concluded on Nov. 19. A losing candidate may also request a recount if the margin is less than or equal to 0.5%. This threshold was set in 2019 following the passage ofH.B. 319.
November 20
- 7:00 a.m.: Late last night, a consensus of five media outlets determined thatJoe Biden had won Georgia's 16 electoral votes after that state completed a hand-count audit of ballots cast in the presidential election. With all states called, Biden has won 306 electoral votes, and Trump won 232 electoral votes. Georgia Secretary of StateBrad Raffensperger (R) announced the results of the hand-count audit, which confirmed Biden's victory over PresidentDonald Trump (R) Thursday night. The audit revealed a 0.1053 percent discrepancy in the statewide vote total, and a 0.0099 percent variation in the margin of victory, between the hand count and the initial machine count. The audit uncovered approximately 5,000 ballots that were not tallied during the initial machine count, which election officials attributed to human error. This resulted in a net gain of 1,272 votes for Trump.[3][4]
November 19
- 1:00 p.m.: Virginia certified its election results Wednesday, two days later than originally scheduled. The certification was delayed because of a coronavirus outbreak at the voter registrar's office in Richmond, the state's fourth-largest city. Arkansas, Idaho, and Massachusetts also certified their Nov. 3 election results on Nov. 18. Georgia and North Dakota are scheduled to certify their election results Nov. 20.[5]
- 10:00 a.m.: A partial recount of the presidential election results requested by the Trump campaign began in Dane and Milwaukee counties. After deadlocking on a number of procedural points, the Wisconsin Elections Commission's three Democrats and three Republicans voted unanimously to approve the recount Nov. 18.[6]
November 18
- 12:40 p.m.: The presidential campaign of PresidentTrump wired $3 million to the Wisconsin Elections Commission to pay for a partial recount of that state's results. The campaign said it would file a petition later today for a recount in Dane and Milwaukee counties.[7]
- 9:00 a.m.: Florida certified its Nov. 3 election results on Nov. 17. Three states—Arkansas, Idaho, and Massachusetts—are scheduled to certify their results today.[8]
November 17
- 1:00 p.m.: Ballotpedia has determined that Alaska voters approvedBallot Measure 2. Ballot Measure 2 would replace partisan primaries with open top-four primaries and enact ranked-choice voting for general elections. It would be the first to enact a top-four primary system.
- 10:55 a.m.: A consensus of five media outlets has determined that both U.S. Senate races in Georgia will require runoff elections on Jan. 5, 2021.
- IncumbentDavid Perdue (R) andJon Ossoff (D) are the two candidates in the runoff in the state's regularSenate election for a full six-year term. As of November 17, results showed Perdue received 49.7% of the vote and Ossoff received 48.0%. Perdue was first elected to this seat in 2014.
- IncumbentKelly Loeffler (R) andRaphael Warnock are running in the runoff election for the remaining two years of the six-year term thatJohnny Isakson (R) was elected to in2016. Gov.Brian Kemp (R) appointed Loeffler, and she was sworn in on January 6. Twenty-one candidates ran in the special election, including eight Democrats, six Republicans, five independents, one Green Party candidate, and one Libertarian. Results reported as of November 17 showed Warnock had received 33% of the vote to Loeffler's 26%.
- 10:45 a.m.:Burgess Owens was declared the winner in the election forUtah's 4th Congressional District, defeating incumbentBen McAdams (D) andJohn Molnar (L). In2018, McAdams defeated incumbentMia Love (R) 50.1% to 49.9%—a margin of 694 votes.
- 10:00 a.m.: State elections officials inVirginia delayed certifying the state's results until later this week due to a coronavirus outbreak at the voter registrar's office in Richmond, the state's capital and fourth-largest city. All other cities and counties in Virginia have completed certifying results. Floridacertifies its election results today.[9]
November 16
- 4:15 p.m.: According to areport in theMilwaukee Journal Sentinel, PresidentDonald Trump (R) must decide by Wednesday whether to pursue a statewide recount of Wisconsin's presidential election results. The Trump campaign would be responsible for paying the cost of the recount, which the state's election commission said was $7.9 million. A recount would begin Nov. 19 and be completed by Dec. 1.[10]
- 10:00 a.m.:Virginia is scheduled to certify election results today.Florida will certify their election results Nov. 17. In total, seven states willcertify their Nov. 3 election results this week.
November 14
- 7:50 a.m.: PresidentDonald Trump (R) was declared by a consensus of five media outlets to be the winner of the presidential race in North Carolina, leaving Georgia as the only state where the presidential elections has not been determined. Based on the states that have been called so far,Joe Biden has won at least 290 electoral votes, and Trump has won at least 232 electoral votes.
November 13
- 9:30 p.m.: Ballotpedia has determined thatAlaska Ballot Measure 1 was not approved. Ballot Measure 1 would have increased taxes on certain oil production fields located in the area known as the North Slope. Based on election results as of Nov. 13, the measure was opposed by 58% of voters.
- 10:50 a.m.: Ballotpedia has determined that voters have approvedCalifornia Proposition 14. The measure authorizes the state to issue $5.5 billion in general obligation bonds for the state's stem cell research institute and makes changes to the institute's governance structure and programs. Based on election results as of Nov. 13, the measure is supported by 51% of voters and opposed by 49%.
- 9:30 a.m.:Joe Biden (D) was declared by a consensus of five media outlets to be the winner of the presidential race in Arizona. Based on states that have been called so far, Biden has won at least 290 electoral votes, and PresidentDonald Trump (R) has won at least 217 electoral votes. The presidential race remains uncalled in two states—Georgia and North Carolina.
- 1:50 a.m.: For the first time since preliminary election results from Alaska were released on Nov. 3, support forAlaska Ballot Measure 2 moved ahead of opposition.
- Ballot Measure 2 would replace partisan primaries with open top-four primaries and enact ranked-choice voting for general elections. If Ballot Measure 2 is approved, Alaska would be the second state (after Maine) to enact ranked choice voting for state-level elections. It would be the first to enact a top-four primary system.
- The election results report released Thursday evening showed support for “yes” leading “no,” 50.08% to 49.92%, or 497 votes.
November 12
- 3:00 p.m.:Wyoming Constitutional Amendment A, known as the Municipal Debt for Sewage Systems Measure, has failed since it required approval by a majority of voters casting a ballot at the election. The measure would have removed the constitutional limit on debt that a municipality may incur for municipal sewer projects and allowed the legislature to establish rules for additional debt for municipal sewage projects. Not voting on Amendment A was the equivalent of voting against it. Eleven percent of voters either left Amendment A blank or filled in both "for" and "against." Of those voters that cast their ballot on the measure, 51% approved and 49% were opposed.
- 8:30 a.m.: Ballotpedia has projected thatCalifornia Proposition 15, which would have created a split roll property tax, was defeated. Based on votes tallied through Nov. 11, 48.2% of voters approved the measure and 51.8% opposed it. Proposition 15 would have required commercial and industrial properties, except those zoned as commercial agriculture, to be taxed based on their market value, rather than their purchase price. More than $148 million was raised for and against Proposition 15, making the measure the second most expensive of 2020. As of November 11, two statewide California ballot propositions remain uncalled—Proposition 14 and Proposition 19.
November 11
- 8:00 p.m.: A consensus of five media outlets (ABC News, CNN, Fox News, NBC News, andThe New York Times) have called enough races to confirm that Democrats will retain their majority in theHouse of Representatives. Four hundred twenty of the 435 races have been called, with Democrats having won 218 seats to Republicans' 202.
- 7:10 p.m.: North Carolina Sen.Thom Tillis (R) was declared the winner in hisre-election race overCal Cunningham (D),Kevin E. Hayes (Constitution Party), andShannon Bray (L). Tillis was first elected in2014, defeating incumbentKay Hagan (D) 48.8% to 47.3%.
- 5:20 p.m.: Media outlets project that theArizona House of Representatives will remain controlled by Republicans. TheAlaska House of Representatives remains the only state legislative chamber that is yet uncalled. Republicans flipped control of the New Hampshire state House and Senate. Eight-three state legislative chambers that held elections Nov. 3 did not change partisan control.
- 1:30 p.m.: PresidentDonald Trump (R) was declared by a consensus of five media outlets to be the winner of Alaska's three electoral votes. The presidential race remains uncalled in three states: Arizona, Georgia, and North Carolina. Based on states that have been called so far, Biden has won at least 279 electoral votes, and Trump has won at least 217 electoral votes.
- 1:25 p.m.: Sen.Dan Sullivan (R) was declared the winner of theU.S. Senate seat from Alaska, defeating Alaskan Independence Party candidateJohn Howe, independentAl Gross, and three write-in candidates. Sullivan was first elected in 2014.
- 9:25 a.m.: Four hundred seventeen of the 435 races for the U.S. House of Representatives have been called, with Democrats having been declared the winner in 216 districts to Republicans' 201.
November 10
- 4:10 p.m.:Beth Van Duyne (R) was declared the winner in the election forTexas' 24th Congressional District. Incumbent Rep.Kenny Marchant (R), who was first elected in 2004, did not run for re-election. Van Duyne worked as a regional administrator for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in the Trump administration. She served as the Mayor of Irving from 2011-2017.
- 3:30 p.m.: TwoU.S. Senate seats and 25U.S. House seats remain too close to call.
- 10:00 a.m.: Ballotpedia had called108 statewide ballot measures, of which 82 were approved and 26 were defeated. The remaining 12 (out of the 120 total on Nov. 3) remain uncalled.
- 8:52 a.m.: Voters in Puerto Rico approved anon-binding referendum that asked: “Should Puerto Rico be immediately admitted into the Union as a state?” “Yes” received 623,053 or 52.3% as of votes recorded on November 9. While the ballot measure itself cannot compel the U.S. Congress to act on the issue of Puerto Rico's political status, the ballot measure contained a provision authorizing the governor to appoint a seven-member commission to represent Puerto Rico in matters and negotiations related to achieving statehood. The commission will meet to develop a transition plan, which the governor can approve or reject, and present the plan to Congress and the President.
November 9
- 4:28 p.m.: IncumbentAbigail Spanberger (D) was declared the winner inVirginia's 7th Congressional District overNick Freitas (R). Spanberger was first elected in 2018, defeating incumbentDave Brat (R) 50% to 48%.
- 12:03 p.m.: IncumbentConor Lamb (D) was declared the winner inPennsylvania's 17th Congressional District overSean Parnell (R). Lamb was first elected in a March 2018 special election in what was then the 18th Congressional District. Following court-ordered redistricting later that year, Lamb won election to the new 17th District 56.3% to 43.7% over Keith Rothfus (R).
- 11:41 a.m.:Carolyn Bourdeaux (D) defeatedRich McCormick (R) inGeorgia's 7th Congressional District. Incumbent Rep.Rob Woodall (R), who was first elected in 2010, did not run for re-election in 2020. Bourdeaux was the Democratic nominee in 2018 and lost the general election to Woodall that year by 433 votes—50.1% to 49.9%.
November 8
- 9:34 a.m.: IncumbentDavid Schweikert (R) defeatedHiral Tipirneni (D) inArizona's 6th Congressional District election.
November 7
- 3:48 p.m.: Incumbent Sen.Susan Collins (R) defeatedSara Gideon (D) and five others in theU.S. Senate race in Maine.
- 3:21 p.m.: IncumbentJeff Van Drew (R) was called as the winner overAmy Kennedy (D) inNew Jersey's 2nd Congressional District. Van Drew was first elected in 2018 as a Democrat after defeatingSeth Grossman (R) 53% to 45%. In December 2019, Van Drew switched his party affiliation from Democratic to Republican. The day before, he was one of two House Democrats to vote against both articles of impeachment against PresidentDonald Trump (R).
- 11:47 a.m.: Former Vice PresidentJoe Biden (D) is the projected winner of the 2020 presidential election, according to a consensus call from the ABC News, CNN, Fox News, NBC News, and The New York Times. Projected to win Pennsylvania, Biden has won at least 273 electoral votes, putting him over the threshold of 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency. PresidentDonald Trump (R) won at least 213 electoral votes. Races remain too close to call in four battleground states: Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, and North Carolina. Biden currently leads in the first three states, totaling 33 electoral votes. Trump leads in North Carolina, which has 15 electoral votes.
- 11:24 a.m.:George Gascón defeated incumbentJackie Lacey in the nonpartisangeneral election for Los Angeles County District Attorney, the nation's largest local prosecutorial district. Gascón served two terms as San Francisco District Attorney, winning election to succeed Kamala Harris in 2011 and winning re-election unopposed in 2015. He did not seek election to a third term in 2019. Lacey was first elected as Los Angeles County District Attorney in 2012 and was re-elected unopposed in 2016.
- 10:51 a.m.: IncumbentKim Wyman (R) defeatedGael Tarleton (D) in theelection for Washington Secretary of State, winning a third term as the state's top elections administrator. Wyman was first elected to the office in 2012. Her win continues Republicans' winning streak in Washington Secretary of State elections. No Democrat has won election to the office since 1960.
- 10:44 a.m.:Tony Gonzales (R) was called as the winner inTexas' 23rd Congressional District overGina Ortiz Jones (D) andBeto Villela (L) . The seat was left open following Will Hurd's (R) retirement. The district was one of five held by Republicans that Hillary Clinton (D) had carried in the 2016 presidential election.
- 10:27 a.m.: IncumbentElaine Luria (D) was declared the winner inVirginia's 2nd Congressional District over Scott Taylor (R) and David Foster (I). This was one of 30 U.S. House districts Democrats were defending this year that Donald Trump (R) carried in 2016.
- 10:05 a.m.: IncumbentTom Malinowski (D) defeated challengerThomas Kean Jr. (R) inNew Jersey's 7th Congressional District. Malinowski was first elected in 2018, when he defeated incumbentLeonard Lance (R), 52% to 47%, becoming the first Democrat to win election from the district since 1978.
- 9:48 a.m.: IncumbentFrench Hill (R) was called as the winner inArkansas' 2nd Congressional District overJoyce Elliott (D). Hill was first elected in 2014.
November 6
- 2:12 p.m.: Incumbent Rep.Scott Perry (R) was declared the winner overEugene DePasquale (D) in Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional District.
- 12:52 p.m.: Arizona voters approveProposition 208 which would enact a 3.50% income tax, in addition to the existing income tax and distribute the revenue to teacher and classroom support staff salaries, teacher mentoring and retention programs, career and technical education programs, and the Arizona Teachers Academy.
- 12:47 p.m.: California voters rejectedProposition 18, which would have allowed 17-year-olds who will be 18 at the time of the next general election to vote in primary and special elections. Currently, 18 states, along with Washington, D.C., allow 17-year-olds who will be 18 by the time of the general election to vote in primaries.
- 12:09 p.m.:Mark Kelly (D) defeated incumbentMartha McSally (R) and 17 write-in candidates in the special election for Arizona's U.S. Senate seat. Kelly will complete the remainder of the late-Sen.John McCain's term, meaning that the seat will be up for election in 2022.
- 9:22 a.m.:Peter Meijer (R) was declared the winner in Michigan's 3rd Congressional District overHillary Scholten (D). IncumbentJustin Amash (L) didn't seek re-election. Amash was elected as a Republican and changed his affiliation to independent in 2019 and Libertarian in 2020. So far, 391 of 435 House races have been called. Democrats have won 201 and Republicans 190.
November 5
- 8:33 p.m.: Two U.S. House seats in Florida currently held by Democrats were called as flips for Republicans. In Florida's 26th Congressional District,Carlos Gimenez (R) defeated Rep.Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D). In the Florida's 27th District,Maria Elvira Salazar (R) was declared the winner over Rep.Donna Shalala (D). Both Democratic representatives were first elected in 2018.
- 5:15 p.m.: Vote counting continues in the presidential race with Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, and Pennsylvania releasing updated results. No new states were called for either candidate Thursday.
- 11:06 a.m.: IncumbentGary Peters (D) defeatedJohn James (R) and three other candidates for the United States Senate seat from Michigan. Peters was first elected in 2014. This was James' second run for the U.S. Senate after challenging Sen.Debbie Stabenow (D) in 2018. Peters was first elected in 2014
- 8:30 a.m.:Nancy Mace (R) was called as the winner over incumbentJoe Cunningham (D) in South Carolina’s 1st Congressional District. Cunningham was first elected in 2018. Before then, Republicans had represented the 1st District since 1981.
- 7:34 a.m.: IncumbentChip Roy (R) won re-election over three candidates in Texas’ 21st Congressional District. Roy was first elected in 2018.
November 4
- 9:39 p.m.: Nevada votersapproved four ballot questions that would do the following: recognize the marriages of couples regardless of gender; revise duties of the State Board of Pardons Commissioners; create a constitutional right to certain voting procedures and policies; and require electric utilities to acquire 50% of their electricity from renewable resources by 2030. A fifth measure—concerning the constitutional status of the Board of Regents—is still too close to call.
- 9:39 p.m.: Rhode Island residentsvoted to remove "Providence Plantations" from the state's official name by a vote of 53%-47%. At the time of the election, the state's official name was the "State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations."
- 6:38 p.m.:Bob Good (R) defeatedCameron Webb (D) for Virginia's 5th Congressional District. Good was one of five Republicans to defeat an incumbent U.S. representative in a primary or convention this year when he won the Republican nomination over Rep.Denver Riggleman (R) at the district's primary convention.
- 5:19 p.m.: IncumbentFred Upton (R) won re-election in Michigan's 6th Congressional District. Upton was first elected in 1986.
- 5:08 p.m.: Incumbent Rep.Lucy McBath (D) defeatedKaren Handel (R) in the general election to represent Georgia's 6th Congressional District. The election was one of 56 U.S. House elections between the same two candidates who ran in 2018.
- 5:05 p.m.: IncumbentElissa Slotkin (D) was declared the winner overPaul Junge (R) andJoe Hartman (L) in Michigan's 8th Congressional District.
- 4:01 p.m.:Ashley Hinson (R) defeated incumbentAbby Finkenauer (D) in the general election for Iowa's 1st Congressional District.
- 3:53 p.m.:Yvette Herrell (R) defeated incumbent Rep.Xochitl Torres Small (D) andSteve Jones (I) in New Mexico's 2nd Congressional District.
- 3:51 p.m.: IncumbentSteve Chabot (R) defeatedKate Schroder (D) andKevin Kahn (L) in thegeneral election for Ohio's 1st Congressional District.
- 1:40 p.m.: Michigan voters approvedtwo amendments to the state constitution.
- 12:00 p.m.: 49.9% of all elections are called and not subject to a recount or lawsuit, while 50.1% are uncalled and not subject to a recount or lawsuit
- Two races are currently called but subject to a recount or lawsuit
- One race is currently uncalled and subject to a recount or lawsuit
- 11:41 a.m. Illinois voters rejected aballot measure that would have allowed the state to change its personal income tax to a graduated income tax.
- 10:43 a.m. The New Hampshire House of Representatives has flipped from Democratic to Republican control. It was under Democratic control since the 2018 elections. As a result, New Hampshire will have a Republican trifecta. Gov.Chris Sununu (R) won re-election and the New Hampshire State Senate also flipped from Democratic to Republican control. Along with Republicans gaining trifecta control in Montana, it is projected that Republicans will have 22 trifectas and Democrats nine. Eight states are projected to have divided government. It was too early to call one Republican-held trifecta, six Democratic-held trifectas, and four divided governments.
- 9:30 a.m.: Democratic candidates won elections for state attorney general and secretary of state in Oregon, which means that Oregon will have a Democratic triplex. Gov.Kate Brown (D) was last elected in 2018 and that office was not up for election in 2020.
- 8:51 a.m.: Republicans won the elections for state attorney general and secretary of state in Montana, which along withGreg Gianforte's win in the governor's race, means Montana will have a Republican triplex.
- 8:41 a.m.: The New Hampshire State Senate has flipped from Democratic to Republican control. It was under Democratic control since the 2018 elections.
- 3:20 a.m.: Incumbent Sen.Steve Daines (R) defeats Gov.Steve Bullock (D) in Montana's U.S. Senate election.
- 3:06 a.m.: Rep. Greg Gianforte (R) defeatsMike Cooney (D) and two others to win Montana's open-seat gubernatorial race. Along with Republican control of both chambers of the state legislature, this means Montana will have a Republican trifecta. Gov.Steve Bullock (D) was term-limited and unable to run for re-election. The state has had divided government since 2004.
- 1:36 a.m.: Colorado voters approveProposition 118-a paid family and medical leave program-in a vote of 57% to 43%.
November 3
- 11:30 p.m.:Tommy Tuberville (R) wins the Alabama U.S. Senate seat currently held by Sen.Doug Jones (D)
- 10:54 p.m.: Oklahoma voters defeatboth statewide ballot measures on the November ballot.
- 10:13 p.m.: Gov.John Hickenlooper (D) wins the Colorado U.S. Senate seat currently held by Sen.Cory Gardner (R)
- 10:13 p.m.: New Jersey voters approveQuestion 1 to legalize marijuana.
- 9:45 p.m.: D.C. voters approve aninitiative regarding psilocybin mushrooms.
- 8:48 p.m.: Senate Majority LeaderMitch McConnell (R) defeatsAmy McGrath (D) in Kentucky's U.S. Senate election.
Presidential election results
Results by state
Election Help Desk
We tracked all of the elections in ourcoverage scope subject to a recount or a lawsuit.Click here for more information.
Congressional or state executive offices and chambers that changed parties
The following tables showcongressional seats,state legislative chambers,gubernatorial offices,attorney general offices, andsecretary of state offices that changed party control as a result of the 2020 elections.
| U.S. Senate seats which switched parties in the 2020 general elections | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| State | Pre-election control | Post-election control | |
| Alabama | Doug Jones![]() | Tommy Tuberville![]() | |
| Arizona | Martha McSally![]() | Mark Kelly![]() | |
| Colorado | Cory Gardner![]() | John Hickenlooper![]() | |
| Georgia | Kelly Loeffler![]() | Raphael Warnock![]() | |
| Georgia | David Perdue![]() | Jon Ossoff![]() | |
| Flipped state legislative chambers, 2020 elections | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State | Chamber | Pre-election control | Post-election control | |
| New Hampshire | Senate | Democrats![]() | Republicans![]() | |
| New Hampshire | House | Democrats![]() | Republicans![]() | |
| Gubernatorial offices that changed party hands, 2020 elections | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State | Pre-election control | Post-election control | ||
| Montana | Steve Bullock![]() | Greg Gianforte![]() | ||
| Attorney general offices that changed party control, 2020 elections | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| State | Pre-election control | Post-election control | |
| Secretary of State offices that changed party control, 2020 elections | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State | Pre-election control | Post-election control | ||
| Oregon | Bev Clarno![]() | Shemia Fagan![]() | ||
Ballot measures
- See also:2020 ballot measure election results
(click the arrows to the right or left to see other highlighted results)
California Proposition 22 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 9,958,425 | 58.63% | |||
| No | 7,027,820 | 41.37% | ||
This measure requires either (a)60 percent of votes cast on the ballot measure itself or (b) a simple majority of all of those voting in the election.
Illinois Allow for Graduated Income Tax Amendment | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| Yes | 2,683,490 | 46.73% | ||
| 3,059,411 | 53.27% | |||
California Proposition 16 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| Yes | 7,217,064 | 42.77% | ||
| 9,655,595 | 57.23% | |||
Oregon Measure 109, Psilocybin Mushroom Services
Oregon Measure 109 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 1,270,057 | 55.75% | |||
| No | 1,008,199 | 44.25% | ||
Oregon Measure 110, Drug Decriminalization and Addiction Treatment
Oregon Measure 110 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 1,333,268 | 58.46% | |||
| No | 947,313 | 41.54% | ||
Alaska Ballot Measure 2, Top-Four Ranked-Choice Voting
Alaska Ballot Measure 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 174,032 | 50.55% | |||
| No | 170,251 | 49.45% | ||
Massachusetts Question 2, Ranked-Choice Voting
Massachusetts Question 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| Yes | 1,549,919 | 45.22% | ||
| 1,877,447 | 54.78% | |||
Florida Amendment 3, Top-Two Open Primaries
60% supermajority required
Florida Amendment 3 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| Yes | 5,854,468 | 57.03% | ||
| 4,410,768 | 42.97% | |||
California Proposition 15 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| Yes | 8,213,054 | 48.03% | ||
| 8,885,569 | 51.97% | |||
Colorado Proposition 118 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 1,804,546 | 57.75% | |||
| No | 1,320,386 | 42.25% | ||
California Proposition 25 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| Yes | 7,232,380 | 43.59% | ||
| 9,358,226 | 56.41% | |||
Arizona Proposition 207 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 1,956,440 | 60.03% | |||
| No | 1,302,458 | 39.97% | ||
Montana I-190 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 341,037 | 56.90% | |||
| No | 258,337 | 43.10% | ||
South Dakota Constitutional Amendment A | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 225,260 | 54.18% | |||
| No | 190,477 | 45.82% | ||
Trifectas
As a result of the 2020 elections, the country had 23 Republican-held trifectas, 15 Democratic-held trifectas, and 12 divided governments, as illustrated by the table below.
| Change in state government trifectas, 2020 elections | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trifecta status | Before | After | Net | |
Democratic trifectas![]() | 15 | 15 | 0 | |
Republican trifectas![]() | 21 | 23 | +2 | |
| Divided government | 14 | 12 | -2 | |
The map below shows trifecta statuses following the 2020 election.
The map below shows trifecta control in states going into the 2020 election.
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See also
- Presidential election, 2020
- U.S. Senate elections, 2020
- United States House of Representatives elections, 2020
- State legislative elections, 2020
- State executive official elections, 2020
Footnotes
- ↑CBS, "President Biden takes office, moving quickly to implement agenda," January 21, 2021
- ↑Associated Press, "US agency ascertains Biden as winner, lets transition begin," November 24, 2020
- ↑Georgia Secretary of State, "Historic First Statewide Audit of Paper Ballots Upholds Result of Presidential Race," November 19, 2020
- ↑The New York Times, "Where Georgia’s Hand Recount Differed From the Initial Tally, by County," November 19, 2020
- ↑Richmond Times-Dispatch, "State Board of Elections unanimously certifies Virginia's election results," November 18, 2020
- ↑Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Wisconsin recount gets off to a rough start as Elections Commission repeatedly clashes," November 19, 2020
- ↑Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Trump campaign moves to seek recount of ballots in Wisconsin in liberal Milwaukee and Dane counties," November 18, 2020
- ↑Tampa Bay Times, "Florida certifies voting results for president and other races," November 17, 2020
- ↑Richmond Times-Dispatch, "Virginia delays statewide certification of election results, citing Richmond office's COVID outbreak," November 16, 2020
- ↑Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Trump campaign would have to pay nearly $8 million for Wisconsin recount," November 16, 2020
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