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United States House of Representatives elections in Michigan, 2018

From Ballotpedia


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2018 U.S. House Elections in Michigan

Primary Date
August 7, 2018
GOP primaries • Democratic primaries

Partisan breakdownCandidates

Michigan's District Pages
District 1District 2District 3District 4District 5District 6District 7District 8District 9District 10District 11District 12District 13District 14

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2018 U.S. Senate Elections

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Contents

The2018 U.S. House of Representatives elections inMichigan took place onNovember 6, 2018. Voterselected 14 candidates to serve in theU.S. House, one from each of the state's 14 congressional districts.


Partisan breakdown

Heading into the November 6 election, the Republican Party held nine of the 14 congressional seats fromMichigan.

Members of the U.S. House from Michigan -- Partisan Breakdown
PartyAs of November 2018After the 2018 Election
    Democratic Party47
    Republican Party97
    Vacancy10
Total1414

Incumbents

Heading into the 2018 election, the incumbents for the 14 congressional districts were:

NamePartyDistrict
Jack BergmanEnds.pngRepublican1
Bill HuizengaEnds.pngRepublican2
Justin AmashEnds.pngRepublican3
John MoolenaarEnds.pngRepublican4
Dan KildeeElectiondot.pngDemocratic5
Fred UptonEnds.pngRepublican6
Tim WalbergEnds.pngRepublican7
Mike BishopEnds.pngRepublican8
Sander LevinElectiondot.pngDemocratic9
Paul MitchellEnds.pngRepublican10
David TrottEnds.pngRepublican11
Debbie DingellElectiondot.pngDemocratic12
Vacant13
Brenda LawrenceElectiondot.pngDemocratic14


2016 Pivot Counties

See also:Pivot Counties andCongressional districts intersecting with Pivot Counties

Michigan features nine congressional districts that, based on boundaries adopted after the 2010 census, intersected with one or morePivot Counties. These 206 Pivot Counties voted forDonald Trump (R) in 2016 after voting forBarack Obama (D) in 2008 and 2012.

The 206 Pivot Counties are located in 34 states. Iowa, with 31, had the most such counties. Heading into the 2018 elections, the partisan makeup of the108 congressional districts intersecting with Pivot Counties was more Republican than the partisan breakdown of the U.S. House. Of the 108 congressional districts that had at least one Pivot County, 63 percent were held by a Republican incumbent, while 55.4 percent of U.S. House seats were won by a Republican in the2016 elections.[1]


Candidates

See also:Statistics on U.S. Congress candidates, 2018
Candidate ballot access
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Find detailed information onballot access requirements in all 50 states and Washington, D.C.

District 1

See also:Michigan's 1st Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 1st Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General election candidates

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:

Matthew Morgan was disqualified from the primary ballot in May 2018, but successfully ran as a write-in candidate. He appeared on the general election ballot.[2]


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


District 2

See also:Michigan's 2nd Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 2nd Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General election

General election candidates

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


District 3

General candidates

General election candidates


Did not make the ballot:

Write-in candidates

Primary candidates

See also:Michigan's 3rd Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 3rd Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Grey.pngIndependents


District 4

See also:Michigan's 4th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 4th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General candidates

General election candidates

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


District 5

See also:Michigan's 5th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 5th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General election

General election candidates

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Libertarian PartyLibertarians

Withdrew


District 6

See also:Michigan's 6th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 6th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General election

General election candidates

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


District 7

See also:Michigan's 7th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 7th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General election

General election candidates

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


District 8

See also:Michigan's 8th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 8th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General candidates

General election candidates


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey


Libertarian PartyLibertarians


District 9

See also:Michigan's 9th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 9th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General candidates

General election candidates


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey


Green PartyGreen


District 10

See also:Michigan's 10th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 10th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General candidates

General election candidates


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Grey.pngIndependent


Green PartyGreen


District 11

See also:Michigan's 11th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 11th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General candidates

General election candidates


Candidate Connection = candidate completedBallotpedia's Candidate Connection survey

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Libertarian PartyLibertarian

Grey.pngIndependents


District 12

See also:Michigan's 12th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 12th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

General election

General election candidates


Did not make the ballot:

Primary candidates

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Republican Party Republican primary candidates


Green PartyGreen Party


Grey.pngSocialist Equality Party


District 13

General election

General election candidates


Did not make the ballot:

Write-in candidates

Primary candidates

See also:Michigan's 13th Congressional District special election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 13th Congressional District special election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)
See also:Michigan's 13th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
See also:Michigan's 13th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


Did not make the ballot:


Republican Party Republican primary candidates

No candidates filed for the Republican Party primary.


    Did not make the ballot:


    Minor Party general election candidates


    Did not make the ballot:

    Did not make the ballot


    District 14

    See also:Michigan's 14th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Democratic primary)
    See also:Michigan's 14th Congressional District election (August 7, 2018 Republican primary)

    General election

    General election candidates

    Primary candidates

    Democratic Party Democratic primary candidates


    Republican Party Republican primary candidates



    Wave election analysis

    See also:Wave elections (1918-2016)

    The termwave election is frequently used to describe an election cycle in which one party makessignificant electoral gains. How many seats would Republicans have had to lose for the 2018 midterm election to be considered a wave election?

    Ballotpedia examined the results of the 50 election cycles that occurred between 1918 and 2016—spanning from PresidentWoodrow Wilson's (D) second midterm in 1918 toDonald Trump's (R) first presidential election in 2016.We define wave elections as the 20 percent of elections in that period resulting in the greatest seat swings against the president's party.

    Applying this definition toU.S. House elections, we found that Republicans needed to lose48 seats for 2018 to qualify as awave election.

    The chart below shows the number of seats the president's party lost in the 11 U.S. House waves from 1918 to 2016.Click here to read the full report.

    U.S. House wave elections
    YearPresidentPartyElection typeHouse seats changeHouse majority[11]
    1932HooverRPresidential-97D
    1922HardingRFirst midterm-76R
    1938RooseveltDSecond midterm-70D
    2010ObamaDFirst midterm-63R (flipped)
    1920WilsonDPresidential-59R
    1946TrumanDFirst midterm-54R (flipped)
    1994ClintonDFirst midterm-54R (flipped)
    1930HooverRFirst midterm-53D (flipped)
    1942RooseveltDThird midterm-50D
    1966JohnsonDFirst midterm[12]-48D
    1974FordRSecond midterm[13]-48D

    See also

    Footnotes

    1. The raw data for this study was provided by Dave Leip ofAtlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.
    2. Detroit Free Press, "Michigan write-in candidate for Congress gets 29,293 votes," August 24, 2018
    3. Douglas Smith for Congress, "Home," accessed September 28, 2017
    4. Information submitted to Ballotpedia via email on February 17, 2018
    5. Facebook, "Jeremy Peruski for US Congress," accessed May 10, 2018
    6. Information submitted to Ballotpedia on February 27, 2018
    7. Federal Election Commission, "YOUNG, STEPHEN ROBERT NEALE," accessed September 28, 2017
    8. World Socialist Web Site, "Socialist Equality Party to run Niles Niemuth for Michigan’s 12th Congressional district," June 27, 2018
    9. The Detroit News, "John Conyers III plans to run for Congress as independent," July 2, 2018
    10. Detroit News, "Conyers III disqualified as independent candidate for Congress," July 31, 2018
    11. Denotes the party that had more seats in the U.S. House following the election.
    12. Lyndon Johnson's (D) first term began in November 1963 after the death of President John F. Kennedy (D), who was first elected in 1960. Before Johnson had his first midterm in 1966, he was re-elected president in 1964.
    13. Gerald Ford's (R) first term began in August 1974 following the resignation of President Richard Nixon (R), who was first elected in 1968 and was re-elected in 1972. Because Ford only served for two full months before facing the electorate, this election is classified as Nixon's second midterm.
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    Senators
    Representatives
    District 1
    District 2
    District 3
    District 4
    District 5
    District 6
    District 7
    District 8
    District 9
    District 10
    District 11
    District 12
    District 13
    Democratic Party (8)
    Republican Party (7)