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All 11 Virginia seats to theUnited States House of Representatives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The2022 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia were held on November 8, 2022, to elect the 11U.S. representatives from thestate ofVirginia, one from each of the state's 11congressional districts. The elections coincided withother elections to the House of Representatives. Pursuant to state law, primaries organized through the Department of Elections were held on June 21, 2022 (the third Tuesday of June). However, some Republican firehouse primaries were held on dates as late as May 21, 2022.[1][2][3]
Following the passage ofQuestion 1 in the2020 elections, a bipartisan redistricting commission was created. The commission holds 16 members: four from theHouse of Delegates, four from theSenate of Virginia, and eight citizens. It had 60 days following the release of the2020 census data or until July 1, 2021, whichever was later, to approve a map, which had to be approved by theGeneral Assembly.
As the2020 census data was released on August 12, 2021[4] the deadline was set to October 11, 2021. Early in the commission meetings the Democrat and Republican sides both hired partisan map makers and legal advisers. This created worry they would cause the commission to become too partisan to create a compromise map. This was proved true after it became clear that the commission would not create a Congressional map within the deadline after it failed to create any progress on a starting draft for theGeneral Assembly maps, which it had solely focused on. The failure of the commission was shown even more clearly when, out of growing frustration from the lack of compromise, three Democratic members of the commission walked out, breaking any chance of a deal.[5] After the walkout no other progress was made and the deadline passed, handing the redistricting process over to theVirginia Supreme Court.
Following the rules established by Question 1, the court ordered both Democrats and Republicans to create a list of nominees to be selected asspecial masters for a map. However, the court threw out 1 of the 3 Republican nominees and ordered a replacement as they found past ties to Republican leadership.[6] Once the Republican list was re-submitted, the court started reviewing both parties' lists again and pickedSean Trende as the Republican nominee andBernard Grofman as the Democratic nominee.[7] On December 8 the twospecial masters had announced the completion of the draft map for theHouse of Representatives.[8] However, following the announcement it came with public backlash over the handling of incumbents, mostly around the new 7th district. Following the public comment period, the map was almost completely redrawn and a revised map was released on December 28.[9] The new map's announcement ended the nearly six-month redistricting process.

The new court-approvedmap completely changed every district, with the largest changes being in the1st,2nd,7th, and10th districts. The first district previously held a significant southern portion ofNorthern Virginia and was replaced with the western parts ofHenrico andChesterfield counties. These changes made it more Republican.[10] The second district shifted more Republican as it previously heldWilliamsburg City,York County, eastern portions ofHampton City, and northern parts ofNorfolk City. These regions were generally Democratic and were replaced with the southern portions ofChesapeake City,Suffolk City,Isle of Wight County,Franklin City, and eastern parts ofSouthampton County, which are generally Republican areas. These changes made it less Republican.[10] Unlike the 1st and 2nd districts, the new 7th district was entirely remade. The new district now holds the eastern parts ofPrince William County and the entirety ofCulpeper,Madison,Greene,Orange,Stafford,King George,Spotsylvania, andCaroline counties. These areas combined are more Democratic than the former Richmond suburbs and rural central Virginia counties which made up the old 7th district.[10] The last major change district was the 10th district, which removedFrederick County,Winchester City,Clarke County, and western parts ofFairfax County. These were replaced by the addition of westernPrince William County,Fauquier County, andRappahannock County. This made the district more Republican.[10]
| Party | Candidates | Votes | Seats | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | No. | +/– | % | |||
| Democratic Party | 11 | 1,572,296 | 51.59% | 6 | 54.54% | ||
| Republican Party | 11 | 1,462,049 | 47.97% | 5 | 45.46% | ||
| Independent | 2 | 7,466 | 0.24% | 0 | 0.0% | ||
| Write-in | 11 | 5,918 | 0.19% | 0 | 0.0% | ||
| Total | 35 | 3,047,729 | 100% | 11 | 100% | ||
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County and independent city results Wittman: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Jones: 50–60% 60–70% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 1st district is based in the westernChesapeake Bay and includes portions of suburbanRichmond. Within the district are westernHenrico andChesterfield counties. Other localities in the district includeColonial Beach,Mechanicsville, andWilliamsburg. The incumbent was RepublicanRob Wittman, who was re-elected with 58.2% of the vote in 2020. On November 8, 2022, Congressman Wittman was re-elected.
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid R | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid R | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe R | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Likely R | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe R | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid R | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid R | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid R | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe R | September 28, 2022 |
Organizations
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Rob Wittman (incumbent) | 191,828 | 56.0 | |
| Democratic | Herb Jones | 147,229 | 43.0 | |
| Independent | David Foster | 3,388 | 1.0 | |
| Write-in | 297 | 0.1 | ||
| Total votes | 342,742 | 100.0 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
| Locality[30] | Rob Wittman Republican | Herb Jones Democratic | Various candidates Other parties | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Chesterfield (part) | 39,866 | 52.27% | 35,601 | 46.68% | 806 | 1.06% | 4,265 | 5.59% | 76,273 |
| Essex | 2,498 | 59.19% | 1,696 | 40.19% | 26 | 0.62% | 802 | 19.00% | 4,220 |
| Gloucester | 10,921 | 70.65% | 4,306 | 27.86% | 231 | 1.49% | 6,615 | 42.79% | 15,458 |
| Hanover (part) | 28,401 | 65.73% | 14,401 | 33.33% | 405 | 0.94% | 14,000 | 32.40% | 43,207 |
| Henrico (part) | 34,120 | 45.70% | 39,737 | 53.23% | 796 | 1.07% | -5,617 | -7.52% | 74,653 |
| James City | 19,342 | 51.17% | 18,090 | 47.85% | 371 | 0.98% | 1,252 | 3.31% | 37,803 |
| King and Queen | 1,869 | 63.83% | 1,023 | 34.94% | 36 | 1.23% | 846 | 28.89% | 2,928 |
| King William | 5,411 | 71.68% | 2,074 | 27.47% | 64 | 0.85% | 3,337 | 44.20% | 7,549 |
| Lancaster | 3,211 | 58.84% | 2,188 | 40.10% | 58 | 1.06% | 1,023 | 18.75% | 5,457 |
| Mathews | 3,065 | 69.67% | 1,239 | 28.17% | 95 | 2.16% | 1,826 | 41.51% | 4,399 |
| Middlesex | 3,351 | 65.35% | 1,716 | 33.46% | 61 | 1.19% | 1,635 | 31.88% | 5,128 |
| New Kent | 7,567 | 68.35% | 3,417 | 30.86% | 87 | 0.79% | 4,150 | 37.49% | 11,071 |
| Northumberland | 4,027 | 65.13% | 2,093 | 33.85% | 63 | 1.02% | 1,934 | 31.28% | 6,183 |
| Poquoson | 4,271 | 76.46% | 1,250 | 22.38% | 65 | 1.16% | 3,021 | 54.08% | 5,586 |
| Richmond County | 2,005 | 71.92% | 764 | 27.40% | 19 | 0.68% | 1,241 | 44.51% | 2,788 |
| Westmoreland | 4,333 | 61.43% | 2,642 | 37.46% | 78 | 1.11% | 1,691 | 23.98% | 7,053 |
| Williamsburg | 1,656 | 32.50% | 3,352 | 65.79% | 87 | 1.71% | -1,696 | -33.29% | 5,095 |
| York | 15,914 | 57.07% | 11,640 | 41.74% | 333 | 1.19% | 4,274 | 15.33% | 27,887 |
| Totals | 191,828 | 55.97% | 147,229 | 42.96% | 3,681 | 1.07% | 44,599 | 13.01% | 342,738 |
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County and independent city results Kiggans: 50–60% 60–70% Luria: 50–60% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 2nd district is based inHampton Roads, containing the cities ofChesapeake,Franklin,Suffolk, andVirginia Beach. Virginia'sEastern Shore is also located within the district. The incumbent was DemocratElaine Luria, who was re-elected with 51.6% of the vote in 2020. Despite her home inNorfolk no longer being in the district, Luria ran for re-election in this seat. On November 8, 2022, State Senator Jen Kiggans won the election to the district, unseating Luria.
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| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size[a] | Margin of error | Tommy Altman | Jarome Bell | Jen Kiggans | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basswood Research (R)[37][A] | May 24–26, 2022 | 400 (LV) | ± 4.9% | 9% | 8% | 43% | 40% |

| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Jen Kiggans | 23,300 | 55.7 | |
| Republican | Jarome Bell | 11,330 | 27.1 | |
| Republican | Tommy Altman | 5,972 | 14.3 | |
| Republican | Andy Baan | 1,237 | 3.0 | |
| Total votes | 41,839 | 100.0 | ||
| No. | Date | Host | Moderator | Link | Democratic | Republican |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key: P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn | ||||||
| Elaine Luria | Jen Kiggans | |||||
| 1 | Oct. 12, 2022 | Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce WTKR-TV | [39] | P | P | |
| 2[40] | Oct. 17, 2022 | Herb De Groft Steve Stewart | P | P | ||
| 3 | Oct. 26, 2022 | WTKR | Barbara Ciara | [41] | P | P |
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| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Tossup | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Tilt R(flip) | November 3, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Lean R(flip) | November 7, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Tossup | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Lean R(flip) | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Lean R(flip) | November 1, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Tossup | October 21, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Tossup | August 5, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Tossup | September 28, 2022 |
| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size[a] | Margin of error | Elaine Luria (D) | Jen Kiggans (R) | Other | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christopher Newport University[63] | October 12–18, 2022 | 820 (LV) | ± 3.9% | 45% | 45% | 1% | 8% |
| Slingshot Strategies (D)[64] | April 10–15, 2022 | 600 (RV) | ± 4.0% | 39% | 34% | 4% | 20% |
Elaine Luria vs. Jarome Bell
| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size[a] | Margin of error | Elaine Luria (D) | Jarome Bell (R) | Other | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slingshot Strategies (D)[64] | April 10–15, 2022 | 600 (RV) | ± 4.0% | 38% | 33% | 4% | 20% |
Generic Democrat vs. generic Republican
| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size[a] | Margin of error | Generic Democrat | Generic Republican | Other | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slingshot Strategies (D)[64] | April 10–15, 2022 | 600 (RV) | ± 4.0% | 40% | 42% | 3% | 13% |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Jen Kiggans | 153,328 | 51.6 | |
| Democratic | Elaine Luria (incumbent) | 143,219 | 48.2 | |
| Write-in | 449 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 296,996 | 100.0 | ||
| Republicangain fromDemocratic | ||||
| Locality[65] | Elaine Luria Democratic | Jen Kiggans Republican | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Accomack | 5,569 | 42.23% | 7,604 | 57.66% | 15 | 0.11% | 2,035 | 15.43% | 13,188 |
| Chesapeake (part) | 22,511 | 42.61% | 30,241 | 57.24% | 78 | 0.15% | 7,730 | 14.63% | 52,830 |
| Franklin City | 1,730 | 59.39% | 1,179 | 40.47% | 4 | 0.14% | -551 | -18.92% | 2,913 |
| Isle of Wight | 7,158 | 38.62% | 11,346 | 61.22% | 29 | 0.16% | 4,188 | 22.60% | 18,533 |
| Northampton | 2,855 | 52.54% | 2,569 | 47.28% | 10 | 0.18% | -286 | -5.26% | 5,434 |
| Southampton (part) | 1,500 | 32.52% | 3,108 | 67.37% | 5 | 0.11% | 1,608 | 34.86% | 4,613 |
| Suffolk | 20,475 | 55.64% | 16,265 | 44.20% | 56 | 0.15% | -4,210 | -11.44% | 36,796 |
| Virginia Beach | 81,421 | 50.05% | 81,016 | 49.80% | 245 | 0.15% | -405 | -0.25% | 162,682 |
| Totals | 143,219 | 48.22% | 153,328 | 51.63% | 442 | 0.15% | 10,109 | 3.40% | 296,989 |
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County and independent city results Scott: 60–70% 70–80% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 3rd district encompasses the innerHampton Roads, including parts ofHampton andNorfolk, as well asNewport News. The incumbent was DemocratBobby Scott, who was reelected with 68.4% of the vote in 2020. On November 8, 2022, Congressman Scott was re-elected.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Terry Namkung | 6,293 | 60.5 | |
| Republican | Theodore "Ted" Engquist | 4,116 | 39.5 | |
| Total votes | 10,409 | 100.0 | ||
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid D | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid D | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe D | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Solid D | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe D | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid D | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid D | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid D | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe D | September 28, 2022 |
Organizations
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Bobby Scott (incumbent) | 139,659 | 67.2 | |
| Republican | Terry Namkung | 67,668 | 32.6 | |
| Write-in | 523 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 207,850 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
| Locality[74] | Bobby Scott Democratic | Terry Namkung Republican | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Chesapeake (part) | 21,824 | 60.94% | 13,821 | 38.59% | 170 | 0.47% | 8,003 | 22.35% | 35,815 |
| Hampton | 28,593 | 70.33% | 11,994 | 29.50% | 67 | 0.16% | 16,599 | 40.83% | 40,654 |
| Newport News | 31,834 | 64.05% | 17,790 | 35.79% | 81 | 0.16% | 14,044 | 28.25% | 49,705 |
| Norfolk | 38,638 | 71.06% | 15,579 | 28.65% | 154 | 0.28% | 23,059 | 42.41% | 54,371 |
| Portsmouth | 18,770 | 68.76% | 8,484 | 31.08% | 44 | 0.16% | 10,286 | 37.68% | 27,298 |
| Totals | 139,659 | 67.19% | 67,668 | 32.56% | 516 | 0.25% | 71,991 | 34.64% | 207,843 |
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County and independent city results McEachin: 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% Benjamin: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 4th district takes in the city ofRichmond and portions ofSouthside Virginia followingInterstate 95. Within the district are the cities ofColonial Heights,Emporia,Hopewell, andPetersburg. The incumbent wasDonald McEachin, who was re-elected with 61.6% of the vote in 2020.
On November 8, 2022, McEachin was re-elected; however, he died on November 28. Aspecial election was held on February 21, 2023, with fellow DemocratJennifer McClellan elected to succeed him.
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid D | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid D | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe D | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Solid D | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe D | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid D | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid D | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid D | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe D | September 28, 2022 |
Organizations
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Donald McEachin (incumbent) | 159,044 | 64.9 | |
| Republican | Leon Benjamin | 85,503 | 34.9 | |
| Write-in | 431 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 244,978 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
| Locality[79] | Donald McEachin Democratic | Leon Benjamin Republican | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Brunswick | 2,791 | 53.20% | 2,450 | 46.70% | 5 | 0.10% | 341 | 6.50% | 5,246 |
| Charles City | 1,585 | 55.65% | 1,263 | 44.35% | 0 | 0.00% | 322 | 11.31% | 2,848 |
| Chesterfield (part) | 34,933 | 54.60% | 28,959 | 45.26% | 91 | 0.14% | 5,974 | 9.34% | 63,983 |
| Colonial Heights | 1,618 | 28.66% | 4,019 | 71.20% | 8 | 0.14% | -2,401 | -42.53% | 5,645 |
| Dinwiddie | 3,639 | 38.16% | 5,890 | 61.77% | 6 | 0.06% | -2,251 | -23.61% | 9,535 |
| Emporia | 840 | 60.22% | 542 | 38.85% | 13 | 0.93% | 298 | 21.36% | 1,395 |
| Greensville | 1,527 | 52.06% | 1,397 | 47.63% | 9 | 0.31% | 130 | 4.43% | 2,933 |
| Henrico (part) | 36,582 | 72.40% | 13,867 | 27.44% | 82 | 0.16% | 22,715 | 44.95% | 50,531 |
| Hopewell | 2,692 | 51.80% | 2,493 | 47.97% | 12 | 0.23% | 199 | 3.83% | 5,197 |
| Petersburg | 6,592 | 86.74% | 994 | 13.08% | 14 | 0.18% | 5,598 | 73.66% | 7,600 |
| Prince George | 4,163 | 37.26% | 6,994 | 62.60% | 15 | 0.13% | -2,831 | -25.34% | 11,172 |
| Richmond City | 57,568 | 83.02% | 11,625 | 16.76% | 150 | 0.22% | 45,943 | 66.25% | 69,343 |
| Southampton (part) | 1,166 | 41.70% | 1,628 | 58.23% | 2 | 0.07% | -462 | -16.52% | 2,796 |
| Surry | 1,659 | 49.97% | 1,654 | 49.82% | 7 | 0.21% | 5 | 0.15% | 3,320 |
| Sussex | 1,689 | 49.27% | 1,728 | 50.41% | 11 | 0.32% | -39 | -1.14% | 3,428 |
| Totals | 159,044 | 64.92% | 85,503 | 34.90% | 425 | 0.17% | 73,541 | 30.02% | 244,972 |
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County and independent city results Good: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Throneburg: 50–60% 60–70% 80–90% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 5th district includes the majority ofSouthside Virginia. Within the district are the cities ofCharlottesville,Danville, andLynchburg. The incumbent representative isBob Good, who was elected with 52.4% of the vote in 2020, after ousting then RepresentativeDenver Riggleman in the Republican convention. On November 8, 2022, Congressman Bob Good was re-elected.
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| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Bob Good (incumbent) | 1,488 | 84.6 | |
| Republican | Dan Moy | 271 | 15.4 | |
| Total votes | 1,759 | 100.0 | ||
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid R | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid R | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe R | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Likely R | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe R | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid R | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid R | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid R | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe R | September 28, 2022 |
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| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Bob Good (incumbent) | 177,191 | 57.6 | |
| Democratic | Josh Throneburg | 129,996 | 42.2 | |
| Write-in | 603 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 307,790 | 100.0 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
| Locality[107] | Bob Good Republican | Josh Throneburg Democratic | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Albemarle (part) | 16,624 | 33.13% | 33,430 | 66.62% | 126 | 0.25% | -16,806 | -33.49% | 50,180 |
| Amelia | 4,187 | 74.98% | 1,393 | 24.95% | 4 | 0.07% | 2,794 | 50.04% | 5,584 |
| Amherst | 8,250 | 69.90% | 3,536 | 29.96% | 16 | 0.14% | 4,714 | 39.94% | 11,802 |
| Appomattox | 5,224 | 79.19% | 1,364 | 20.68% | 9 | 0.14% | 3,860 | 58.51% | 6,597 |
| Bedford (part) | 10,129 | 76.07% | 3,168 | 23.79% | 18 | 0.14% | 6,961 | 52.28% | 13,315 |
| Buckingham | 3,472 | 64.93% | 1,869 | 34.95% | 6 | 0.11% | 1,603 | 29.98% | 5,347 |
| Campbell | 15,393 | 76.74% | 4,616 | 23.01% | 50 | 0.25% | 10,777 | 53.73% | 20,059 |
| Charlotte | 2,953 | 69.40% | 1,301 | 30.58% | 1 | 0.02% | 1,652 | 38.82% | 4,255 |
| Charlottesville | 2,100 | 12.56% | 14,581 | 87.19% | 43 | 0.26% | -12,481 | -74.63% | 16,724 |
| Cumberland | 2,410 | 64.75% | 1,307 | 35.12% | 5 | 0.13% | 1,103 | 29.63% | 3,722 |
| Danville | 5,421 | 46.48% | 6,208 | 53.22% | 35 | 0.30% | -787 | -6.75% | 11,664 |
| Fluvanna | 6,299 | 53.24% | 5,516 | 46.62% | 17 | 0.14% | 783 | 6.62% | 11,832 |
| Goochland | 8,706 | 63.29% | 5,028 | 36.55% | 22 | 0.16% | 3,678 | 26.74% | 13,756 |
| Halifax | 7,677 | 63.60% | 4,374 | 36.24% | 20 | 0.17% | 3,303 | 27.36% | 12,071 |
| Hanover (part) | 6,064 | 69.46% | 2,653 | 30.39% | 13 | 0.15% | 3,411 | 39.07% | 8,730 |
| Louisa | 10,511 | 64.50% | 5,762 | 35.36% | 24 | 0.15% | 4,749 | 29.14% | 16,297 |
| Lunenburg | 2,658 | 64.83% | 1,440 | 35.12% | 2 | 0.05% | 1,218 | 29.71% | 4,100 |
| Lynchburg | 12,508 | 53.41% | 10,840 | 46.29% | 71 | 0.30% | 1,668 | 7.12% | 23,419 |
| Mecklenburg | 7,236 | 65.07% | 3,869 | 34.79% | 15 | 0.13% | 3,367 | 30.28% | 11,120 |
| Nelson | 3,725 | 52.14% | 3,405 | 47.66% | 14 | 0.20% | 320 | 4.48% | 7,144 |
| Nottoway | 3,103 | 64.36% | 1,713 | 35.53% | 5 | 0.10% | 1,390 | 28.83% | 4,821 |
| Pittsylvania | 17,896 | 74.78% | 5,994 | 25.05% | 41 | 0.17% | 11,902 | 49.73% | 23,931 |
| Powhatan | 11,200 | 75.01% | 3,711 | 24.85% | 20 | 0.13% | 7,489 | 50.16% | 14,931 |
| Prince Edward | 3,445 | 54.05% | 2,918 | 45.78% | 11 | 0.17% | 527 | 8.27% | 6,374 |
| Totals | 177,191 | 57.57% | 129,996 | 42.24% | 588 | 0.19% | 47,195 | 15.33% | 307,775 |
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County and independent city results Cline: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Lewis: 50–60% 60–70% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 6th district is located in western Virginia taking in theShenandoah Valley alongInterstate 81. The district is anchored at the southern end by the cities ofRoanoke andSalem. The incumbent was RepublicanBen Cline, who was re-elected with 64.6% of the vote in 2020. On November 8, 2022, Congressman Cline was re-elected.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Ben Cline (incumbent) | 19,620 | 82.1 | |
| Republican | Merritt Hale | 4,264 | 17.9 | |
| Total votes | 23,884 | 100.0 | ||
State officials
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid R | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid R | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe R | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Solid R | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe R | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid R | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid R | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid R | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe R | September 28, 2022 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Ben Cline (incumbent) | 173,352 | 64.4 | |
| Democratic | Jennifer Lewis | 95,410 | 35.4 | |
| Write-in | 472 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 269,234 | 100.0 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
| Locality[114] | Ben Cline Republican | Jennifer Lewis Democratic | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Alleghany | 4,057 | 74.98% | 1,347 | 24.89% | 7 | 0.13% | 2,710 | 50.08% | 5,411 |
| Augusta | 23,358 | 76.62% | 7,089 | 23.25% | 40 | 0.13% | 16,269 | 53.36% | 30,487 |
| Bath | 1,330 | 78.65% | 358 | 21.17% | 3 | 0.18% | 972 | 57.48% | 1,691 |
| Bedford (part) | 1 | 100.00% | 0 | 0.00% | 0 | 0.00% | 1 | 100.00% | 1 |
| Botetourt | 11,118 | 75.60% | 3,568 | 24.26% | 21 | 0.14% | 7,550 | 51.34% | 14,707 |
| Buena Vista | 1,153 | 70.95% | 466 | 28.68% | 6 | 0.37% | 687 | 42.28% | 1,625 |
| Clarke | 4,270 | 59.48% | 2,902 | 40.42% | 7 | 0.10% | 1,368 | 19.06% | 7,179 |
| Covington | 1,011 | 68.03% | 474 | 31.90% | 1 | 0.07% | 537 | 36.14% | 1,486 |
| Frederick | 22,317 | 66.24% | 11,302 | 33.54% | 74 | 0.22% | 11,015 | 32.69% | 33,693 |
| Harrisonburg | 3,819 | 36.83% | 6,526 | 62.94% | 23 | 0.22% | -2,707 | -26.11% | 10,368 |
| Highland | 891 | 74.81% | 297 | 24.94% | 3 | 0.25% | 594 | 49.87% | 1,191 |
| Lexington | 700 | 34.64% | 1,312 | 64.92% | 9 | 0.45% | -612 | -30.28% | 2,021 |
| Page | 6,360 | 77.45% | 1,847 | 22.49% | 5 | 0.06% | 4,513 | 54.96% | 8,212 |
| Roanoke City | 10,780 | 40.96% | 15,482 | 58.82% | 58 | 0.22% | -4,702 | -17.86% | 26,320 |
| Roanoke County (part) | 14,463 | 67.92% | 6,796 | 31.92% | 34 | 0.16% | 7,667 | 36.01% | 21,293 |
| Rockbridge | 6,037 | 66.94% | 2,964 | 32.86% | 18 | 0.20% | 3,073 | 34.07% | 9,019 |
| Rockingham | 23,093 | 73.23% | 8,392 | 26.61% | 50 | 0.16% | 14,701 | 46.62% | 31,535 |
| Salem | 5,283 | 63.34% | 3,040 | 36.45% | 18 | 0.22% | 2,243 | 26.89% | 8,341 |
| Shenandoah | 11,766 | 72.76% | 4,387 | 27.13% | 19 | 0.12% | 7,379 | 45.63% | 16,172 |
| Staunton | 4,033 | 44.17% | 5,081 | 55.65% | 17 | 0.19% | -1,048 | -11.48% | 9,131 |
| Warren | 9,965 | 69.94% | 4,253 | 29.85% | 30 | 0.21% | 5,712 | 40.09% | 14,248 |
| Waynesboro | 3,926 | 54.50% | 3,264 | 45.31% | 14 | 0.19% | 662 | 9.19% | 7,204 |
| Winchester | 3,621 | 45.86% | 4,263 | 53.99% | 12 | 0.15% | -642 | -8.13% | 7,896 |
| Totals | 173,352 | 64.39% | 95,410 | 35.44% | 469 | 0.17% | 77,942 | 28.95% | 269,231 |
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County and independent city results Spanberger: 60–70% Vega: 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 7th district is based inNorthern andCentral Virginia. The district containsStafford,Spotsylvania,Greene,Orange,Madison,Culpeper,Caroline, andKing George counties, the city ofFredericksburg, parts of easternPrince William County, along with a small sliver ofAlbemarle County. The incumbent was DemocratAbigail Spanberger, who was re-elected with 50.8% of the vote in 2020. The district was radically redrawn and no longer includes her residence inHenrico County. Despite this, Spanberger ran for re-election in this seat.[115]
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| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Yesli Vega | 10,913 | 28.9 | |
| Republican | Derrick Anderson | 8,966 | 23.8 | |
| Republican | Bryce Reeves | 7,580 | 20.1 | |
| Republican | Crystal Vanuch | 6,400 | 17.0 | |
| Republican | David Ross | 2,284 | 6.1 | |
| Republican | Gina Ciarcia | 1,565 | 4.2 | |
| Total votes | 37,708 | 100.0 | ||
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Tossup | October 25, 2022 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Tilt D | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Lean D | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Tossup | November 3, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Tossup | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Tossup | November 1, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Lean D | November 6, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Lean D | October 25, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Lean D | November 1, 2022 |
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| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size[a] | Margin of error | Abigail Spanberger (D) | Yesli Vega (R) | Other | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wick Insights/RRH Elections (R)[171] | October 23–26, 2022 | 525 (LV) | ± 4.0% | 47% | 47% | – | 6% |
| RMG Research[172] | July 31 – August 6, 2022 | 400 (LV) | ± 4.9% | 46% | 41% | 3% | 10% |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Abigail Spanberger (incumbent) | 143,357 | 52.2 | |
| Republican | Yesli Vega | 130,586 | 47.6 | |
| Write-in | 647 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 274,590 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
| Locality[173] | Abigail Spanberger Democratic | Yesli Vega Republican | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Albemarle (part) | 7 | 33.33% | 14 | 66.67% | 0 | 0.00% | −7 | −33.33% | 21 |
| Caroline | 5,244 | 45.17% | 6,350 | 54.70% | 15 | 0.13% | −1,106 | −9.53% | 11,609 |
| Culpeper | 7,979 | 39.47% | 12,198 | 60.34% | 39 | 0.19% | −4,219 | −20.87% | 20,216 |
| Fredericksburg | 6,082 | 66.34% | 3,066 | 33.44% | 20 | 0.22% | 3,016 | 32.90% | 9,168 |
| Greene | 3,307 | 39.20% | 5,114 | 60.62% | 15 | 0.18% | −1,807 | −21.42% | 8,436 |
| King George | 3,913 | 37.16% | 6,590 | 62.59% | 26 | 0.25% | −2,677 | −25.43% | 10,529 |
| Madison | 2,320 | 35.85% | 4,143 | 64.02% | 8 | 0.12% | −1,823 | −28.17% | 6,471 |
| Orange | 6,432 | 39.81% | 9,695 | 60.01% | 28 | 0.17% | −3,263 | −20.20% | 16,155 |
| Prince William (part) | 53,964 | 67.98% | 25,220 | 31.77% | 202 | 0.25% | 28,744 | 36.21% | 79,386 |
| Spotsylvania | 25,424 | 46.26% | 29,390 | 53.48% | 140 | 0.25% | −3,966 | −7.22% | 54,954 |
| Stafford | 28,685 | 49.77% | 28,806 | 49.98% | 144 | 0.25% | −121 | −0.21% | 57,635 |
| Totals | 143,357 | 52.21% | 130,586 | 47.56% | 637 | 0.23% | 12,771 | 4.65% | 274,580 |
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County and independent city results Beyer: 60–70% 70–80% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 8th district is based innorthern Virginia and encompasses the innerWashington, D.C. suburbs, includingArlington,Alexandria, andFalls Church. The incumbent was DemocratDon Beyer, who was re-elected with 75.8% of the vote in 2020. On November 8, 2022, Congressman Beyer was re-elected.
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Don Beyer (incumbent) | 39,062 | 77.1 | |
| Democratic | Victoria Virasingh | 11,583 | 22.9 | |
| Total votes | 50,645 | 100.0 | ||
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Karina Lipsman | 440 | 61.5 | |
| Republican | Kezia Tunnell | 137 | 19.1 | |
| Republican | Jeff Jordan | 114 | 15.9 | |
| Republican | Heerak Christian Kim | 17 | 2.4 | |
| Republican | Monica Carpio | 8 | 1.1 | |
| Total votes | 716 | 100.0 | ||
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid D | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid D | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe D | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Solid D | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe D | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid D | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid D | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid D | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe D | September 28, 2022 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Don Beyer (incumbent) | 197,760 | 73.5 | |
| Republican | Karina Lipsman | 66,589 | 24.8 | |
| Independent | Teddy Fikre | 4,078 | 1.5 | |
| Write-in | 509 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 268,936 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
| Locality[185] | Don Beyer Democratic | Karina Lipsman Republican | Various candidates Other parties | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Alexandria | 41,974 | 77.41% | 11,276 | 20.80% | 973 | 1.79% | 30,698 | 56.61% | 54,223 |
| Arlington | 70,856 | 77.58% | 18,699 | 20.47% | 1,779 | 1.95% | 52,157 | 57.11% | 91,334 |
| Fairfax County (part) | 79,796 | 68.24% | 35,421 | 30.29% | 1,719 | 1.47% | 44,375 | 37.95% | 116,936 |
| Falls Church | 5,134 | 79.76% | 1,193 | 18.53% | 110 | 1.71% | 3,941 | 61.22% | 6,437 |
| Totals | 197,760 | 73.54% | 66,589 | 24.76% | 4,581 | 1.70% | 131,171 | 48.78% | 268,930 |
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County and independent city results Griffith: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% DeVaughan: 50–60% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 9th district takes in ruralsouthwest Virginia, includingAbingdon,Blacksburg,Bristol andNorton. The incumbent was RepublicanMorgan Griffith, who was re-elected with 94% of the vote in 2020 without opposition from any party. Despite his home inSalem no longer being in the district. Griffith was running for re-election in this seat.[11] On November 8, 2022, Congressman Morgan Griffith was re-elected.
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid R | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid R | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe R | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Solid R | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe R | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid R | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid R | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid R | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe R | September 28, 2022 |
Organizations
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Morgan Griffith (incumbent) | 182,207 | 73.2 | |
| Democratic | Taysha DeVaughan | 66,027 | 26.5 | |
| Write-in | 558 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 248,792 | 100.0 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||
| Locality[187] | Morgan Griffith Republican | Taysha DeVaughan Democratic | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Bedford (part) | 16,124 | 79.15% | 4,221 | 20.72% | 27 | 0.13% | 11,903 | 58.43% | 20,372 |
| Bland | 1,922 | 86.38% | 296 | 13.30% | 7 | 0.31% | 1,626 | 73.08% | 2,225 |
| Bristol | 3,130 | 71.09% | 1,259 | 28.59% | 14 | 0.32% | 1,871 | 42.49% | 4,403 |
| Buchanan | 3,969 | 83.65% | 767 | 16.16% | 9 | 0.19% | 3,202 | 67.48% | 4,745 |
| Carroll | 8,496 | 83.21% | 1,685 | 16.50% | 29 | 0.28% | 6,811 | 66.71% | 10,210 |
| Craig | 1,715 | 82.85% | 350 | 16.91% | 5 | 0.24% | 1,365 | 65.94% | 2,070 |
| Dickenson | 3,018 | 77.44% | 864 | 22.17% | 15 | 0.38% | 2,154 | 55.27% | 3,897 |
| Floyd | 4,208 | 67.58% | 2,005 | 32.20% | 14 | 0.22% | 2,203 | 35.38% | 6,227 |
| Franklin County | 15,259 | 74.76% | 5,131 | 25.14% | 22 | 0.11% | 10,128 | 49.62% | 20,412 |
| Galax | 1,208 | 75.26% | 395 | 24.61% | 2 | 0.12% | 813 | 50.65% | 1,605 |
| Giles | 4,436 | 76.68% | 1,337 | 23.11% | 12 | 0.21% | 3,099 | 53.57% | 5,785 |
| Grayson | 4,393 | 81.59% | 985 | 18.29% | 6 | 0.11% | 3,408 | 63.30% | 5,384 |
| Henry | 10,984 | 70.93% | 4,486 | 28.97% | 16 | 0.10% | 6,498 | 41.96% | 15,486 |
| Lee | 4,806 | 84.85% | 842 | 14.87% | 16 | 0.28% | 3,964 | 69.99% | 5,664 |
| Martinsville | 1,642 | 44.58% | 2,032 | 55.17% | 9 | 0.24% | -390 | -10.59% | 3,683 |
| Montgomery | 13,563 | 48.67% | 14,239 | 51.09% | 67 | 0.24% | -676 | -2.43% | 27,869 |
| Norton | 666 | 71.00% | 266 | 28.36% | 6 | 0.64% | 400 | 42.64% | 938 |
| Patrick | 4,864 | 81.87% | 1,065 | 17.93% | 12 | 0.20% | 3,799 | 63.95% | 5,941 |
| Pulaski | 8,065 | 74.27% | 2,768 | 25.49% | 26 | 0.24% | 5,297 | 48.78% | 10,859 |
| Radford | 2,006 | 53.35% | 1,744 | 46.38% | 10 | 0.27% | 262 | 6.97% | 3,760 |
| Roanoke County (part) | 9,823 | 60.97% | 6,240 | 38.73% | 48 | 0.30% | 3,583 | 22.24% | 16,111 |
| Russell | 6,471 | 82.65% | 1,337 | 17.08% | 21 | 0.27% | 5,134 | 65.58% | 7,829 |
| Scott | 5,607 | 85.69% | 928 | 14.18% | 8 | 0.12% | 4,679 | 71.51% | 6,543 |
| Smyth | 6,935 | 82.00% | 1,496 | 17.69% | 26 | 0.31% | 5,439 | 64.31% | 8,457 |
| Tazewell | 9,876 | 85.60% | 1,635 | 14.17% | 27 | 0.23% | 8,241 | 71.42% | 11,538 |
| Washington | 13,870 | 77.18% | 4,047 | 22.52% | 53 | 0.29% | 9,823 | 54.66% | 17,970 |
| Wise | 7,506 | 80.58% | 1,783 | 19.14% | 26 | 0.28% | 5,723 | 61.44% | 9,315 |
| Wythe | 7,645 | 80.55% | 1,824 | 19.22% | 22 | 0.23% | 5,821 | 61.33% | 9,491 |
| Totals | 182,207 | 73.24% | 66,027 | 26.54% | 555 | 0.22% | 116,180 | 46.70% | 248,789 |
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County and independent city results Wexton: 50–60% 60–70% Cao: 50–60% 60–70% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 10th district is based in northern Virginia and the D.C. metro area, encompassingFauquier,Loudoun, andRappahannock counties, the independent cities ofMansassas andManassas Park, and portions ofFairfax andPrince William counties. Democratic incumbentJennifer Wexton was re-elected with 56.5% of the vote in 2020.
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| Virginia 10th district GOP firehouse primary[194] | |||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidate | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Round 5 | Round 6 | Round 7 | Round 8 | Round 9 | ||||||||||
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| Hung Cao | 6,363 | 42% | 6,379 | 42.1% | 6,393 | 42.2% | 6,471 | 42.8% | 6,562 | 43.5% | 6,672 | 44.4% | 6,998 | 46.6% | 7,238 | 48.7% | 7,729 | 52.3% | |
| Jeanine Lawson | 4,373 | 28.9% | 4,382 | 30% | 4,390 | 29% | 4,433 | 29.3% | 4,503 | 29.8% | 4,564 | 30.4% | 4,693 | 31.2% | 4,800 | 32.3% | 5,000 | 33.8% | |
| Brandon Michon | 1,538 | 10.2% | 1,551 | 10.2% | 1,555 | 10.3% | 1,588 | 10.5% | 1,612 | 10.7% | 1,614 | 10.7% | 1,733 | 11.5% | 1,854 | 12.5% | 2,052 | 13.9% | |
| Mike Clancy | 719 | 4.7% | 721 | 4.8% | 724 | 4.8% | 739 | 4.9% | 764 | 5.1% | 794 | 6.3% | 876 | 5.8% | 979 | 6.6% | Eliminated | ||
| Caleb Max | 621 | 4.1% | 623 | 4.1% | 627 | 4.1% | 646 | 4.3% | 678 | 4.5% | 707 | 4.7% | 727 | 4.8% | Eliminated | ||||
| John Henley | 612 | 4% | 614 | 4.1% | 619 | 4.1% | 628 | 4.2% | 641 | 4.2% | 676 | 4.5% | Eliminated | ||||||
| Dave Beckwith | 308 | 2% | 308 | 2% | 312 | 2.1% | 328 | 2.2% | 333 | 2.2% | Eliminated | ||||||||
| Theresa Ellis | 259 | 1.7% | 262 | 1.7% | 276 | 1.8% | 285 | 1.9% | Eliminated | ||||||||||
| John Beatty | 232 | 1.5% | 232 | 1.5% | 237 | 1.6% | Eliminated | ||||||||||||
| Jeff Mayhugh | 64 | 0.4% | 66 | 0.4% | Eliminated | ||||||||||||||
| Brooke Taylor | 56 | 0.4% | Eliminated | ||||||||||||||||
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Likely D | October 25, 2022 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Likely D | October 21, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Likely D | June 22, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Likely D | August 12, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Lean D | October 17, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Likely D | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Likely D | October 17, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Likely D | October 20, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Likely D | October 4, 2022 |
Both candidates agreed to four joint events.
The first forum was hosted by The Arc of Northern Virginia (NoVA), an advocacy center for disabled children and seniors.[197] They have been hosting these forums since 2020. It was the only online event in which both Wexton and Cao participated. It also included the Democratic and Republican candidates for the 7th and 10th congressional districts. The Arc of NoVA asked their own questions, questions sent to them ahead of time, and questions taken from a Facebook chat. As mentioned at the start of the forum, all candidates were sent the questions they were planning to ask as well as questions that were sent in.
| No. | Date | Host | Moderator | Link | Participants | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P Participant A Absent N Non-invitee I Invitee W Withdrawn | ||||||
| Jennifer Wexton | Hung Cao | |||||
| 1 | August 23, 2022 | Arc of NoVA | Lucy Beadnell | [198] | P | P |
| 2 | October 2, 2022 | MOVE Chamber | Ayan Sheikh | [199] | P | P |
| 3 | October 5, 2022 | Prince William Committee of 100 | Stephen J. Farnsworth | [200] | P | P |
| 4 | October 20, 2022 | Loudoun Chamber | Tony Howard | [201] | P | P |
| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size[a] | Margin of error | Jennifer Wexton (D) | Hung Cao (R) | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OnMessage (R)[202][B] | October 11–13, 2022 | 400 (LV) | ± 4.9% | 43% | 41% | 16% |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Jennifer Wexton (incumbent) | 157,405 | 53.2 | |
| Republican | Hung Cao | 138,163 | 46.7 | |
| Write-in | 577 | 0.2 | ||
| Total votes | 296,145 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
| Locality[203] | Jennifer Wexton Democratic | Hung Cao Republican | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Fairfax (part) | 4,940 | 50.72% | 4,781 | 49.09% | 18 | 0.18% | 159 | 1.63% | 9,739 |
| Fauquier | 12,408 | 37.42% | 20,704 | 62.44% | 45 | 0.14% | -8,296 | -25.02% | 33,157 |
| Loudoun | 94,116 | 57.75% | 68,505 | 42.03% | 355 | 0.22% | 25,611 | 15.71% | 162,976 |
| Manassas | 6,029 | 56.59% | 4,609 | 43.26% | 15 | 0.14% | 1,420 | 13.33% | 10,653 |
| Manassas Park | 2,041 | 60.89% | 1,304 | 38.90% | 7 | 0.21% | 737 | 21.99% | 3,352 |
| Prince William (part) | 36,149 | 50.07% | 35,931 | 49.76% | 122 | 0.17% | 218 | 0.30% | 72,202 |
| Rappahannock | 1,722 | 42.40% | 2,329 | 57.35% | 10 | 0.25% | -607 | -14.95% | 4,061 |
| Totals | 157,405 | 53.15% | 138,163 | 46.65% | 572 | 0.19% | 19,242 | 6.50% | 296,140 |
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County and independent city results Connolly: 60–70% | |||||||||||||||||
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The 11th district encompasses portions of suburbanWashington, D.C., including the city ofFairfax and portions ofFairfax County. The incumbent was DemocratGerry Connolly, who was re-elected with 71.4% of the vote in 2020. On November 8, 2022, Congressman Connolly was re-elected.
| Virginia GOP 11th district, firehouse primary[207] | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidate | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | ||||
| Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | Votes | % | |
| Jim Myles | 670 | 40.17% | 681 | 40.9% | 752 | 45.44% | 959 | 59.2% |
| Manga Anantatmula | 517 | 31% | 530 | 31.83% | 559 | 33.78% | 661 | 40.8% |
| Matthew Chappell | 309 | 18.53% | 316 | 18.98% | 344 | 20.79% | Eliminated | |
| Joe Babb | 129 | 7.73% | 138 | 8.29% | Eliminated | |||
| Barbara Banks | 43 | 2.58% | Eliminated | |||||
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report[19] | Solid D | December 28, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[20] | Solid D | February 8, 2022 |
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[21] | Safe D | January 4, 2022 |
| Politico[22] | Solid D | April 5, 2022 |
| RCP[23] | Safe D | June 9, 2022 |
| Fox News[24] | Solid D | July 11, 2022 |
| DDHQ[25] | Solid D | July 20, 2022 |
| 538[26] | Solid D | June 30, 2022 |
| The Economist[27] | Safe D | September 28, 2022 |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Gerry Connolly (incumbent) | 193,190 | 66.7 | |
| Republican | Jim Myles | 95,634 | 33.0 | |
| Write-in | 852 | 0.3 | ||
| Total votes | 289,676 | 100.0 | ||
| Democratichold | ||||
| Locality[208] | Gerry Connolly Democratic | Jim Myles Republican | Write-in Various | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Fairfax City | 6,384 | 66.22% | 3,235 | 33.55% | 22 | 0.23% | 3,149 | 32.66% | 9,641 |
| Fairfax County (part) | 186,806 | 66.71% | 92,399 | 33.00% | 806 | 0.29% | 94,407 | 33.72% | 280,011 |
| Totals | 193,190 | 66.70% | 95,634 | 33.02% | 828 | 0.29% | 97,556 | 33.68% | 289,652 |
Partisan clients
After the court approved the final map, Spanberger's potential opponents for the Democratic nomination all dropped out of consideration.
Official campaign websites for 1st district candidates
Official campaign websites for 2nd district candidates
Official campaign websites for 3rd district candidates
Official campaign websites for the 4th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 5th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 6th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 7th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 8th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 9th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 10th district candidates
Official campaign websites for 11th district candidates