Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Classes of United States senators

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromClass III senator of the United States)
Cohorts of Senate seats whose holders will be elected in a given year

This article is part ofa series on the
United States Senate
Great Seal of the United States Senate
Great Seal of the United States Senate
History of the United States Senate
Members


Politics and procedure
Places

The 100 seats in theUnited States Senate are divided into three classes for the purpose of determining which seats will be up for election in any two-year cycle, with only one class being up for election at a time. With senators being elected tofixed terms of six years, the classes allow about a third of the seats to be up for election in anypresidential ormidterm election year instead of having all 100 be up for election at the same time every six years. The seats are also divided in such a way that any givenstate's two senators are in different classes so that each seat's term ends in different years. Class 1 and class 2 consist of 33 seats each, while class 3 consists of 34 seats. Elections for class 1 seats took place in 2024, and elections for classes 2 and 3 will take place in 2026 and 2028, respectively.

The three classes were established byArticle I, Section 3, Clause 2 of theU.S. Constitution. The actual division was originally performed by the Senate of the1st Congress in May 1789by lot.[1] Whenever a new state subsequently joined the union, its two Senate seats were assigned to two different classes by a random draw, while keeping the three classes as close to the same number as possible.[2]

The classes only apply to the regular fixed-term elections of the Senate. Aspecial election to fill a vacancy, usually either due to the incumbent resigning or dying while in office, may happen in any given year regardless of the seat's class.[3]

A senator's description as junior or senior senator is also not related to their class. Rather, a state's senior United States senator is the one with the greaterseniority in the Senate, which is mostly based on length of service.

History

[edit]

Constitutional footing

[edit]

TheU.S. Constitution sets the fixed term of senators to six years and staggers their elections into three cycles, so that a third of the Senate was up for election every two years. This allows at least some Senate elections to be held during anypresidential ormidterm election year, as theU.S. President is elected to a fixed term of four years and members of theU.S. House of Representatives are elected to fixed terms of two years. The objective is to promote stability in the Senate, and encourage senators to deliberate measures over time, rather than risk a rapid turnover of the entire chamber every six years. At the same time, it provided for more frequent elections as opposed to waiting every six years, to prevent senators from permanently combining for "sinister purposes".[1]

The three classes of the Senate are specified by Article I, Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution:

Immediately after they shall be assembled in Consequence of the first Election, they shall be divided as equally as may be into three Classes. The Seats of the Senators of the first Class shall be vacated at the Expiration of the second Year, of the second Class at the Expiration of the fourth Year, and of the third Class at the Expiration of the sixth Year, so that one third may be chosen every second Year.

The allocation took place in May 1789, several weeks afterthe first Senate assembled. Only twenty senators from ten states were present; North Carolina and Rhode Island had not yet ratified the U.S. Constitution, and New York, because of its late ratification, had not yet selected its senators.[4] To decide on how to implement the division into classes, on May 11 the Senate appointed a committee consisting of SenatorsEllsworth,Carroll, andFew.[5] In accordance with their recommendation, on May 14 the Senate divided the members into three classes:[6]

Thursday, May 14, 1789. The committee appointed to consider and report a mode of carrying into effect the provision in the second clause of the third section of the first article of the Constitution, reported:

Whereupon, Resolved, That the Senators be divided into three classes:

That three papers of equal size, numbered 1, 2, and 3, be, by the Secretary, rolled up and put into a box, and drawn by Mr. Langdon, Mr. Wingate, and Mr. Dalton, in behalf of the respective classes in which each of them are placed; and that the classes shall vacate their seats in the Senate according to the order of numbers drawn for them, beginning with number one: And that, when Senators shall take their seats from States that have not yet appointed Senators, they shall be placed by lot in the foregoing classes, but in such manner as shall keep the classes as nearly equal as may be in numbers.

On the next day, May 15, the term expiration of each class was determined bydrawing lots.[6] Lot 1 was drawn by Dalton, 2 by Wingate, and 3 by Langdon.

Upon the expiration of a senator's term of any length, someone starts a new six-year term as senator (based on election by the state legislatures until theSeventeenth Amendment required directpopular election of senators).

Addition of new states to the Union

[edit]

When a new state isadmitted to the Union, its two senators are placed into separate classes. Which two classes are determined by a scheme that keeps the three classes as close to the same size as possible, so that the largest class never differs by more than one senator from the smallest class.[2] A random draw determined which new senator enters which of the classes selected to be expanded.[2] This means at least one of any new state's first pair of senators had a term of more than 2 and up to 6 years and the other had a term that was 2 or 4 years shorter.

New York, which held itsfirst Senate elections in July 1789, was the first state to undergo this process after the original May 1789 draw by the Senate of the1st Congress. Among the new senators,Philip Schuyler drew the lot for class 1 (whose term would end in 1791) whileRufus King drew class 3 (whose term would end in 1795).[7] This made class 1 have 8 senators while classes 2 and 3 had 7 senators each. North Carolina was then assigned classes 2 and 3 after holdingits first Senate elections in November 1789, making all three classes have 8 seats each.

When the newest state, Hawaii, was admitted in 1959,its first Senate elections had candidates run either for "seat A" or "B". The new senators,Hiram Fong andOren E. Long, in a process managed by theSecretary of the Senate, drew lots to determine which of the two would join class 1 (whose term would end in five-and-a-half years), and which would join class 3 (whose term would end in three-and-a-half years).[4][8][9] If a51st state is admitted, it will receive senators in classes 1 and 2, at which point all three classes would have 34 senators.[2]

Because each state is represented by 2 senators, regardless of population, each class varies in electorate and populace. Since the early 19th century, it so happens class 2 senators cumulatively co-represent 50–60% of the population; senators from each of the other 2 classes: 70–75% of the U.S. population.[10] Because each state has 2 senators, the sum of these figures is 200%, not 100%. Several of the most populous states, such as California, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, have their senators in classes 1 and 3, provoking this imbalance.

The only times when both of a state's Senate seats are up for election in the same year are either when a new state joins the union (as mentioned above), or when there is aspecial election to fill a vacant seat. Special elections have no bearing on when the term for that seat ends, and a senator elected in a special election will serve the remainder of the term, until the next regularly scheduled election, not affecting which class that seat falls within.[3]

Class 1

[edit]
Map shows the classes in each U.S. state:
  Classes 1 and 2
  Classes 1 and 3
  Classes 2 and 3
Applies to those states, in the figured map, which are not shaded cyan

Class 1 consists of the 33 Senate seats who were elected in 2024 and whose next election will be inNovember 2030 and whose terms end January 3, 2031.

This includes earlier senators with terms that ended in1791,1797,1803,1809,1815,1821,1827,1833,1839,1845,1851,1857,1863,1869,1875,1881,1887,1893,1899,1905,1911,1917,1923,1929,1935,1941,1947,1953,1959,1965,1971,1977,1983,1989,1995,2001,2007,2013,2019, and2025.

States with a Class 1 senator:Arizona,California,Connecticut,Delaware,Florida,Hawaii,Indiana,Maine,Maryland,Massachusetts,Michigan,Minnesota,Mississippi,Missouri,Montana,Nebraska,Nevada,New Jersey,New Mexico,New York,North Dakota,Ohio,Pennsylvania,Rhode Island,Tennessee,Texas,Utah,Vermont,Virginia,Washington,West Virginia,Wisconsin, andWyoming.

Class 2

[edit]
Applies to those states, in the figured map, which are not shaded pink

Class 2 consists of the 33 Senate seats who were elected in 2020 and whose next election will be inNovember 2026 and whose terms end January 3, 2027.

This includes earlier senators whose terms ended in1793,1799,1805,1811,1817,1823,1829,1835,1841,1847,1853,1859,1865,1871,1877,1883,1889,1895,1901,1907,1913,1919,1925,1931,1937,1943,1949,1955,1961,1967,1973,1979,1985,1991,1997,2003,2009,2015, and2021.

States with a class 2 senator:Alabama,Alaska,Arkansas,Colorado,Delaware,Georgia,Idaho,Illinois,Iowa,Kansas,Kentucky,Louisiana,Maine,Massachusetts,Michigan,Minnesota,Mississippi,Montana,Nebraska,New Hampshire,New Jersey,New Mexico,North Carolina,Oklahoma,Oregon,Rhode Island,South Carolina,South Dakota,Tennessee,Texas,Virginia,West Virginia, andWyoming.

Class 3

[edit]
Applies to those states, in the figured map, which are not shaded green

Class 3 consists of the 34 Senate seats who were elected in 2022 and whose next election will be inNovember 2028 and whose terms end January 3, 2029.

This includes earlier senators whose terms ended in1795,1801,1807,1813,1819,1825,1831,1837,1843,1849,1855,1861,1867,1873,1879,1885,1891,1897,1903,1909,1915,1921,1927,1933,1939,1945,1951,1957,1963,1969,1975,1981,1987,1993,1999,2005,2011,2017, and2023.

States with a class 3 senator:Alabama,Alaska,Arizona,Arkansas,California,Colorado,Connecticut,Florida,Georgia,Hawaii,Idaho,Illinois,Indiana,Iowa,Kansas,Kentucky,Louisiana,Maryland,Missouri,Nevada,New Hampshire,New York,North Carolina,North Dakota,Ohio,Oklahoma,Oregon,Pennsylvania,South Carolina,South Dakota,Utah,Vermont,Washington, andWisconsin.

Election cycle years

[edit]

This table is re-sorted every two years so that the next scheduled election year appears at the top.

ClassMost recent
election year
Next scheduled
election year
Class 120242030
Class 220202026
Class 320222028

Comparison with other United States general elections

[edit]
See also:List of elections in the United States
Basic rotation ofU.S. general elections (fixed terms only[1])
Year20242025202620272028
TypePresidentialOff-yearMidtermOff-yearPresidential
PresidentYesNoYes
SenateClass I (33 seats)NoClass II (33 seats)NoClass III (34 seats)
HouseAll 435 seats[3]NoAll 435 seats[2]NoAll 435 seats[3]
Gubernatorial11 states, 2 territories
DE,IN,MO,MT,NH,NC,ND,UT,VT,WA,WV,AS,PR
2 states
NJ,VA
36 states, DC, & 3 territories[4]
AL,AK,AZ,AR,CA,CO,CT,FL,GA,HI,ID,IL,IA,KS,ME,MD,MA,MI,MN,NE,NV,NH,NM,NY,OH,OK,OR,PA,RI,SC,SD,TN,TX,VT,WI,WY,DC (Mayor),GU,MP,VI
3 states
KY,LA,MS
11 states, 2 territories
DE,IN,MO,MT,NH,NC,ND,UT,VT,WA,WV,AS,PR
Lieutenant gubernatorial[5]5 states, 1 territory
DE,MO,NC,VT,WA,AS
1 state
VA
10 states[6]
AL,AR,CA,GA,ID,NV,OK,RI,TX,VT
2 states
LA,MS
5 states, 1 territory
DE,MO,NC,VT,WA,AS
Secretary of state7 states
MO,MT,NC,OR,VT,WA,WV
None26 states
AL,AZ,AR,CA,CO,CT,GA,ID,IL,IN,IA,KS,MA,MI,MN,NE,NV,NM,ND,OH,RI,SC,TX,VT,WI,WY
3 states
KY,LA,MS
7 states
MO,MT,NC,OR,VT,WA,WV
Attorney general10 states
IN,MO,MT,NC,OR,PA,UT,VT,WA,WV
1 state
VA
30 states, DC, & 2 territories
AL,AZ,AR,CA,CO,CT,DE,FL,GA,ID,IL,IA,KS,MD,MA,MI,MN,NE,NV,NM,NY,ND,OH,OK,RI,SC,SD,TX,VT,WI,DC,GU,MP
3 states
KY,LA,MS
10 states
IN,MO,MT,NC,OR,PA,UT,VT,WA,WV
State treasurer[7]9 states
MO,NC,ND,OR,PA,UT,VT,WA,WV
None23 states
AL,AZ,AR,CA,CO,CT,FL (CFO),ID,IL,IN,IA,KS,MA,NE,NV,NM,OH,OK,RI,SC,VT,WI,WY
3 states
KY,LA,MS
9 states
MO,NC,ND,OR,PA,UT,VT,WA,WV
State comptroller/controllerNoneNone7 states
CA,CT,IL,MD,NV,NY,SC
NoneNone
State auditor9 states
MT,NC,ND,PA,UT,VT,WA,WV,GU
None15 states
AL,AR,DE,IN,IA,MA,MN,MO,NE,NM,OH,OK,SD,VT,WY
2 states
KY,MS
9 states
MT,NC,ND,PA,UT,VT,WA,WV,GU
Superintendent of public instruction4 states
MT,NC,ND,WA
1 state
WI
7 states
AZ,CA,GA,ID,OK,
SC,WY
None4 states
MT,NC,ND,WA
Agriculture commissioner2 states
NC,WV
None6 states
AL,FL,GA,IA,ND,SC
3 states
KY,LA,MS
2 states
NC,WV
Insurance commissioner3 states
NC,ND,WA,
None5 states
DE,CAGA,KS,OK,
2 states
LA,MS
3 states
NC,ND,WA,
Other commissioners & elected officials1 state
NC (Labor)
None9 states
AZ (Mine Inspector),AR (Land),GA (Land),NM (Land),ND (Tax),OK (Labor),OR (Labor),SD (Land),TX (Land)
None1 state
NC (Labor)
State legislatures[8]44 states, DC, & 5 territories
AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, ME, MA, MI, MN, MO, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI, WY, DC, AS, GU, MP, PR, VI
2 states
VA, NJ
46 states, DC, & 4 territories
AK, AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, ME, MA, MD, MI, MN, MO, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI, WY, DC, AS, GU, MP, VI
4 states
LA, MS, NJ, VA
44 states, DC, & 5 territories
AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, ME, MA, MI, MN, MO, MN, NE, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI, WY, DC, AS, GU, MP, PR, VI
State boards of education[9]8 states, DC, & 3 territories
AL,CO,KS,MI,NE,OH,TX,UT,DC, GU, MP, VI
None8 states, DC, & 3 territories
AL,CO,KS,MI,NE,OH,TX,UT,DC, GU, MP, VI
None8 states, DC, & 3 territories
AL,CO,KS,MI,NE,OH,TX,UT,DC, GU, MP, VI
Other state, local, and tribal officesVaries
1 This table does not includespecial elections, which may be held to fill political offices that have become vacant between the regularly scheduled elections.
2 As well as all sixnon-voting delegates of the U.S. House.
3 As well as fivenon-voting delegates of the U.S. House. Theresident commissioner of Puerto Rico instead serves a four-year term that coincides with the presidential term.
4 The governors of New Hampshire and Vermont are each elected to two-year terms. The other 48 state governors and all five territorial governors serve four-year terms.
5 In 26 states and 3 territories the lieutenant governor is elected on the same ticket as the governor: AK, CO, CT, FL, HI, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, MD, MA, MI, MN, MT, NE, NJ, NM, NY, ND, OH, PA, SC, SD, UT, WI, GU, MP, VI.
6 Like the governor, Vermont's other officials are each elected to two-year terms. All other state officers for all other states listed serve four-year terms.
7 In some states, the comptroller or controller has the duties equivalent to a treasurer. There are some states with both positions, so both have been included separately.
8 This list does not differentiate chambers of each legislature. Forty-nine state legislatures are bicameral; Nebraska is unicameral. Additionally, Washington, DC, Guam, and the US Virgin Islands are unicameral; the other territories are bicameral. All legislatures have varying terms for their members. Many have two-year terms for the lower house and four-year terms for the upper house. Some have all two-year terms and some all four-year terms. Arkansas has a combination of both two- and four-year terms in the same chamber.
9 Most states not listed here have a board appointed by the governor and legislature. All boards listed here have members that serve four-year staggered terms, except Colorado, which has six-year terms, and Guam, which has two-year terms. Most are elected statewide, some are elected from districts. Louisiana, Ohio, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands have additional members who are appointed.

List of current senators by class

[edit]
See also:List of current United States senators and119th United States Congress

The following table lists the senators by party by class.

Class 1Class 2Class 3Total
Democratic17131545
Republican14201953 + VP
Independent2 (caucus with Democrats)002
Last election202420202022
Next election203020262028
Total333334100
Senate composition by class, state & party
Class 1 US Senators by State & Party
Class 1
Class 2 US Senators by State & Party
Class 2
Class 3 US Senators by State & Party
Class 3

  Democrat  Independent who caucuses withDemocrats
  Republican  Not up for election

The following table lists the senators by state and by class, including the states'Cook Partisan Voting Index ratings, which indicate the party direction in which a state tends to lean and the extent of that lean.[11]

StateClass 1Class 2Class 3Cook PVI
AlabamaTommy Tuberville (R)Katie Britt (R)R+15
AlaskaDan Sullivan (R)Lisa Murkowski (R)R+6
ArizonaRuben Gallego (D)Mark Kelly (D)R+2
ArkansasTom Cotton (R)John Boozman (R)R+15
CaliforniaAdam Schiff (D)Alex Padilla (D)D+12
ColoradoJohn Hickenlooper (D)Michael Bennet (D)D+6
ConnecticutChris Murphy (D)Richard Blumenthal (D)D+8
DelawareLisa Blunt Rochester (D)Chris Coons (D)D+8
FloridaRick Scott (R)Ashley Moody (R)R+5
GeorgiaJon Ossoff (D)Raphael Warnock (D)R+1
HawaiiMazie Hirono (D)Brian Schatz (D)D+13
IdahoJim Risch (R)Mike Crapo (R)R+18
IllinoisDick Durbin (D)Tammy Duckworth (D)D+6
IndianaJim Banks (R)Todd Young (R)R+9
IowaJoni Ernst (R)Chuck Grassley (R)R+6
KansasRoger Marshall (R)Jerry Moran (R)R+8
KentuckyMitch McConnell (R)Rand Paul (R)R+15
LouisianaBill Cassidy (R)John Kennedy (R)R+11
MaineAngus King (I)Susan Collins (R)D+4
MarylandAngela Alsobrooks (D)Chris Van Hollen (D)D+15
MassachusettsElizabeth Warren (D)Ed Markey (D)D+14
MichiganElissa Slotkin (D)Gary Peters (D)EVEN
MinnesotaAmy Klobuchar (D)Tina Smith (D)D+3
MississippiRoger Wicker (R)Cindy Hyde-Smith (R)R+11
MissouriJosh Hawley (R)Eric Schmitt (R)R+9
MontanaTim Sheehy (R)Steve Daines (R)R+10
NebraskaDeb Fischer (R)Pete Ricketts (R)R+10
NevadaJacky Rosen (D)Catherine Cortez Masto (D)R+1
New HampshireJeanne Shaheen (D)Maggie Hassan (D)D+2
New JerseyAndy Kim (D)Cory Booker (D)D+4
New MexicoMartin Heinrich (D)Ben Ray Luján (D)D+4
New YorkKirsten Gillibrand (D)Chuck Schumer (D)D+8
North CarolinaThom Tillis (R)Ted Budd (R)R+2
North DakotaKevin Cramer (R)John Hoeven (R)R+18
OhioBernie Moreno (R)Jon Husted (R)R+5
OklahomaMarkwayne Mullin (R)James Lankford (R)R+17
OregonJeff Merkley (D)Ron Wyden (D)D+8
PennsylvaniaDave McCormick (R)John Fetterman (D)R+1
Rhode IslandSheldon Whitehouse (D)Jack Reed (D)D+8
South CarolinaLindsey Graham (R)Tim Scott (R)R+8
South DakotaMike Rounds (R)John Thune (R)R+15
TennesseeMarsha Blackburn (R)Bill Hagerty (R)R+14
TexasTed Cruz (R)John Cornyn (R)R+6
UtahJohn Curtis (R)Mike Lee (R)R+11
VermontBernie Sanders (I)Peter Welch (D)D+17
VirginiaTim Kaine (D)Mark Warner (D)D+4
WashingtonMaria Cantwell (D)Patty Murray (D)D+10
West VirginiaJim Justice (R)Shelley Moore Capito (R)R+21
WisconsinTammy Baldwin (D)Ron Johnson (R)R+1
WyomingJohn Barrasso (R)Cynthia Lummis (R)R+23

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"The Senate and the United States Constitution". senate.gov. RetrievedOctober 23, 2011.
  2. ^abcd"Frequently Asked Questions about a New Congress". United States Senate. RetrievedJune 11, 2013.
  3. ^abPittman, Travis (October 16, 2018)."The US Senate is divided into classes: What that means".ABC 10. KXTV. RetrievedNovember 12, 2022.
  4. ^ab"Senators Receive Class Assignments".Senate History. United States Senate. RetrievedMay 1, 2022.
  5. ^"Annals of Congress". Constitution Society. RetrievedAugust 4, 2016.
  6. ^ab"Journal of the Senate of the United States of America".Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, 1789–1793. Library of Congress. May 14, 1789. RetrievedJune 11, 2013.
  7. ^Power, Nicholas (August 4, 1789)."New-York, July 29".Poughkeepsie Journal. Poughkeepsie, NY. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  8. ^Davies, Lawrence E. (July 30, 1959)."G.O.P. Wins Governorship in Hawaii's First State Vote".The New York Times.
  9. ^Trussell, C. P. (August 25, 1959)."Congress Hails Three New Members from 50th State".The New York Times.
  10. ^Skelley, Geoffrey (May 29, 2014)."Senate Class Population Imbalance".Sabato's Crystal Ball. RetrievedMay 30, 2014.
  11. ^"2023 Cook PVI℠: District Map and List (118th Congress)".Cook Political Report. April 5, 2023. RetrievedFebruary 27, 2025.. . . instead of using a 50/50 mix of the two most recent presidential elections to assess partisanship as we had done in the past, we switched to a 75/25 weighting in favor of the more recent presidential cycle.

External links

[edit]
Membership
Members
Senate
House
Leaders
Senate
House
Districts
Groups
Congressional caucus
Ethnic and racial
Gender and sexual identity
Occupation
Religion
Related
Powers, privileges, procedure, committees, history, media
Powers
Privileges
Procedure
Senate-specific
Committees
Items
History
Media
Legislative
offices
Offices
Senate
House
Employees
Senate
House
Library of
Congress
Gov.
Publishing Office
Capitol Building
Office
buildings
Senate
House
Other
facilities
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Classes_of_United_States_senators&oldid=1323420822#Class_3"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp