2020 United States elections

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2020 United States elections
2018          2019         2020         2021          2022
Presidential election year
Election dayNovember 3
Incumbent president Donald Trump (Republican)
Next Congress 117th
Presidential election
Partisan controlDemocratic gain
Popular vote marginDemocratic +4.5%
Electoral vote
Joe Biden (D)306
Donald Trump (R)232
ElectoralCollege2020.svg
Presidential election results map. Blue denotes states won by Biden/Harris, and red denotes states won by Trump/Pence. Numbers indicate electoral votes allotted to the winner of each state or district.
Senate elections
Overall controlDemocratic gain [a]
Seats contested35 of 100 seats
(33 seats of Class II + 2 special elections)
Net seat changeDemocratic +3
2020 United States Senate elections results map.svg
Map of the 2020 Senate races
(Georgia held two Senate elections)
     Democratic hold     Republican hold
     Democratic gain     Republican gain
     No election
House elections
Overall controlDemocratic hold
Seats contestedAll 435 voting-members
All six non-voting delegates
Popular vote marginDemocratic +3.1%
Net seat changeRepublican +13
2020 US House Election Results.svg
Map of the 2020 House of Representatives elections
     Democratic hold     Republican hold
     Democratic gain     Republican gain
Gubernatorial elections
Seats contested13 (11 states, two territories)
Net seat changeRepublican +1
2020 United States gubernatorial elections results map.svg
Map of the 2020 gubernatorial races
     Democratic hold     Republican hold
     Republican gain
     New Progressive hold     Nonpartisan
     No election

The 2020 United States elections were held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. The Democratic Party's nominee, former vice president Joe Biden, defeated incumbent Republican president Donald Trump in the presidential election. Despite losing seats in the House of Representatives, Democrats retained control of the House and very narrowly gained control of the Senate. As a result, the Democrats obtained a government trifecta, the first time since the elections in 2008 that the party gained unified control of Congress and the presidency. [1] With Trump losing his bid for re-election, he became the first president to have seen his party lose the presidency and control of both the House and the Senate since Herbert Hoover in 1932. [2] [3] This was the first time since 1980 that either chamber of Congress flipped partisan control in a presidential year, and the first time Democrats did so since 1948.

Contents

Biden became his party's nominee after defeating numerous challengers in the Democratic primaries, while Trump faced token opposition in the Republican primaries. In the congressional elections, Democrats lost seats in the House of Representatives but retained their majority in the chamber by a narrow margin. Democrats made a net gain of three seats in the Senate for a total of 50 seats, taking control of the chamber as newly elected vice-president Kamala Harris could cast tie-breaking votes. Contests for the six non-voting congressional delegates from the District of Columbia and the permanently inhabited U.S. territories were also held during the 2020 elections.

Regularly-scheduled elections were held in 86 of the 99 state legislative chambers, and 11 states held their gubernatorial elections. Only one state governorship and two legislative chambers changed partisan control, as Republicans won the gubernatorial race in Montana and gained control of both legislative chambers in New Hampshire. Various other state executive and judicial elections, as well as numerous referendums, tribal elections, mayoral elections, and other local elections, also took place in 2020. The 2020 elections were the last major set of elections to impact the redistricting cycle that will take place following the 2020 census. Significant issues for voters included the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, as well as health care, the economy, racial unrest and climate change. Social distancing guidelines resulted in unprecedented levels of postal voting and early voting. Voter turnout greatly exceeded recent elections; one projection has turnout by voting eligible population being higher than any election since 1900.

After Biden won the election, Trump and other Republicans refused to concede, making baseless and disproven claims of widespread voter fraud, [4] [5] [6] despite U.S. election security officials saying that the election was "the most secure in American history". [7] These attempts to overturn the election resulted in a deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol, which led to Trump being impeached for the second time and deplatformed across several major social media platforms. [8] [9] [10]

Issues

During the campaign, the most prominent issues were the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, health care, economy, race, and abortion. [11] Democrats emphasized coronavirus economic relief and public health measures such as contact tracing, face mask usage, and social distancing, whereas Republican downplayed the coronavirus, [12] scuttled coronavirus economic relief negotiations in the lead-up to the election, [13] [14] and advocated for laxer public health measures to deal with the spread of the coronavirus. [15] Trump himself held events across the country, including in coronavirus hotspots, where attendees did not wear masks and were not socially distancing; at the same time, he mocked those who wore face masks. [16] [17] [18]

The Republican Party opted not to provide a comprehensive platform of its policy positions for the election; the 2020 platform was a one-page resolution which stated that the party "has and will continue to enthusiastically support the president's America-first agenda." [19] Democrats ran on protecting and expanding the Affordable Care Act, while criticizing Republicans for jeopardizing protections for individuals with preexisting conditions. [20] [21] Republicans generally did not emphasize health care issues, as their opposition to the Affordable Care Act had become a political liability by 2020, as the legislation had grown in popularity. [21] [22]

On the environment, Democrats proposed plans to combat climate change, including through investments in renewable energy and rejoining the Paris Climate Accords, whereas Republicans emphasized increased production of oil and natural gas. [23]

During the election campaign, Democrats made calls for criminal justice reform and spoke of a need to reduce systemic racism in the criminal justice system. [24] [25] Republicans ran on a "law and order" and pro-police messaging. [26] [27] While Democrats in many races were moderate, Republicans depicted them as extremists or secret "socialists" who held radical views on criminal justice or climate legislation. [26]

The rhetoric of incumbent president Donald Trump and his allies during the election campaign was marked by frequent use of falsehoods and promotion of unfounded conspiracy theories. [28] [29] [30] In the lead-up to the elections, Republicans attacked voting rights and spread falsehoods about voter fraud. [31] [32] [33] [34] Trump refused to commit to a peaceful transition of power in case he lost the election. [35] While senior Republicans disapproved of Trump's rhetoric in private, they refused to rebuke him publicly. [36]

Federal elections

Presidential election

The U.S. presidential election of 2020 was the 59th quadrennial U.S. presidential election, and was held to fill a term lasting from January 20, 2021, to January 20, 2025. By November 7, all major media organizations had projected that former vice president Joe Biden, the candidate of the Democratic Party, had defeated incumbent Republican president Donald Trump in the election. [37] Based on the winner of the popular vote in each state, [b] the Electoral College cast votes on December 14, and Congress counted the electoral votes and formally declared Biden as the election winner in a joint session on January 6, 2021. [38] In the months after the election, Trump challenged the results of the election, but on January 7, following congressional certification of the electoral vote and the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol, Trump acknowledged that "a new administration will be inaugurated." [39]

Biden won the election with 306 electoral votes and 51.3% of the national popular vote, compared to Trump's 232 electoral votes and 46.9% of the popular vote. Biden won every state that 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won in the 2016 presidential election, as well as Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Nebraska's second congressional district. Biden won the tipping-point state, Wisconsin, by a margin of 0.6%. [40] While Biden won the popular vote by 7 million votes, across Arizona, Georgia, and Wisconsin, the three states whose electoral votes contributed to Biden's win, Biden won by fewer than 45,000 votes. [41] In California and New York, Biden received 7 million more votes than Trump, accounting for Biden's popular vote win. [41] Among third party and independent candidates, Libertarian Party candidate Jo Jorgensen won 1.2% of the popular vote, Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins finished with 0.3% of the vote, and various other candidates won about 0.4% of the vote.

Incumbent Trump won re-nomination by his party after facing token opposition in the 2020 Republican primaries. [42] [43] The Republican Party also re-nominated Vice President Mike Pence as Trump's running mate for the 2020 election. Biden became the Democratic Party's presumptive nominee in early April 2020 after Bernie Sanders withdrew from the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries; Biden later chose Kamala Harris as his running mate shortly before the 2020 Democratic National Convention. [44] Along with Biden and Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Michael Bloomberg, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, and Tulsi Gabbard all won at least one delegate in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries. [45] Beyond the two major parties, about 1,200 individuals listed their names with the federal government as third party and independent candidates. [46] [c]

Biden is the oldest individual to win a US presidential election, [48] and Kamala Harris is the first woman to be elected vice president of the US. [49] Trump's defeat made him the first incumbent president to lose re-election since George H. W. Bush in the 1992 presidential election, [50] and the tenth elected president to lose his re-election bid. [51] He also became the first elected president to lose the popular vote twice since Benjamin Harrison in the late 19th century; and the first president ever to be elected while losing the popular vote, to then be impeached, and to then lose reelection as an incumbent. [2] [52] Accounting for the Democratic gain of the House in 2018, 2020 represented the first time since the 1930 and 1932 elections, as well as the sixth time overall, that an opposition party flipped control of the White House and both houses of Congress from the prior governing party following a single presidential term. [53] Biden became the first U.S. presidential candidate to win over 80 million total votes, won the highest share of the popular vote of any challenger to an incumbent president since the 1932 presidential election, and won the popular vote by the largest margin since Barack Obama's victory in the 2008 presidential election. [54] The Democratic victory in the national popular vote marked the seventh time in eight elections that Democrats won the national popular vote, although Republicans won the majority of the electoral vote (and thus the election) in three of those eight elections. [55]

Congressional elections

Senate elections

331222330
15 Democrats
not up
12 Democrats
up
[d] 23 Republicans
up
30 Republicans
not up
Control of Senate seats by class after the 2020 elections
Class DemocraticIndependentRepublicanNext elections
121210 2024
213020 2026
314020 2022
Total48250

Thirty-five of the 100 seats in the United States Senate were up for election in 2020: all 33 seats of Senate Class II, and seats in Arizona and Georgia that were up for special elections. Republicans defended 23 seats, while Democrats defended 12 seats. Prior to the 2020 election, and including seats not up for election, Republicans held 53 Senate seats, while Democrats held 45 seats, and Democratic-aligned independents held the remaining two seats. Because the vice president has the casting vote in the Senate, Democrats needed to achieve a net gain of at least three seats to achieve control if they won the vice presidency; otherwise, they needed to achieve a net gain of at least four seats to take the majority.

Five seats changed partisan control in the 2020 elections, as Democrats defeated both Republican incumbents in Georgia, as well as the Republican incumbents in the seats up in Arizona and Colorado. Republicans picked up one seat by defeating the Democratic incumbent in Alabama. The results of the 2020 cycle left both partisan caucuses with 50 senators. [56] Democrats gained majority control of the Senate on January 20, 2021, when Vice President-elect Harris and senators Alex Padilla, Jon Ossoff, and Raphael Warnock were sworn into office. [57] Democrats gained control of the Senate for the first time since they lost control in the 2014 United States Senate elections.

House of Representatives elections

Cartogram of U.S. House of Representative results:

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Democratic gain
Republican gain

Democratic hold
Republican hold

Independent hold
New Progressive (Puerto Rico) & Republican hold 2020 US House Election Results cartogram.svg
Cartogram of U.S. House of Representative results:
  Democratic gain  Republican gain
  Democratic hold  Republican hold
  Independent hold
  New Progressive (Puerto Rico) & Republican hold

All 435 voting seats in the United States House of Representatives were up for election; 218 seats are necessary for a majority. The winners of each race serve a two-year term. Democrats had gained control of the House of Representatives in the 2018 elections, winning 235 seats compared to 199 seats for Republicans. [e] Due to vacancies and party-switching that arose during the 116th Congress, immediately before the November 2020 elections Democrats held 232 seats, compared to 197 seats held by Republicans and one seat, that of Justin Amash, held by the Libertarian Party. [58] Thus, Republicans needed to gain 21 seats to gain a majority.

Republicans picked up 14 seats in the House elections, defeating thirteen incumbent House Democrats. [59] Nationally, Democratic House candidates won by a margin of about 3%, as many Democrats ran behind Biden. [60] The election results left Democrats with a narrow majority of 222 seats at the start of the 117th Congress.

Special elections

Five special elections were held in 2020 to replace a member who resigned or died in office during the 116th U.S. Congress:

State elections

Gubernatorial

2351720
Democrats Not UpDemocrats Up PNP/R UpRepublicans UpRepublicans Not Up
States holding regularly-scheduled legislative and gubernatorial elections in 2020:

Governor and all legislative chambers
All legislative chambers
A portion of legislative chambers
None USLegislativeElections2020.png
States holding regularly-scheduled legislative and gubernatorial elections in 2020:
  Governor and all legislative chambers
  All legislative chambers
  A portion of legislative chambers
  None

Elections were held for the governorships of 11 U.S. states and two U.S. territories. Most elections were for four-year terms, but the governors of New Hampshire and Vermont each serve two-year terms. Republicans defended a total of seven seats, while Democrats defended six seats. Only one state governorship changed parties, as Republican Greg Gianforte won the 2020 Montana gubernatorial election, succeeding outgoing Democratic governor Steve Bullock. [75] In Puerto Rico, the governorship was retained by the New Progressive Party, although the winning candidate, Pedro Pierluisi, is affiliated with the Democratic Party, replacing an incumbent who was affiliated with the Republican Party. [76]

Legislative

Regularly-scheduled elections were held in 86 of the 99 state legislative chambers in the United States; nationwide, regularly-scheduled elections were held for 5,876 of the 7,383 legislative seats. Many legislative chambers had all legislative seats up for election, but some legislative chambers that use staggered elections held elections for only a portion of the total seats in the chamber. [g] Although most states held regularly-scheduled elections for both legislative chambers, Alabama, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey and Virginia did not hold state legislative elections, and Michigan held elections only for the lower house. [f] Nebraska, the only state that does not have a bicameral state legislature, held elections for half of the seats in its lone legislative chamber. [77]

A total of two legislative chambers changed partisan control in 2020, as Republicans gained control of both chambers in New Hampshire. [78] [79] This represented the fewest partisan changes in state legislatures since 1944. [80]

Prior to the November 2020 elections, Democrats held 15 "trifectas" (control of the governor's office and both legislative chambers), Republicans held 20 trifectas, and 14 states have a divided government. Not included in this tally is Nebraska, as its legislature officially recognizes no party affiliations. [81] [82] Nationwide, Republicans controlled approximately 60 percent of the legislative chambers and 52 percent of the legislative seats. [83] The 2020 elections created two new trifectas, as the New Hampshire and Montana state government shifted from divided government to Republican control.

Attorney general

Regularly-scheduled elections were held in 10 of 43 states that elect attorneys general. The previous attorney general elections for this group of states took place in 2016, except in Vermont where attorneys general only serve two-year terms and last elected their current attorney general in 2018. Nine state attorneys general ran for re-election and eight won, while Republican Tim Fox of Montana could not run again due to term limits and Republican Curtis Hill of Indiana was eliminated in the Republican convention. [84]

No attorneys general offices changed party control in 2020. [85]

Secretary of State

Regularly-scheduled elections were held in 7 of 35 states that elect secretaries of states. The previous secretary of state elections for this group of states took place in 2016, except in Vermont where secretaries of state only serve two-year terms and last elected their current secretary of state in 2018. Five state secretaries of state ran for re-election and all five won, while Republicans Corey Stapleton of Montana and Bev Clarno of Oregon chose to retire. [86]

Democrats picked up the secretary of state office in Oregon. [87]

State Treasurer

Regularly-scheduled elections were held in nine states. The previous state treasurer elections for this group of states took place in 2016, except in Vermont where state treasurers only serve two-year terms and last elected their current state treasurer in 2018. Eight state treasurers ran for re-election and five won, while Republican Kelly Schmidt of North Dakota chose to retire. [88]

Republicans picked up the state treasurer offices in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. While Democrats picked up the state treasurer office in Washington. [88]

Other state elections

Partisan control of state and territorial governments following the 2020 elections:

Democratic trifecta maintained
Republican trifecta maintained
Republican trifecta established
Divided government established
Divided government maintained
Officially non-partisan, unicameral legislature USStateandTerritorialControl2020elections.svg
Partisan control of state and territorial governments following the 2020 elections:
  Democratic trifecta maintained
  Republican trifecta maintained
  Republican trifecta established
  Divided government established
  Divided government maintained
  Officially non-partisan, unicameral legislature

In 2020, 82 state supreme court seats are up for election in 35 states. This constitutes 24% of all state supreme court seats in the country. Various other state courts will also hold elections in 2020. Various state executive positions are also up for election in 2020.

Referendums and ballot measures

In the 2020 Mississippi flag referendum, Mississippi voters adopted a new state flag (pictured), replacing the former state flag, which included a representation of the Confederate battle flag. Flag of Mississippi.svg
In the 2020 Mississippi flag referendum, Mississippi voters adopted a new state flag (pictured), replacing the former state flag, which included a representation of the Confederate battle flag.

In the 2020 elections, voters considered a number of referendums, initiatives, ballot measures, and state constitutional amendments on a variety of topics, ranging from Medicaid expansion to marijuana legalization to voting rights. [89] Since the murder of George Floyd and subsequent protests, there were at least 20 police-related ballot measures across the country, including in California, Illinois, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Washington. [90]

Several proposed referendums failed to secure the necessary number of signatures to appear on ballots due to disruptions and social distancing measures undertaken after the COVID-19 pandemic. These included an effort in Ohio to raise the state's hourly minimum wage from $8.70 to $13; an anti-gerrymandering efforts in Oklahoma and Arkansas; and a California effort to allow electronic signatures for future California ballot measures. [134]

Impact on redistricting

Following the 2020 United States census, the state delegations to the U.S. House of Representatives will undergo reapportionment, and both the U.S. House of Representatives and the state legislatures will undergo redistricting. In states without redistricting commissions, the legislators and governors elected between 2017 and 2020 will draw the new congressional and state legislative districts that will take effect starting with the 2022 elections. State supreme courts can also have a significant effect on redistricting, as demonstrated in states such as Pennsylvania and Virginia. Thus the 2020 elections had a significant impact on the 2020 United States redistricting cycle. Barring court orders or mid-decade redistricting, the districts drawn in the redistricting cycle will remain in place until the next round of redistricting begins in 2030. [135] [136]

In the 2020 elections, the Republican Party won several legislative chambers and gubernatorial positions that had been selected by Democrats as key redistricting targets. Republicans flipped control of the New Hampshire legislature, defended the governorship of Missouri, retained control of both legislative chambers in Iowa, North Carolina, and Texas, and gained a super-majority in both chambers of the Kansas legislature, giving the party control of the key redistricting institutions in those states. Republicans also retained control of the Pennsylvania legislature and Minnesota Senate, ensuring divided partisan control of redistricting in both states. Additionally, the passage of a referendum in Virginia removed control of redistricting from the Democratic-controlled legislature to an independent commission. [79] However, in New York, Democrats gained a two-thirds super-majority in the State Senate and held their super-majority in the State Assembly, giving the party full control of redistricting. [137]

Territorial elections

The U.S. territories of American Samoa and Puerto Rico held gubernatorial and legislative elections in 2020, while Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands held legislative elections. Along with Washington, D.C., each territory also held elections for a non-voting delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives. All non-voting delegates serve two-year terms, with the exception of the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico, a non-voting position with a four-year term. Washington, D.C., also held elections for its shadow representative and one of its two shadow senators. The five territories also took part in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries and the 2020 Republican Party presidential primaries.

Local elections

Mayoral elections

Since the beginning of 2020, various major cities have seen incumbent mayors re-elected, including Bakersfield (Karen Goh), [138] Fremont (Lily Mei), [139] and Sacramento, California (Darrell Steinberg); [140] Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Sharon Weston Broome); [141] Chesapeake (David West), [142] Fairfax City (David Meyer), [142] Fredericksburg (Mary Katherine Greenlaw), [142] Hampton (Donnie Tuck), [142] Richmond (Levar Stoney), [143] and Virginia Beach, Virginia (Bobby Dyer); [144] Glendale (Jerry Weiers), [145] Mesa (John Giles), [146] and Phoenix, Arizona (Kate Gallego); [147] Irving (Rick Stopfer) [148] and Lubbock, Texas (Dan Pope); [149] Milwaukee (Tom Barrett), [150] and Kenosha, Wisconsin (John Antaramian); [151] Portland, Oregon (Ted Wheeler); [152] Salt Lake County, Utah (Jenny Wilson); [153] Wilmington, Delaware (Mike Purzycki); [154] Winston-Salem, North Carolina (Allen Joines); [155] and Bayamón, Puerto Rico (Ramón Luis Rivera Jr.). [156]

In Norfolk, Virginia, Mayor Kenny Alexander was unopposed in seeking reelection, [142] as was Mayor John Cruz in Hagåtña, Guam. [157] In Tulsa, Oklahoma, incumbent mayor G. T. Bynum earned reelection by winning an outright majority in the August primary. [158]

Open mayoral seats were won in Clearwater (Frank Hibbard) [159] and Miami-Dade County, Florida (Daniella Levine Cava); [160] Fresno (Jerry Dyer), [161] Riverside (Patricia Lock Dawson), [162] San Diego (Todd Gloria), [163] and Santa Ana, California (Vicente Sarmiento); [164] Gilbert (Brigette Peterson) [147] and Scottsdale, Arizona (David Ortega); [147] Honolulu, Hawaiʻi (Rick Blangiardi); [165] and San Juan, Puerto Rico (Miguel Romero). [166]

In Baltimore, Maryland, city council president Democrat Brandon Scott was elected to replace incumbent Democrat Jack Young who came in fifth in a crowded primary. [167] [168] In Stockton, California, Kevin Lincoln defeated one-term incumbent mayor Michael Tubbs, who was first Black mayor of the city and the youngest person elected to the position when he unseated incumbent mayor Anthony Silva in 2016. [169] In Texas, two mayoral runoff elections in December saw incumbents defeated: In Corpus Christi, city councilwoman Paulette Guajardo defeated incumbent Joe McComb, [170] and in El Paso, former mayor Oscar Leeser unseated one-term incumbent Dee Margo. [171] In Ely, Minnesota, Eric Urbas defeated three-term incumbent mayor Chuck Novack despite Urbas having dropped out of the race in August. [172] In Rabbit Hash, Kentucky, incumbent Brynneth Pawltro was ousted by Wilbur Beast, a 6-month-old French bulldog. [173] The town has never had a human mayor; Pawltro is a pit bull terrier.

Mayoral recalls

Several mayors faced recall campaigns during 2020. Mayors in Broken Bow, Nebraska; Diamond City, Arkansas; Heyburn, Idaho; and Oregon City, Oregon, were removed from office. Mayors in Elizabeth and Idaho Springs, Colorado; Humboldt, Nebraska; Powers, Oregon; Stevensville, Montana; and Westminster, California were retained in office. [174]

Other elections and referendums

Tribal elections

A number of Native American tribal governments held elections for tribal leadership in 2020. As with other elections in the country, the coronavirus pandemic disrupted many elections, delaying primaries and shifting some voting from in-person to postal.

The Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation reelected President Bernadine Burnette; [180] the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians reelected Tribal Chairman Aaron A. Payment; [181] Oneida Nation of Wisconsin reelected Chairman Tehassi Hill; [182] the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa reelected Tribal Chair Cathy Chavers; [183] the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes reelected President Terri Parton; [184] the Sitka Tribe of Alaska reelected Tribal Chairman Lawrence "Woody" Widmark; [185] and incumbent Tribal Chief Donald (Doc) Slyter was unopposed in seeking reelection to lead the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians. [186] Stephanie Bryan, the first woman to serve as chair of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians, also won reelection. [187] United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians incumbent Tribal Chief Joe Bunch, who was impeached but not removed from office in January 2020, [188] was re-elected.

In a runoff election, former South Dakota state senator Kevin Killer defeated incumbent Oglala Lakota Tribe president Julian Running Bear, who made the runoff by a single vote after surviving an impeachment effort in September. [189] [190] [191] Crow Nation Senator Frank White Clay defeated incumbent tribal chairman A.J. Not Afraid Jr. [192] Kristopher Peters was elected Squaxin Island Tribe tribal council chairman, defeating incumbent Arnold Cooper, [193] and Joseph Tali Byrd defeated long-time Quapaw Nation Business Committee Chairman John Berrey. [194] Durell Cooper defeated incumbent Apache Tribe of Oklahoma Tribal Chairman Bobby Komardley. [195] Walter R. Echo-Hawk was unopposed in a special election for president of the Pawnee Nation of Oklahoma Business Council [196] following the April 2020 recall of the prior president, James Whiteshirt. [197] The Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community elected Keith Anderson tribal chairman, replacing the retiring Charlie Vig. [198]

Three Minnesota Chippewa Tribe bands had candidates win more than 50% of the votes in June primaries, eliminating the need for a general election: Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe incumbent tribal chair Faron Jackson Sr., [199] White Earth Nation incumbent chief executive Michael Fairbanks, [200] and, on the Grand Portage Indian Reservation, challenger Bobby Deschampe, who defeated incumbent tribal chair Beth Drost. [201]

Northern Cheyenne voters elected five women to the tribal council, along with electing Donna Marie Fisher as tribal president and Serena Wetherelt as vice president. It is the first time women will make up the majority on the Northern Cheyenne tribal council. [202]

Tribal referendums

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

A poll worker sanitizes an election booth in Davis, California Poll worker sanitizes election booth.jpg
A poll worker sanitizes an election booth in Davis, California

Starting in March 2020, elections across the United States were delayed and disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Numerous states delayed presidential primaries, while Alabama delayed the Republican primary Senatorial run-off and North Carolina and Mississippi delayed Republican primary run-off for congressional seats. [205] Iowa, Missouri, South Carolina, and Texas all delayed municipal elections, and in New York City the special election for Queens borough president was cancelled. [206] The pandemic also led to the postponement of the 2020 Democratic National Convention, and both the 2020 Democratic National Convention and the 2020 Republican National Convention were held virtually. [207]

California Governor Gavin Newsom speaks about the decision to sign an executive order requiring mail-in voting in the 2020 November election.

To help enforce social distancing, many states expanded absentee and vote-by-mail options for 2020 primary elections and the November general elections. [208] Several elections, including Democratic primaries in Alaska and Hawaiʻi, as well as the Maryland 7th congressional district special election, were conducted entirely with mail-in ballots only. [206]

While the pandemic was impacting a number of things in elections 2020, Donald Trump was reported of planning to host his Election Night party at the White House. Two officials informed that Trump was planning a large indoor party of nearly 400 people at the East Room. The Trump Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue was initially chosen as the venue, but this was later changed due to the coronavirus restrictions that limited such gatherings to 50 people. [209] [210]

Turnout

Turnout by voting eligible population (VEP) in U.S. presidential elections since 1948. UsPresidentialElectionVoterTurnout19482020.png
Turnout by voting eligible population (VEP) in U.S. presidential elections since 1948.

With many states easing rules on early voting in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 election saw an unprecedented rate of early voting. [211] By October 26, with eight days remaining until the election, the total early vote throughout the United States had eclipsed that of 2016. [212] In total, about 100 million voters cast early votes, compared to the approximately 57 million early votes cast in 2016. [213] Democrats disproportionately voted by mail, while Republicans tended to vote more frequently in person. [211]

Just under 160 million people voted in the 2020 elections, compared to a turnout of approximately 137 million in the 2016 presidential election. Michael McDonald projects that about 67% of the voting eligible population voted in 2020, the highest rate of voter participation since the 1952 election. [214] [215] The 2020 elections saw the highest rate of voter participation by voting eligible population since the ratification of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which prohibits racial discrimination in voting, and the Twenty-sixth Amendment, which effectively lowered the national voting age from 21 to 18. [216] [217]

Public perceptions and analysis

In a poll conducted in 2019, 59% of respondents expressed that they are not confident in the "honesty of U.S. elections". [218] In an August 2020 survey, 49% of respondents said that they expect voting to be "difficult", up from 15% in 2018; 75% of Republicans, but less than half of Democrats were confident that the elections "will be conducted fairly and accurately". [219] In an October 2020 survey, 47% of respondents disagreed with the statement that the election "is likely to be fair and honest", 51% would not "generally agree on who is the legitimately elected president of the United States"; [220] 56% said that they expect "an increase in violence as a result of the election". [220] 49% of college students polled in September 2020 said that the elections won't be "fair and open", 55% that "it will not be administered well", and 81% that "special interest groups have more influence over election outcomes than voters". [221]

According to an October 2020 poll, eight out of ten Americans consider misinformation a "major problem"; [222] Biden supporters were more likely than Trump supporters to trust the news media and their candidate's messaging. [222] [223]

Historian Timothy Snyder, an expert on authoritarianism, said that "it's important not to talk about this as just an election. It's an election surrounded by the authoritarian language of a coup d'etat. [...] [Trump] seems pretty sure he won't win the election, [but] he doesn't want to leave the office." According to Snyder, in order to overcome Trump's "authoritarian's instinct", the opposition "has to win the election and it has to win the aftermath of the election." [224]

According to political scientist Gary C. Jacobson, "The 2020 elections extended several long-term trends in American electoral politics that were driven to new extremes by the singularly divisive person and presidency of Donald J. Trump. The election set new records for electoral continuity, party loyalty, nationalization, polarization, and presidential influence on the down-ballot vote choices, to the point where local factors such as incumbency, candidate quality, and campaign spending barely registered in the congressional election results." [225]

Table of state, territorial, and federal results

This table shows the partisan results of president, congressional, gubernatorial, and state legislative races held in each state and territory in 2020. Note that not all states and territories held gubernatorial, state legislative, and U.S. Senate elections in 2020. The five territories and Washington, D.C., do not elect members of the U.S. Senate, and the territories do not take part in presidential elections; instead, they each elect one non-voting member of the House. Nebraska's unicameral legislature and the governorship and legislature of American Samoa are elected on a non-partisan basis and therefore political party affiliation is not listed.

Subdivision and PVI [226] Before 2020 elections [227] After 2020 elections
Subdivision PVI GovernorState leg. U.S. Senate U.S. House Pres. [h] Governor State leg. U.S. Senate U.S. House
Alabama R+14RepRepSplitRep 6–1RepRepRepRepRep 6–1
Alaska R+9RepSplitRepRep 1–0RepRepSplit [i] RepRep 1–0
Arizona R+5RepRepSplitDem 5–4DemRepRepDemDem 5–4
Arkansas R+15RepRepRepRep 4–0RepRepRepRepRep 4–0
California D+12DemDemDemDem 45–7DemDemDemDemDem 42–11
Colorado D+1DemDemSplitDem 4–3DemDemDemDemDem 4–3
Connecticut D+6DemDemDemDem 5–0DemDemDemDemDem 5–0
Delaware D+6DemDemDemDem 1–0DemDemDemDemDem 1–0
Florida R+2RepRepRepRep 14–13RepRepRepRepRep 16–11
Georgia R+5RepRepRepRep 8–4DemRepRepDemRep 8–6
Hawaii D+18DemDemDemDem 2–0DemDemDemDemDem 2–0
Idaho R+19RepRepRepRep 2–0RepRepRepRepRep 2–0
Illinois D+7DemDemDemDem 13–5DemDemDemDemDem 13–5
Indiana R+9RepRepRepRep 7–2RepRepRepRepRep 7–2
Iowa R+3RepRepRepDem 3–1RepRepRepRepRep 3–1
Kansas R+13DemRepRepRep 3–1RepDemRepRepRep 3–1
Kentucky R+15DemRepRepRep 5–1RepDemRepRepRep 5–1
Louisiana R+11DemRepRepRep 5–1RepDemRepRepRep 5–1
Maine D+3DemDemSplit R/I [j] Dem 2–0Dem [k] DemDemSplit R/I [j] Dem 2–0
Maryland D+12RepDemDemDem 7–1DemRepDemDemDem 7–1
Massachusetts D+12RepDemDemDem 9–0DemRepDemDemDem 9–0
Michigan D+1DemRepDemDem 7–6–1DemDemRepDemSplit 7–7
Minnesota D+1DemSplitDemDem 5–3DemDemSplitDemSplit 4–4
Mississippi R+9RepRepRepRep 3–1RepRepRepRepRep 3–1
Missouri R+9RepRepRepRep 6–2RepRepRepRepRep 6–2
Montana R+11DemRepSplitRep 1–0RepRepRepSplitRep 1–0
Nebraska R+14RepNPRepRep 3–0Rep [l] RepNPRepRep 3–0
Nevada D+1DemDemDemDem 3–1DemDemDemDemDem 3–1
New Hampshire EvenRepDemDemDem 2–0DemRepRepDemDem 2–0
New Jersey D+7DemDemDemDem 10–2DemDemDemDemDem 10–2
New Mexico D+3DemDemDemDem 3–0DemDemDemDemDem 2–1
New York D+11DemDemDemDem 21–6DemDemDemDemDem 19–8
North Carolina R+3DemRepRepRep 9–3RepDemRepRepRep 8–5
North Dakota R+17RepRepRepRep 1–0RepRepRepRepRep 1–0
Ohio R+3RepRepSplitRep 12–4RepRepRepSplitRep 12–4
Oklahoma R+20RepRepRepRep 4–1RepRepRepRepRep 5–0
Oregon D+5DemDemDemDem 4–1DemDemDemDemDem 4–1
Pennsylvania EvenDemRepSplitSplit 9–9DemDemRepSplitSplit 9–9
Rhode Island D+10DemDemDemDem 2–0DemDemDemDemDem 2–0
South Carolina R+8RepRepRepRep 5–2RepRepRepRepRep 6–1
South Dakota R+14RepRepRepRep 1–0RepRepRepRepRep 1–0
Tennessee R+14RepRepRepRep 7–2RepRepRepRepRep 7–2
Texas R+8RepRepRepRep 22–13RepRepRepRepRep 23–13
Utah R+20RepRepRepRep 3–1RepRepRepRepRep 4–0
Vermont D+15RepDemSplit D/I [m] Dem 1–0DemRepDemSplit D/I [m] Dem 1–0
Virginia D+1DemDemDemDem 7–4DemDemDemDemDem 7–4
Washington D+7DemDemDemDem 7–3DemDemDemDemDem 7–3
West Virginia R+20RepRepSplitRep 3–0RepRepRepSplitRep 3–0
Wisconsin EvenDemRepSplitRep 5–3DemDemRepSplitRep 5–3
Wyoming R+25RepRepRepRep 1–0RepRepRepRepRep 1–0
United StatesEvenRep 26–24Rep 28–19–2Rep 53–47 [n] Dem 232–197DemRep 27–23Rep 29–18–2Dem 50–50 [a] Dem 222–213
Washington, D.C. D+43Dem [o] Dem [o] DemDemDem [o] Dem [o] Dem
American Samoa NP/D [p] NPRepNP/D [q] NPRep
Guam DemDemDemDem [r] DemDemDem
N. Mariana Islands RepRepInd [s] RepSplit [t] Ind [s]
Puerto Rico PNP/R [u] PNPPNP/R [v] PNP/D [w] PDP PNP/R [v]
U.S. Virgin Islands DemDemDemDemDemDem
SubdivisionPVIGovernorState leg. U.S. Senate U.S. House President Governor State leg. U.S. Senate U.S. House
Subdivision and PVIBefore 2020 electionsAfter 2020 elections

Table of partisan control of state legislatures

Subdivision [226] [230] Before 2020 elections [231] [x] After 2020 elections
Subdivision PVI % Pop. GovernorUpper houseLower houseOverall Governor Upper houseLower houseOverall
 
Alabama R+141.48RepRep 27–8Rep 75–28RepRepRepRepRep
Alaska R+90.22RepRep 13–7Coal. 22–17 [y] DivRepRepCoal.Div
Arizona R+52.19RepRep 17–13Rep 31–29RepRepRepRepRep
Arkansas R+150.91RepRep 26–9Rep 75–23RepRepRepRepRep
California D+1211.91DemDem 29–11Dem 61–17–1DemDemDemDemDem
Colorado D+11.74DemDem 19–16Dem 41–24DemDemDemDemDem
Connecticut D+61.07DemDem 22–14Dem 91–60DemDemDemDemDem
Delaware D+60.29DemDem 12–9Dem 26–15DemDemDemDemDem
Florida R+26.47RepRep 23–17Rep 73–46RepRepRepRepRep
Georgia R+53.2RepRep 35–21Rep 105–75RepRepRepRepRep
Hawaii D+180.43DemDem 24–1Dem 46–5DemDemDemDemDem
Idaho R+190.54RepRep 28–7Rep 56–14RepRepRepRepRep
Illinois D+73.82DemDem 40–19Dem 73–44DemDemDemDemDem
Indiana R+92.03RepRep 40–10Rep 67–33RepRepRepRepRep
Iowa R+30.95RepRep 32–18Rep 53–47RepRepRepRepRep
Kansas R+130.88DemRep 29–11Rep 84–41DivDemRepRepDiv
Kentucky R+151.35DemRep 28–10Rep 62–38DivDemRepRepDiv
Louisiana R+111.4DemRep 27–12Rep 68–35–2DivDemRepRepDiv
Maine D+30.41DemDem 21–14Dem 88–57–6DemDemDemDemDem
Maryland D+121.82RepDem 32–14Dem 99–42DivRepDemDemDiv
Massachusetts D+122.09RepDem 36–4Dem 127–31–1DivRepDemDemDiv
Michigan D+13.01DemRep 22–16Rep 58–51DivDemRepRepDiv
Minnesota D+11.7DemRep 35–32Dem 75–59DivDemRepDemDiv
Mississippi R+90.9RepRep 36–16Rep 76–45–1RepRepRepRepRep
Missouri R+91.85RepRep 23–8Rep 113–48RepRepRepRepRep
Montana R+110.32DemRep 30–20Rep 57–43DivRepRepRepRep
Nebraska R+140.58RepNP [z] [z] RepNP [z] [z]
Nevada D+10.93DemDem 13–8Dem 29–13DemDemDemDemDem
New Hampshire Even0.41RepDem 14–10Dem 231–158–1DivRepRepRepRep
New Jersey D+72.68DemDem 25–15Dem 52–28DemDemDemDemDem
New Mexico D+30.63DemDem 26–16Dem 45–24DemDemDemDemDem
New York D+115.86DemDem 40–20Dem 103–42–1DemDemDemDemDem
North Carolina R+33.16DemRep 28–21Rep 64–55DivDemRepRepDiv
North Dakota R+170.23RepRep 37–10Rep 79–15RepRepRepRepRep
Ohio R+33.52RepRep 24–9Rep 61–38RepRepRepRepRep
Oklahoma R+201.19RepRep 38–9Rep 77–23RepRepRepRepRep
Oregon D+51.27DemDem 18–12Dem 38–22DemDemDemDemDem
Pennsylvania Even3.86DemRep 28–21–1Rep 109–93DivDemRepRepDiv
Rhode Island D+100.32DemDem 33–5Dem 66–9DemDemDemDemDem
South Carolina R+81.55RepRep 27–19Rep 78–44RepRepRepRepRep
South Dakota R+140.27RepRep 30–5Rep 59–11RepRepRepRepRep
Tennessee R+142.06RepRep 28–5Rep 73–26RepRepRepRepRep
Texas R+88.74RepRep 19–11Rep 84–66RepRepRepRepRep
Utah R+200.97RepRep 23–6Rep 59–16RepRepRepRepRep
Vermont D+150.19RepDem 22–6–1Dem 94–44–12DivRepDemDemDiv
Virginia D+12.57DemDem 21–19Dem 55–45DemDemDemDemDem
Washington D+72.29DemDem 29–20Dem 57–41DemDemDemDemDem
West Virginia R+200.54RepRep 20–14Rep 58–41–1RepRepRepRepRep
Wisconsin Even1.75DemRep 18–13Rep 63–35DivDemRepRepDiv
Wyoming R+250.17RepRep 27–3Rep 50–9–1RepRepRepRepRep
U.S. states98.71Rep 26–24Rep 30–19Rep 28–21 [aa] Rep 20–15 [ab] Rep 27–23Rep 31–18Rep 29–20Rep 22–15
Washington, D.C. D+430.21Dem [o] Dem [o] DemDemDemDem
American Samoa 0.02NP/D [ac] NPNPNPNP/D [p] NPNPNP
Guam 0.05DemDemDemDemDemDem
N. Mariana Islands 0.02RepRepRepRepRepRepDivDiv
Puerto Rico 0.96 PNP/R [ad] PNPPNPPNP PNP/DDiv PDP Div
U.S. Virgin Islands 0.03DemDemDemDemDemDem
United StatesEven10028–28Rep 31–22 [ae] Rep 30–20Rep 21–1828–28Rep 32–21 [ae] Rep 29–20Rep 22–18
Subdivision PVI % Pop. GovernorUpper houseLower houseOverall Governor Upper houseLower houseOverall
SubdivisionBefore 2020 electionsAfter 2020 elections

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 The 2020 Senate elections left both parties with 50 Senate seats, leaving the Vice President of the United States to break ties. Republicans retained control of the chamber until January 20, 2021, when Vice President Kamala Harris and senators Alex Padilla, Jon Ossoff, and Raphael Warnock were sworn in.
  2. 48 states allocate all of their electoral votes to the winner of the statewide vote, while two states, Maine and Nebraska, allocate two electoral votes to the winner of the statewide vote and allocate the remaining votes to the winner of each congressional district.
  3. Under federal law, individuals do not become official candidates for president until they raise and report at least $5000 for their campaign, and not all of the individuals who listed themselves as candidates reached this threshold. [47]
  4. 2 Independents not up
  5. The results of one 2018 race, the 2018 North Carolina's 9th congressional district election, were declared void due to voting irregularities.
  6. 1 2 Some or all of the legislative chambers not holding regularly-scheduled elections in 2020 may nonetheless hold special elections in 2020.
  7. The upper houses of Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming held elections for half of the seats in the chamber. The North Dakota House of Representatives is the only lower house in which only half of the seats were up for election. The Illinois Senate held elections for one-third of the seats in the chamber. [77]
  8. This column reflects the individual who won a plurality of the state's popular vote in the 2020 presidential election.
  9. Republicans won a majority of seats in the state house, but they will continue organizing under a coalition caucus in the next session of the Alaska legislature. [228]
  10. 1 2 One of Maine's senators, Susan Collins, is a Republican. The other senator from Maine, Angus King, is an independent who has caucused with the Democrats since taking office in 2013.
  11. Three of Maine's four electoral votes were called for Biden, while the remaining electoral vote was called for Trump.
  12. Four of Nebraska's electoral votes were called for Trump, while one of its electoral votes was called for Biden.
  13. 1 2 One of Vermont's senators, Patrick Leahy, is a Democrat. The other senator from Vermont, Bernie Sanders, was elected as an independent and has caucused with the Democrats since taking office in 2007.
  14. Prior to the 2020 Senate elections, the Democratic Senate caucus consisted of 45 Democrats and two independents.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Washington, D.C., does not elect a governor or state legislature, but it does elect a mayor and a city council.
  16. 1 2 Although elections for governor of American Samoa are non-partisan, Governor Lolo Matalasi Moliga has affiliated with the Democratic Party at the national level since re-election in 2016.
  17. Although elections for governor of American Samoa are non-partisan, Governor Lemanu Peleti Mauga affiliates with the Democratic Party at the national level.
  18. Although Guam does not have a vote in the Electoral College, the territory has held a presidential advisory vote for every presidential election since 1980.
  19. 1 2 The Northern Mariana Islands' delegate to Congress, Gregorio Sablan, was elected as an Independent and has caucused with the Democrats since taking office in 2009.
  20. Republicans hold a nominal majority in the Northern Mariana Islands House of Representatives with nine seats and Democrats with eight seats; however, one independent caucuses with the Republicans and two with the Democrats, leaving the House split 10–10. One Republican crossed party lines to elect Democrat-aligned Independent Edmund Villagomez as Speaker of the House. [229] With five seats, Republicans maintained control of the Northern Mariana Islands Senate where a Democrat won one seat in 2020 and independents hold the remaining three seats.
  21. Puerto Rican Governor Wanda Vázquez Garced, who became governor after Pedro Pierluisi's succession of Ricardo Rosselló was deemed unconstitutional, is a member of the Puerto Rican New Progressive Party, but affiliates with the Republican Party at the national level.
  22. 1 2 Puerto Rico's Resident Commissioner, Jenniffer González, was elected as a member of the New Progressive Party and has caucused with the Republicans since taking office in 2017.
  23. Puerto Rican Governor-elect Pedro Pierluisi is a member of the Puerto Rican New Progressive Party, but affiliates with the Democratic Party at the national level.
  24. Partisan seat figures were compiled in August 2020.
  25. The Alaska House of Representatives is controlled by a coalition of Democrats, Republicans, and independents. The minority caucus consists of Republicans who are not part of the majority coalition.
  26. 1 2 3 4 Nebraska has a unicameral, officially non-partisan legislature. For this reason, Nebraska is not included in the overall tallies of partisan control (except for governor) and the overall control column is labeled as "N/A".
  27. Republicans controlled the lower house in 29 states, Democrats controlled the lower house in 20 states, and one state, Alaska, had a lower house controlled by a coalition.
  28. Republicans held a trifecta in 20 states, Democrats held a trifecta in 15 states, and 14 states had a divided government.
  29. Although elections for governor of American Samoa are non-partisan, Governor Lolo Matalasi Moliga has affiliated with the Democratic Party at the national level since re-election in 2016. He is counted as a Democrat for the overall tally.
  30. Puerto Rican Governor Wanda Vázquez Garced is a member of the Puerto Rican New Progressive Party and affiliates with the Republican Party at the national level. She is counted as a Republican in the overall tally.
  31. 1 2 The upper house tally includes the unicameral legislatures of Washington, D.C., Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

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Further reading