← 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 → Midterm elections | |
Election day | November 5 |
---|---|
Incumbent president | George W. Bush (Republican) |
Next Congress | 108th |
Senate elections | |
Overall control | Republican gain |
Seats contested | 34 of 100 seats (33 seats of Class II +1 special election) |
Net seat change | Republican +2 |
2002 Senate election results map | |
House elections | |
Overall control | Republican hold |
Seats contested | All 435 voting seats |
Popular vote margin | Republican +4.8% |
Net seat change | Republican +8 |
2002 House of Representatives results (territorial delegate races not shown) | |
Gubernatorial elections | |
Seats contested | 38 (36 states, 2 territories) |
Net seat change | Democratic +3 |
2002 gubernatorial election results | |
Legend | |
Republican hold Republican gain Democratic hold Democratic gain Independent hold |
The 2002 United States elections were held on November 5, in the middle of Republican President George W. Bush's first term. Republicans won unified control of Congress. In the gubernatorial elections, Democrats won a net gain of one seat. The elections were held just a little under fourteen months after the September 11 attacks. Thus, the elections were heavily overshadowed by the War on Terror, the impending Iraq War, the early 2000s recession, and the sudden death of Democratic Senator Paul Wellstone of Minnesota about one week before the election.
Republicans won a net gain of two seats in the Senate and so gained control of a chamber that they had lost in 2001 after Senator Jim Jeffords left the Republican Party. Republicans picked up eight seats in the House of Representatives, making this one of three mid-term elections in which the party of the incumbent president did not lose seats in either the House or the Senate after 1934 and 1998.
This is the only election in history where the President's party gained a house of Congress in a midterm election, the most recent midterm in which the President's party did not lose control of at least one house of Congress, and the most recent midterm election in which a political party maintained a trifecta on the government. The rally around the flag effect on President Bush's popularity as a result of the September 11 attacks played a big role in Republican success across the country in this midterm election.
Despite being the incumbent party in the White House, which is usually a disadvantage for the president's party during midterm congressional elections, Republicans achieved gains in both chambers of the United States Congress.
Main article: 2002 United States Senate elections |
During the 2002 U.S. Senate elections, all thirty-three regularly scheduled Class II Senate seats as well as a special election in Missouri were held.
In the United States Senate elections, the Republican Party achieved an overall net gain of two seats with victories in Georgia, Minnesota, and Missouri, while the Democrats took a seat in Arkansas. Thus, the balance of power in the Senate changed from a 51–49 Democratic majority to a 51–49 Republican majority.
Main article: 2002 United States House of Representatives elections |
During the 2002 House elections, all 435 seats in the House of Representatives plus 5 of the 6 nonvoting delegates from territories and the District of Columbia were up for election that year. These elections were the first to be held following redistricting in apportionment according to the 2000 United States Census.
Republicans succeeded in expanding their majority in the House of Representatives by a net gain of eight, resulting in a 229–204 Republican majority. They won the nationwide popular vote by a margin of 4.8 points.[1] This represented just the third time since the American Civil War that the president's party picked up seats in the House of Representatives, following the 1934 and 1998 elections.[2]
In addition to all regularly scheduled House elections, there were two special elections held, one for Oklahoma's 1st congressional district on January 8 and another for Hawaii's 2nd congressional district on November 30.
Main article: 2002 United States gubernatorial elections |
During the 2002 gubernatorial elections, the governorships of the 36 states, 2 territories, and the District of Columbia were up for election.
Going into the elections, Republicans held the governorships of 27 states and one territory (that being the Northern Mariana Islands); Democrats held those of twenty-one states, four territories, and the mayorship of the District of Columbia; and two governorships were held by incumbents of neither party (those being Angus King (I-Me.) and Jesse Ventura (IPM-Minn.)). Following the elections, Republicans sustained a net loss of one state governorship (but did gain the governorship of the territory of Guam); Democrats had an overall net gain of three state governorships and held on to all other territorial governorships and the mayorship of the District of Columbia; and there would be no governorships held by independents or third parties. Thus, the balance of power (excluding nonstate entities) would change from a 27–21 Republican majority to a 26–24 Republican majority.
In some states where the positions were elective offices, voters elected candidates for state executive-branch offices (lieutenant governor (though some were elected on the same ticket as the gubernatorial nominee); secretary of state; state treasurer; state auditor; state attorney general; state superintendent of education; commissioner of insurance, agriculture, or labor; etc.) and state judicial-branch offices (seats on state supreme courts and, in some states, state appellate courts).
In 2002, the seats of the legislatures of forty-six states and five nonstate entities were up for election.
Republicans captured seven legislative chambers from Democrats and won the majority of state legislative seats for the first time in half a century.[3] They picked up the Georgia Senate- for the first time since 1870; the Missouri House of Representatives- for the first time since 1955, giving Republicans a trifecta for the first time since 1949; the Texas House of Representatives- for the first time since 1873; the Wisconsin Senate; the Washington Senate, the Arizona Senate; and the Colorado Senate.
Democrats flipped three chambers including the Illinois Senate, the New Mexico Senate, and the Maine Senate, which was previously tied. Additionally, the Oregon Senate went from Republican to tied, and the North Carolina House of Representatives went from Democratic to tied.
Nationwide, there were some cities, counties, school boards, special districts and others that elected members in 2002.
Various major American cities held their mayoral elections in 2002, including the following: