A general election will be held in the U.S. state of Oregon on November 5, 2024.
Elections in Oregon |
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Main article: 2024 United States presidential election in Oregon |
Main article: 2024 United States House of Representatives elections in Oregon |
All six of Oregon's seats in the United States House of Representatives will be up for re-election in 2024. These seats were represented by four Democrats and two Republicans.
Main article: 2024 Oregon Secretary of State election |
After winning the election for Secretary of State in 2020, Democrat and former state legislator Shemia Fagan resigned from office on May 8, 2023, after revelations that she took a consulting job at a cannabis company while her office was auditing Oregon's marijuana industry, which many considered to be a conflict of interest. Cheryl Myers took office as acting Secretary of State while Governor Tina Kotek sought for another person to serve Fagan's remaining term. On June 28, 2023, Kotek announced former Portland city auditor LaVonne Griffin-Valade to serve the remaining term.[1]
Main article: 2024 Oregon Attorney General election |
Ellen Rosenblum, a Democrat and former judge on the Oregon Court of Appeals, was first elected in 2012, and was re-elected to the position in 2016 and 2020. Rosenblum has announced that she will not run for re-election.
Main article: 2024 Oregon State Treasurer election |
Democrat and former state legislator Tobias Read was elected to a second term in 2020. Read has announced his plan to run for Secretary of State.
See also: 2024 Oregon Senate election and 2024 Oregon House of Representatives election |
All 60 seats in the Oregon House of Representatives are up for election, and 15 of 30 seats Oregon State Senate will be up for election in 2024.
See also: 2024 Portland, Oregon, mayoral election and 2024 Portland, Oregon City Council election |
Incumbent Democratic mayor Ted Wheeler is eligible to run for re-election to a third term in office, and incumbent city auditor Simone Rede is eligible to run for re-election. In addition, the Portland City Council will be expanded from five seats to twelve (three each from one of four districts), all of which will be up for election.
These will be the first Portland elections to use ranked-choice voting after it was instituted by the passage of a 2022 ballot measure.[2] All elected city positions will be up for election, but will return to staggered rotation in subsequent elections. All seats are nonpartisan.