2018 West Virginia House of Delegates election
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (June 2024) |
![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
All 100 seats in the West Virginia House of Delegates 51 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() Seat colors (boxes): Democratic gain Republican gain Split | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Elections in West Virginia |
---|
![]() |
Elections to the West Virginia House of Delegates took place on November 6, 2018.[1] All the seats in the West Virginia House of Delegates were up for election.[2]
Overview
[edit]This election saw the Republican Party maintain their majority in the House of Delegates, although they sustained a net loss of 4 seats, being reduced from 63 seats to 59. The Democratic Party saw a net gain of 4 seats, from 37 to 41.
In the first sitting of the 84th legislature in January 2019, Roger Hanshaw was re-elected as Speaker of the West Virginia House of Delegates.
Predictions
[edit]Source | Ranking | As of |
---|---|---|
Governing[3] | Safe R | October 8, 2018 |
Results
[edit]District | Representatives |
---|---|
District 1 (2 seats) | Pat McGeehan (Republican)
Randy Swartzmiller (Democratic) |
District 2 | Phil Diserio (Democratic) |
District 3 (2 seats) | Erikka Lynn Storch (Republican)
Shawn Fluharty (Democratic) |
District 4 (2 seats) | Joe Canestraro (Democratic)
Lisa Zukoff (Democratic) |
District 5 | Dave Pethtel (Democratic) |
District 6 | David Kelly (Republican) |
District 7 | Jason Harshbarger (Republican) |
District 8 | Bill Anderson (Republican) |
District 9 | Ray Hollen (Republican) |
District 10 (3 seats) | Vernon Criss (Republican)
John R. Kelly (Republican) Tom Azinger (Republican) |
District 11 | Martin Atkinson III (Republican) |
District 12 | Steve Westfall (Republican) |
District 13 (2 seats) | Joshua Higginbotham (Republican)
Scott Cadle (Republican) |
District 14 | Jim Butler (Republican) |
District 15 | Geoff Foster (Republican) |
District 16 (3 seats) | Sean Hornbuckle (Democratic)
Daniel Linville (Republican) John Mandt (Republican) |
District 17 (2 seats) | Matthew Rohrbach (Republican)
Chad Lovejoy (Democratic) |
District 18 | Evan Worrell (Republican) |
District 19 (2 seats) | Kenneth Hicks (Democratic)
Robert Thompson (Democratic) |
District 20 | Nathan Brown (Republican) |
District 21 | Mark Dean (Republican) |
District 22 (2 seats) | Zack Maynard (Republican)
Joe Jeffries (Republican) |
District 23 | Rodney Miller (Democratic) |
District 24 (2 seats) | Ralph Rodighiero (Democratic)
Ted Tomblin (Democratic) |
District 25 | Tony Paynter (Republican) |
District 26 | Ed Evans (Republican) |
District 27 (3 seats) | Joe Ellington (Republican)
John Shott (Republican) Eric Porterfield (Republican) |
District 28 (2 seats) | Roy Cooper (Republican)
Jeffrey Pack (Republican) |
District 29 | Brandon Steele (Republican) |
District 30 | Mick Bates (Democratic) |
District 31 | Chris Toney (Republican) |
District 32 (3 seats) | Tom Fast (Republican)
Kayla Kessinger (Republican) Margaret Anne Staggers (Democratic) |
District 33 | Roger Hanshaw (Republican) |
District 34 | Brent Boggs (Democratic) |
District 35 (4 seats) | Moore Capito (Republican)
Eric Nelson (Republican) Andrew Byrd (Democratic) Doug Skaff (Democratic) |
District 36 (3 seats) | Andrew Robinson (Democratic)
Larry Rowe (Democratic) Amanda Estep-Burton (Democratic) |
District 37 | Mike Pushkin (Democratic) |
District 38 | Dianna Graves (Republican) |
District 39 | Sharon Malcolm (Republican) |
District 40 | Dean Jeffries (Republican) |
District 41 | Jordan Hill (Republican) |
District 42 (2 seats) | Jeff Campbell (Democratic)
Cindy Lavender-Bowe (Democratic) |
District 43 (2 seats) | William G. Hartman (Democratic)
Cody Thompson (Democratic) |
District 44 | Caleb Hanna (Republican) |
District 45 | Carl Martin (Republican) |
District 46 | Patrick S. Martin (Republican) |
District 47 | Chris Phillips (Republican) |
District 48 (4 seats) | Danny Hamrick (Republican)
Ben Queen (Republican) Terry Waxman (Republican) Timothy Miley (Democratic) |
District 49 | Amy Summers (Republican) |
District 50 (3 seats) | Mike Caputo (Democratic)
Linda Longstreth (Democratic) Michael Angelucci (Democratic) |
District 51 (5 seats) | Barbara Fleischauer (Democratic)
Rodney Pyles (Democratic) John Williams (Democratic) Evan Hansen (Democratic) Danielle Walker (Democratic) |
District 52 | Terri Funk Sypolt (Republican) |
District 53 | D. Rolland Jennings (Republican) |
District 54 | John Paul Hott (Republican) |
District 55 | Isaac Sponaugle (Democratic) |
District 56 | Gary Howell (Republican) |
District 57 | Ruth Rowan (Republican) |
District 58 | Daryl Cowles (Republican) |
District 59 | Larry Kump (Republican) |
District 60 | S. Marshall Wilson (Republican) |
District 61 | Jason Barrett (Democratic) |
District 62 | Tom Bibby (Republican) |
District 63 | John Hardy (Republican) |
District 64 | Eric Householder (Republican) |
District 65 | Sammi Brown (Democratic) |
District 66 | Paul Espinosa (Republican) |
District 67 | John Doyle (Democratic) |
References
[edit]- ^ contact@scytl.com, scytl. "Election Night Reporting". results.enr.clarityelections.com.
- ^ "West Virginia House of Delegates elections, 2018". Ballotpedia. Retrieved September 1, 2025.
- ^ Jacobson, Louis (October 8, 2018). "A Month Before Election Day, Democrats Poised for Legislative Gains". Governing. Retrieved June 27, 2024.