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Connecticut 2020 elections U.S. House • State Senate • State House • Special state legislative • Local judges • How to run for office |
| 2020 Connecticut House Elections | |
|---|---|
| |
| General | November 3, 2020 |
| Primary | August 11, 2020 |
| Past Election Results |
| 2018・2016・2014 2012・2010・2008 |
| 2020 Elections | |
|---|---|
| Choose a chamber below: | |
Democrats gained seats in the 2020 elections for Connecticut House of Representatives, preserving their majority. All 151 seats in the chamber were up for election in 2020. Heading into the election, Democrats held 91 seats and Republicans held 60. Democrats gained a net six seats from Republicans, winning a 97-54 majority.
The Connecticut House of Representatives was one of 86 state legislative chambers holding elections in 2020. All 151 Connecticut House seats were up for election in 2020. There are 99 chambers throughout the country. In 2018, 87 out of 99 legislative chambers held elections.
Connecticut's 2020 state legislative elections affected partisan control of redistricting following the 2020 census. In Connecticut, the state legislature is responsible for drafting both congressional and state legislative district plans. District plans are not subject to gubernatorial veto.
Ballotpedia provided comprehensive coverage of how election dates and procedures changed in 2020. While the majority of changes occurred as a result of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, some changes occurred for other reasons.
Connecticut modified its absentee/mail-in voting and candidate filing procedures for the November 3, 2020, general election as follows:
For a full timeline about election modifications made in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, click here.

| Connecticut House of Representatives | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Party | As of November 3, 2020 | After November 4, 2020 | |
| Democratic Party | 91 | 97 | |
| Republican Party | 60 | 54 | |
| Total | 151 | 151 | |
Connecticut State House general election |
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| Office | Other | ||
| District 1 |
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Mark Stewart Greenstein (Epic Party) |
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| District 2 |
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Dan Carter |
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| District 3 |
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| District 4 |
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Barry D'Andrea |
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| District 5 |
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Charles Jackson |
Charles Jackson (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 6 |
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| District 7 |
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| District 8 |
Brenda Falusi |
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| District 9 |
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Cathy Hopperstad |
Cathy Hopperstad (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 10 |
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| District 11 |
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Matt Harper |
Matt Harper (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 12 |
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Jeff Sullivan |
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| District 13 |
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Brian Marois Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 14 |
Genevieve Coursey |
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| District 15 |
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| District 16 |
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| District 17 |
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Leslee Hill (i) |
Leslee Hill (i) (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 18 |
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Rick Bush |
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| District 19 |
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| District 20 |
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Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 21 |
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John Brockelman |
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| District 22 |
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| District 23 |
David Rubino |
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| District 24 |
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Alden Russell |
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| District 25 |
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Jerrell Hargraves |
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| District 26 |
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Piotr Ceglarz |
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| District 27 |
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Michael Camillo |
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| District 28 |
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Patrick Pentalon |
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| District 29 |
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Henry Vasel |
Henry Vasel (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 30 |
JoAnn Angelico-Stetson |
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JoAnn Angelico-Stetson (Democratic Party, Working Families Party) |
| District 31 |
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Stewart Beckett |
Stewart Beckett (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 32 |
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| District 33 |
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Linda Szynkowicz |
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| District 34 |
Judd Melon |
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Judd Melon (Democratic Party, Working Families Party) |
| District 35 |
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John Hall III |
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| District 36 |
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Robert Siegrist |
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| District 37 |
Cate Steel |
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| District 38 |
Baird Welch-Collins |
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| District 39 |
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Kat Goulart |
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| District 40 |
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Lauren Gauthier |
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| District 41 |
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Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 42 |
Matt Geren Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 43 |
Kate Rotella (i) |
Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 44 |
Christine Rosati Randall |
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| District 45 |
Mark DePonte |
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Daniel Reale (Independent Party) |
| District 46 |
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Robert Bell |
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| District 47 |
Kate Donnelly |
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| District 48 |
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Julie Shilosky |
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| District 49 |
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| District 50 |
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| District 51 |
Larry Groh Jr. Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 52 |
Greg Post |
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| District 53 |
Pat Wilson Pheanious (i) |
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Pat Wilson Pheanious (i) (Democratic Party, Working Families Party) |
| District 54 |
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| District 55 |
John Collins |
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Salvatore Sena (Petitioning) |
| District 56 |
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Laura Bush |
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| District 57 |
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David Stavens |
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| District 58 |
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Mary Ann Turner |
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| District 59 |
Gerald Calnen |
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| District 60 |
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Scott Storms |
Scott Storms (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 61 |
Jack Henrie |
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| District 62 |
Audrey Lampert |
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| District 63 |
Noel Rodriquez |
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Noel Rodriquez (Democratic Party, Independent Party) |
| District 64 |
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Brian Ohler |
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| District 65 |
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Christopher Beyus |
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| District 66 |
Matt Dyer |
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| District 67 |
Hilary Ram |
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| District 68 |
Sean Butterly |
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| District 69 |
Michele Zommer |
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| District 70 |
Stephen Samela |
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| District 71 |
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| District 72 |
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Vernon Matthews |
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| District 73 |
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| District 74 |
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Stephanie Cummings (i) |
Stephanie Cummings (i) (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 75 |
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| District 76 |
Paul Honig |
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| District 77 |
Andrew Rasmussen-Tuller |
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| District 78 |
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Aileen Abrams (Independent Party) |
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| District 79 |
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David Rackliffe |
David Rackliffe (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 80 |
John Mazurek |
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John Mazurek (Democratic Party, Independent Party) |
| District 81 |
Dagmara Scalise |
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| District 82 |
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Mike Skelps |
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| District 83 |
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Lou Arata |
Lou Arata (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 84 |
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Richard Cordero |
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| District 85 |
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Weston Ulbrich |
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| District 86 |
Vincent Mase |
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| District 87 |
Kathy Grant |
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| District 88 |
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Kathy Hoyt |
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| District 89 |
E.J. Maher |
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| District 90 |
Jim Jinks |
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| District 91 |
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Did not make the ballot: |
Weruche George (Petitioning) |
| District 92 |
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| District 93 |
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| District 94 |
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| District 95 |
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| District 96 |
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Eric Mastroianni |
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| District 97 |
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Erin Reilly |
Erin Reilly (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 98 |
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| District 99 |
David Yaccarino Jr. |
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| District 100 |
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Anthony Gennaro |
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| District 101 |
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Noreen Kokoruda (i) |
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| District 102 |
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Marc Riccio |
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| District 103 |
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Pam Salamone |
Pam Salamone (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 104 |
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Myra Rivers |
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| District 105 |
Christopher Bowen |
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| District 106 |
Rebekah Harriman-Stites |
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Rebekah Harriman-Stites (Democratic Party, Working Families Party) |
| District 107 |
Kerri Colombo |
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| District 108 |
Danette Onofrio |
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| District 109 |
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Michael Henry |
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| District 110 |
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Erin Domenech |
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| District 111 |
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Bob Hebert |
Bob Hebert (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 112 |
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| District 113 |
Elaine Matto |
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| District 114 |
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Dan DeBarba |
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| District 115 |
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| District 116 |
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| District 117 |
Tony Sutton |
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Tony Sutton (Democratic Party, Working Families Party, Independent Party) |
| District 118 |
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Erik Smith |
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| District 119 |
Bryan Anderson |
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Bryan Anderson (Democratic Party, Working Families Party, Independent Party) |
| District 120 |
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Jim Feehan |
Jim Feehan (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 121 |
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Edward Scinto |
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| District 122 |
Jose Goncalves |
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| District 123 |
Sujata Gadkar-Wilcox |
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| District 124 |
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Jasmin Sanchez |
Wilfredo Martinez (Independent Party) |
| District 125 |
Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 126 |
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Lee Grisby II |
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| District 127 |
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Peter Perillo |
Robert T. Keeley Jr. (Petitioning) |
| District 128 |
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Ethan Book |
Ethan Book (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 129 |
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Helene Kouassi |
Robert E. Halstead (Petitioning) |
| District 130 |
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Terry Sullivan |
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| District 131 |
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| District 132 |
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Brian Farnen (i) |
Brian Farnen (i) (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 133 |
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Joanne Romano-Csonka |
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| District 134 |
Carla Volpe |
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Carla Volpe (Democratic Party, Working Families Party, Independent Party) |
| District 135 |
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John Shaban |
John Shaban (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 136 |
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Chip Stephens |
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| District 137 |
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Ellen Wink |
Ellen Wink (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 138 |
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Emile Buzaid |
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| District 139 |
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Caleb Espinosa |
Did not make the ballot: |
| District 140 |
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John Flynn |
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| District 141 |
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| District 142 |
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Fred Wilms |
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| District 143 |
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Patrizia Zucaro |
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| District 144 |
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Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 145 |
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J.D. Ospina |
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| District 146 |
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George Hallenbeck |
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| District 147 |
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Dan Maymin |
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| District 148 |
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Wilm Donath |
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| District 149 |
Kathleen Stowe |
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| District 150 |
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Joe Kelly |
Joe Kelly (Republican Party, Independent Party) |
| District 151 |
Hector Arzeno |
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In August 2020, the local Republican Party vacancy committee selected John Hall III (R) to replace incumbent candidate Jesse MacLachlan (R) on the general election ballot after MacLachlan withdrew from the race.[1][2]
In July 2020, the local Republican Party endorsed David Stavens to replace incumbent candidate Christopher Davis on the general election ballot after Davis withdrew from the race.[3][4]
In August 2020, local Democratic Party delegates endorsed Jaime Foster to replace candidate Taylor Biniarz on the general election ballot after Biniarz withdrew from the race.[5]
Connecticut State House primary election |
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| Office | Other | ||
| District 1 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 2 |
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| District 3 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 4 |
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| District 5 |
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| District 6 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 7 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 8 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 9 |
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| District 10 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 11 |
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| District 12 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 13 |
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| District 14 |
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| District 15 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 16 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 17 |
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| District 18 |
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| District 19 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 20 |
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| District 21 |
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| District 22 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 23 |
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| District 24 |
Richard Lacourciere |
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| District 25 |
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| District 26 |
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| District 27 |
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| District 28 |
Paul Montinieri |
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| District 29 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 30 |
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Jim Townsley |
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| District 31 |
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| District 32 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 33 |
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| District 34 |
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| District 35 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 36 |
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| District 37 |
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| District 38 |
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| District 39 |
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| District 40 |
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| District 41 |
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| District 42 |
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| District 43 |
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| District 44 |
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| District 45 |
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| District 46 |
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| District 47 |
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| District 48 |
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| District 49 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 50 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 51 |
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| District 52 |
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| District 53 |
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| District 54 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 55 |
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| District 56 |
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| District 57 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. Did not make the ballot: |
The Republican primary was canceled. Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 58 |
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| District 59 |
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| District 60 |
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| District 61 |
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| District 62 |
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| District 63 |
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| District 64 |
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| District 65 |
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| District 66 |
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| District 67 |
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| District 68 |
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| District 69 |
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| District 70 |
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| District 71 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 72 |
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| District 73 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 74 |
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| District 75 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 76 |
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| District 77 |
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| District 78 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 79 |
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| District 80 |
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| District 81 |
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| District 82 |
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Ernestine Holloway |
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| District 83 |
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| District 84 |
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| District 85 |
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| District 86 |
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| District 87 |
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| District 88 |
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| District 89 |
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| District 90 |
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| District 91 |
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| District 92 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 93 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 94 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 95 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 96 |
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| District 97 |
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| District 98 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 99 |
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| District 100 |
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| District 101 |
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| District 102 |
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| District 103 |
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| District 104 |
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| District 105 |
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| District 106 |
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| District 107 |
Did not make the ballot: |
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| District 108 |
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| District 109 |
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| District 110 |
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| District 111 |
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| District 112 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 113 |
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| District 114 |
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| District 115 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 116 |
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The Republican primary was canceled. |
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| District 117 |
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| District 118 |
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| District 119 |
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| District 120 |
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| District 121 |
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| District 122 |
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| District 123 |
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| District 124 |
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| District 125 |
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| District 126 |
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| District 127 |
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| District 128 |
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| District 129 |
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| District 130 |
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| District 131 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 132 |
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| District 133 |
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| District 134 |
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| District 135 |
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| District 136 |
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| District 137 |
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| District 138 |
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| District 139 |
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| District 140 |
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| District 141 |
The Democratic primary was canceled. |
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| District 142 |
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| District 143 |
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| District 144 |
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| District 145 |
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| District 146 |
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| District 147 |
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| District 148 |
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| District 149 |
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| District 150 |
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| District 151 |
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Six incumbents lost in the Nov. 3 general election. Those incumbents were:
| Name | Party | Office |
|---|---|---|
| Leslee Hill | House District 17 | |
| Kate Rotella | House District 43 | |
| Pat Wilson Pheanious | House District 53 | |
| Stephanie Cummings | House District 74 | |
| Noreen Kokoruda | House District 101 | |
| Brian Farnen | House District 132 |
No incumbents lost in the Aug. 11 primaries.
Sixteen incumbents were not on the ballot in 2020.[6] Those incumbents were:
| Name | Party | Office | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Joe Verrengia | House District 20 | Retired | |
| Rick Lopes | House District 24 | Filed for different office | |
| Russell Morin | House District 28 | Retired | |
| Joe Aresimowicz | House District 30 | Retired | |
| Joseph Serra | House District 33 | Retired | |
| Jesse MacLachlan | House District 35 | Withdrew | |
| Christopher Davis | House District 57 | Withdrew | |
| William Simanski | House District 62 | Retired | |
| Arthur O'Neill | House District 69 | Retired | |
| Emil Altobello | House District 82 | Retired | |
| Richard Smith | House District 108 | Retired | |
| John Frey | House District 111 | Retired | |
| Themis Klarides | House District 114 | Retired | |
| Kim Rose | House District 118 | Retired | |
| Gail Lavielle | House District 143 | Retired | |
| Livvy Floren | House District 149 | Retired |
The 16 retirements in 2020 represented a decrease from 17 in 2018. The table below shows the number of open seats in each election held between 2010 and 2020.
| Open Seats in Connecticut House of Representatives elections: 2010 - 2020 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Total seats | Open seats | Seats with incumbents running for re-election |
| 2020 | 151 | 16 (11 percent) | 135 (89 percent) |
| 2018 | 151 | 17 (11 percent) | 134 (89 percent) |
| 2016 | 151 | 20 (13 percent) | 131 (87 percent) |
| 2014 | 151 | 18 (12 percent) | 133 (88 percent) |
| 2012 | 151 | 19 (13 percent) | 132 (87 percent) |
| 2010 | 151 | 15 (10 percent) | 136 (90 percent) |
See statutes: Chapter 153 of the Connecticut Statutes
If more than one candidate belonging to the same party is running for the same office, a primary election will be held for that office. If there is only a single candidate seeking a party's nomination for an office, that candidate will advance to the general election without running in the primary election.[7][8][9]
A major party candidate may be nominated to run in the primary election in one of two ways: nomination at a convention or nomination by petition.[7]
To be nominated at a convention, a candidate must receive at least 15 percent of the votes cast by convention delegates for the office being sought. After being nominated at a convention, a candidate must file a certificate of nomination with the Connecticut Secretary of State. The certificate must be signed by the candidate, state that the candidate was endorsed by the major party at the convention, and provide the candidate's name as it will appear on the ballot, the candidate's address, and the office being sought by the candidate. The certificate must also be attested to by the chairman, presiding officer, or secretary of the convention.[7][10]
A candidate who has been nominated by convention cannot be nominated by petition. To be nominated by petition, a major party candidate must collect signatures equal to at least 2 percent of the total number of members enrolled in that major party in the state (5 percent for state legislative candidates). Petition forms to collect those signatures are provided by the Connecticut Secretary of State beginning on the 105th day preceding the primary election for candidates seeking federal or state executive office. Candidates seeking office in the Connecticut State Legislature can retrieve petition forms beginning on the 77th day preceding the primary election.[7]
Petitions must be filed with the registrar of voters in each town in which signatures were collected no later than the 63 days preceding the primary. The registrar of voters must provide a receipt of the petition to the candidate, and the candidate must file a copy of that receipt with the Connecticut Secretary of State. The registrar of voters must then certify the names on the petition and file it with the Connecticut Secretary of State within seven days.[7][11]
A minor party candidate whose party has not yet attained qualified status must be nominated by petition. A minor party petition candidate affiliates with his or her party on an "Application for Reservation of Party Designation and Formation of Party Designation Committee." This form must be filed with the Connecticut Secretary of State. On this application, the candidate must indicate a party, whose name includes no more than three words (or no more than 25 letters), and must provide signatures from 25 registered voters in the state. The candidate must also provide the names of two individuals who will be responsible for filing a statement of endorsement qualifying the candidate to run under the party name specified. Candidates for the same minor party for state offices may be included on the same petition. Candidates for all other offices must file separate petitions.[12][13][14]
A minor party candidate whose party has attained qualified status can be nominated without a petition. The presiding officer of the committee or meeting in charge of deciding on nominations is required to certify and file a list of the minor party’s nominees with the Connecticut Secretary of State no later than 62 days prior to the election in which the candidates will be running. The list of nominees must include the following information:[15][16]
An unaffiliated candidate can petition for ballot access. To do this, the candidate must first file an application for the petition with the Connecticut Secretary of State. The application must include the name of the candidate and a statement signed by the candidate affirming that he or she has consented to place his or her name on the petition. The candidate may then circulate the petition. The candidate must collect signatures from registered, eligible voters equal to 1 percent of the votes cast at the most recent election for the office being sought by the candidate, or 7,500 signatures, whichever is less.[12][17][18]
Once completed, the petition may be filed with either the Connecticut Secretary of State or the town clerk where the candidate resides. If the petition is filed with the town clerk, the town clerk must submit it to the Connecticut Secretary of State within two weeks of receiving it.[12][19]
A write-in candidate may only run in the general election. To do so, he or she must register with the Connecticut Secretary of State no earlier than 90 days but no later than 14 days before the general election. The registration must include the candidate's name and address, the office being sought, and a statement of consent to be a candidate. A write-in candidate cannot designate an affiliation with a political party, and no candidate who was nominated by a major or minor party or by petition may run as a write-in candidate.[20][21]
The table below details filing requirements for Connecticut House of Representatives candidates in the 2020 election cycle.
| Filing requirements for state legislative candidates, 2020 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chamber name | Party | Signatures required | Filing fee | Filing deadline | Source |
| Connecticut House of Representatives | Qualified party | 5% of registered party members (reduced to 70% of statutory requirement in response to COVID-19 outbreak) | N/A | 6/11/2020 | Source |
| Connecticut House of Representatives | Unaffiliated | 1% of votes cast for the office being sought in the last preceding election (reduced to 70% of statutory requirement in response to COVID-19 outbreak) | N/A | 8/7/2020 | Source |
Article III, Section 4 of the Connecticut Constitution states: The house of representatives shall consist of not less than one hundred twenty-five and not more than two hundred twenty-five members, each of whom shall be an elector residing in the assembly district from which he is elected. Each assembly district shall be contiguous as to territory and shall elect no more than one representative. For the purpose of forming assembly districts, no town shall be divided except for the purpose of forming assembly districts wholly within the town.
| State legislators | |
|---|---|
| Salary | Per diem |
| $28,000/year | No per diem is paid. |
Connecticut legislators assume office the Wednesday following the first Monday of January after their election.[22]
A state government trifecta is a term that describes single-party government, when one political party holds the governor's office and has majorities in both chambers of the legislature in a state government.
Connecticut Party Control: 1992-2022
Twelve years of Democratic trifectas • No Republican trifectas
Scroll left and right on the table below to view more years.
| Year | 92 | 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 | 00 | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | 06 | 07 | 08 | 09 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Governor | I | I | I | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D |
| Senate | D | D | D | R | R | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D |
| House | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D | D |
| U.S. presidential election, Connecticut, 2016 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Vote % | Votes | Electoral votes | |
| Democratic | 54.6% | 897,572 | 7 | ||
| Republican | Donald Trump/Mike Pence | 40.9% | 673,215 | 0 | |
| Libertarian | Gary Johnson/Bill Weld | 3% | 48,676 | 0 | |
| Green | Jill Stein/Ajamu Baraka | 1.4% | 22,841 | 0 | |
| - | Write-in votes | 0.2% | 2,616 | 0 | |
| Total Votes | 1,644,920 | 7 | |||
| Election results via: Connecticut Secretary of State | |||||
A primary election is an election in which registered voters select a candidate whom they believe should be a political party's candidate for elected office to run in the general election. They are also used to choose convention delegates and party leaders. Primaries are state-level and local-level elections that take place prior to a general election. Connecticut utilizes a closed primary system, in which only registered party members may vote in a party's primary.[23][24][25][26]
For information about which offices are nominated via primary election, see this article.
In Connecticut, all polling places are open from 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Election Day. An individual who is in line at the time polls close must be allowed to vote.[27]
To vote in Connecticut, one must be a U.S. citizen and Connecticut resident who will be at least 18 years old before Election Day.[28]
Registration applications can be submitted online or completed via paper forms. Same-day registration is available in Connecticut for general elections, though not for primary elections.[29]
Connecticut automatically registers eligible individuals to vote through the Department of Motor Vehicles.
Connecticut has implemented an online voter registration system. Residents can register to vote by visiting this website.
Connecticut allows same-day voter registration.
To register to vote in Connecticut, you must be a resident of the state. State law does not specify a length of time for which you must have been a resident to be eligible.
Connecticut does not require proof of citizenship for voter registration.
The site Voter Registration Lookup, run by the Connecticut Secretary of State office, allows residents to check their voter registration status online.
Connecticut requires voters to present non-photo identification while voting.[30]
The following list of accepted ID was current as of August 2022. Click here for the Connecticut Secretary of State's page on accepted ID to ensure you have the most current information.
First-time voters who registered by mail must present one of the following forms of identification to vote in an election with federal candidates on the ballot:
Other voters must present one of the following forms of identification:
Connecticut does not permit early voting.
Connecticut voters are eligible to vote absentee in an election if they cannot make it to the polls on election day for one of the following reasons:[31]
An absentee ballot must be returned either in person by close of business the day before the election or by mail. If returned by mail, the ballot must be received by close of polls on election day.[32]
2020 State Cannabis Voter Guides
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Categories: [House of Representatives elections, 2020] [Connecticut elections, 2020]
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