Georgia state legislative special elections, 2022

From Ballotpedia - Reading time: 7 min

Ballotpedia Election Coverage Badge-smaller use.png

U.S. Senate • U.S. House • Governor • State executive offices • State Senate • State House • Special state legislative • Supreme court • Appellate courts • State ballot measures • Local ballot measures • School boards • Municipal • How to run for office
Flag of Georgia.png


2021
SLP badge.png
2022 State Legislative
Special Elections

Special Elections Information
CausesPartisan controlElections by dateHistorical data

Special elections by state

AlabamaArkansasCalifornia
ConnecticutDelawareFlorida
GeorgiaKentuckyLouisiana
MaineMassachusettsMichigan
MontanaNew YorkOregon
PennsylvaniaSouth CarolinaTexas
VirginiaWashington

Other 2022 Election coverage
Filing deadlinesStatewide elections
State legislative elections
Gubernatorial electionsBallot measures


As of May 2022, one special election has been called to fill a vacant seat in the Georgia General Assembly in 2022. Click here to read more about the special elections.

House special elections called:

How vacancies are filled in Georgia[edit]

See also: How vacancies are filled in state legislatures


If there is a vacancy in the Georgia General Assembly, the vacant seat must be filled by a special election. The governor must declare a special election no later than 10 days after the vacancy happens. The election must be held no less than 30 days and no later than 60 days after the governor calls for the election. The counties representing the vacant district are responsible for conducting the election.[1]

DocumentIcon.jpg See sources: Georgia Code § 21-2-544

About the legislature[edit]

The Georgia General Assembly is a bicameral body composed of the Georgia House of Representatives, with 180 members, and the Georgia State Senate, with 56 members. The boxes below show the partisan composition of both chambers directly before and after the November 2020 general election. For the most up-to-date numbers on partisan composition in this legislature, see here (Senate) and here (House).

Georgia State Senate
Party As of November 3, 2020 After November 4, 2020
     Democratic Party 21 22
     Republican Party 35 34
Total 56 56


Georgia House of Representatives
Party As of November 3, 2020 After November 4, 2020
     Democratic Party 75 76
     Republican Party 104 103
     Vacancy 1 1
Total 180 180

Special elections[edit]

Click [show] to the right of the district name for more information:

April 5, 2022[edit]


Historical data[edit]

There were 848 state legislative special elections that took place from 2010 to 2021. Georgia held 71 special elections during the same time period; the most of any state. About six special elections were held each year on average. The largest number of special elections in Georgia took place in 2015 when 12 special elections were held.

The table below details how many state legislative special elections were held in a state in a given year.

Special elections throughout the country[edit]

See also: State legislative special elections, 2022

As of May 2022, 45 state legislative special elections have been scheduled for 2022 in 20 states. Between 2011 and 2021, an average of 74 special elections took place each year.

Breakdown of 2022 special elections[edit]

In 2022, special elections for state legislative positions are being held for the following reasons:

  • 21 due to appointment, election, or the seeking of election to another position
  • 21 due to resignation
  • 3 due to the death of the incumbent

Impact of special elections on partisan composition[edit]

The partisan breakdown for the special elections is as follows:

As of May 12, 2022, Republicans controlled 54.35% of all state legislative seats nationally, while Democrats held 44.37%. Republicans held a majority in 62 chambers, and Democrats held the majority in 36 chambers. One chamber (Alaska House) was organized under a multipartisan, power-sharing coalition.[4]

Partisan balance of all 7,383 state legislative seats
Legislative chamber Democratic Party Republican Party Grey.png Other Vacant
State senates 861 1,096 8 7
State houses 2,417 2,917 33 48
Total: 3,278

4,012

41

55


The table below details how many seats changed parties as the result of a special election in 2022. The number on the left reflects how many vacant seats were originally held by each party, while the number on the right shows how many vacant seats each party won in the special elections.

Note: This table reflects information for elections that have been held and not the total number of vacant seats.

Partisan Change from Special Elections (2022)
Party As of Special Election After Special Election
     Democratic Party 24 25
     Republican Party 10 9
     Independent 0 0
Total 34 34

Flipped seats[edit]

In 2022, as of May, one seat flipped as a result of state legislative special elections.


Seats flipped from R to D[edit]


See also[edit]

Footnotes[edit]


Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Original source: https://ballotpedia.org/Georgia_state_legislative_special_elections,_2022
Status: cached on May 14 2022 15:45:17
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF