2022 United States Senate election in Alaska
Maximum round results by borough and census area Murkowski: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90%Tshibaka: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80%
The 2022 United States Senate election in Alaska was held on November 8, 2022. Incumbent senator Lisa Murkowski won reelection to a fourth full term, defeating fellow Republican Kelly Tshibaka and Democrat Patricia Chesbro.[ 1]
After the passage of Ballot Measure 2 in 2020 , this was the first U.S. Senate election in Alaska to be held under a new election process. All candidates ran in a nonpartisan blanket top-four primary on August 16, 2022, and the top four candidates advanced to the general election, where voters utilized ranked-choice voting .[ 2] [ 3]
Murkowski was appointed to the Senate in 2002 by her father, Frank Murkowski , who served as a U.S. senator from Alaska from 1981 until he was elected governor of Alaska . Murkowski had won three Senate elections since then, including a notable write-in campaign in the 2010 election , although she had never won an election with an outright majority of the vote.[ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
Murkowski had been a vocal critic of Donald Trump during his presidency and opposed several of his initiatives. Trump first stated in June 2020 that he planned to support a Republican challenger to Murkowski in 2022.[ 7] Murkowski was one of seven Republican senators who voted to convict Trump in his second impeachment trial in 2021, and was the only one up for re-election in 2022. On March 16, 2021, the Alaska Republican Party voted to censure Murkowski and announced that it would recruit a Republican challenger in the 2022 election cycle. Kelly Tshibaka, a former commissioner of the Alaska Department of Administration , was endorsed by Trump and the Alaska Republican Party.[ 8] [ 9] [ 10] Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell and the National Republican Senatorial Committee supported Murkowski.[ 11]
In addition to Murkowski and Tshibaka, Democrat Pat Chesbro and Republican Buzz Kelley also advanced to the general election. On September 13, Kelley suspended his campaign and endorsed Tshibaka but remained on the ballot.[ 12] Murkowski received a plurality of first-place votes, but because no candidate received a majority of the votes in the first round, the instant runoff was triggered. Murkowski won reelection in the third and final round, winning most of the second-choice votes from Chesbro's voters.[ 13] Since Murkowski won her three previous elections to the U.S. Senate (2004 , 2010 , and 2016 ) without a majority of the vote, this election became the fourth election in which she did not receive a majority of the vote in the first round (the other three elections did not employ ranked choice voting with multiple rounds). Murkowski thus holds the record for the most number of elections won by a U.S. senator without winning a majority of the votes.
Advanced to general [ edit ]
Withdrew after advancing to general [ edit ]
Buzz Kelley, retired mechanic[ 16] (remained on ballot; endorsed Tshibaka) [ a] [ 17]
Eliminated in primary [ edit ]
Advanced to general [ edit ]
Eliminated in primary [ edit ]
Eliminated in primary [ edit ]
Alaskan Independence Party [ edit ]
Eliminated in primary [ edit ]
Eliminated in primary [ edit ]
Dave Darden, perennial candidate[ 33]
Shoshana Gungurstein, businesswoman
Sid Hill, political gadfly and candidate for U.S. Senate in 2014 [ 33]
Jeremy Keller, television personality[ 18]
Huhnkie Lee, attorney, army veteran and Republican candidate for Alaska Senate in 2020 [ 19]
Primary election results by state house district
Lisa Murkowski (R)
Executive branch officials
Governors
U.S. Senators
John Barrasso , U.S. Senator from Wyoming (2007–present)[ 53]
Susan Collins , U.S. Senator from Maine (1997–present)[ 54]
John Cornyn , U.S. Senator from Texas (2002–present)[ 55]
Joni Ernst , U.S. Senator from Iowa (2015–present)[ 54]
Angus King , U.S. Senator from Maine (2013–present) (Independent) [ 55]
Joe Manchin , U.S. Senator from West Virginia (2010–present) (Democratic) [ 56]
Mitch McConnell , U.S Senator from Kentucky (1985–present), Senate Minority Leader (2021–present, 2007–2015), and former Senate Majority Leader (2015–2021)[ 57]
Rick Scott , U.S. Senator from Florida (2019–present)[ 58]
Tim Scott , U.S. Senator from South Carolina (2013–present)[ 59]
Kyrsten Sinema , U.S. Senator from Arizona (2019–present) (Democratic) [ 55]
Dan Sullivan , U.S. Senator from Alaska (2015–present)[ 60]
Jeanne Shaheen , U.S. Senator from New Hampshire (2009–present) (Democratic) [ 55]
John Thune , U.S. Senator from South Dakota (2005–present), Senate Minority Whip (2021–present), and former Senate Majority Whip (2019–2021)
Mark Warner , U.S. Senator from Virginia (2009–present) (Democratic) [ 55]
U.S. Representatives
State Legislators
Newspapers
Organizations
Labor unions
Kelly Tshibaka (R)
Executive branch officials
Governors
Local officials
Individuals
Organizations
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ b]
Margin of error
RCV count
Lisa Murkowski (R)
Kelly Tshibaka (R)
Pat Chesbro (D)
Buzz Kelley (R)
Undecided / Not Ranked
Alaska Survey Research [ 90]
October 19–22, 2022
1,276 (LV)
±3.0%
1
41%
39%
16%
4%
—
2
42%
41%
17%
—[ c]
—
3
56%
44%
–[ d]
—
Alaska Survey Research [ 91]
September 25–27, 2022
1,282 (LV)
±3.0%
1
41%
39%
16%
4%
—
2
42%
41%
17%
—[ c]
—
3
57%
43%
–[ d]
—
Fabrizio Ward (R)/Impact Research (D)[ 92] [ A]
September 6–11, 2022
1,050 (LV)
[ e]
N/A [ f]
35%
43%
13%
1%
7% U
1
38%
46%
14%
2%
7% NR
2
38%
47%
14%
–[ g]
8% NR
3
50%
50%
–[ h]
10% NR
Hypothetical polling
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ b]
Margin of error
RCV count
Pat Chesbro (D)
Dustin Darden (AIP)
ElviGray-Jackson (D)
Al Gross (D/I)
John Howe (AIP)
Joe Miller (L)
Lisa Murkowski (R)
Sarah Palin (R)
Kelly Tshibaka (R)
Other
Undecided
Alaska Survey Research [ 93]
July 2–5, 2022
1,201 (LV)
± 2.9%
1
17%
5%
–
35%
–
43%
–
2
20%
–
36%
45%
3
–
52%
48%
Cygnal (R)[ 94] [ B]
March 14–16, 2022
500 (LV)
± 4.2%
1
–
29%
–
45%
26%
–
?
49%
–
51%
–
Alaska Survey Research [ 95]
October 22–27, 2021
969 (RV)
± 3.2%
1
–
22%
–
35%
20%
23%
–
2
23%
42%
–
35%
3
–
60%
40%
Alaska Survey Research [ 96]
July 11–21, 2021
947 (LV)
± 3.2%
1
–
19%
–
18%
36%
–
27%
–
2
21%
–
39%
40%
3
–
55%
45%
Change Research (D)[ 97] [ C]
May 22–25, 2021
1,023 (LV)
± 3.1%
BA
–
25%
4%
–
19%
–
39%
1%[ i]
12%
3[ j]
46%
–
–
54%
–
Lisa Murkowski vs. Kelly Tshibaka
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ b]
Margin of error
Lisa Murkowski (R)
Kelly Tshibaka (R)
Undecided
Alaska Survey Research [ 98]
April 16–21, 2022
1,208 (LV)
± 2.9%
55%
45%
–
Preference flow
2022 United States Senate election in Alaska[ 99] [ 100]
Party
Candidate
First choice
Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Votes
%
Transfer
Votes
%
Transfer
Votes
%
Transfer
Votes
%
Republican
Lisa Murkowski (incumbent)
113,495
43.37%
+623
114,118
43.39%
+1,641
115,759
44.49%
+20,571
136,330
53.70%
Republican
Kelly Tshibaka
111,480
42.60%
+621
112,101
42.62%
+3,209
115,310
44.32%
+2,224
117,534
46.30%
Democratic
Pat Chesbro
27,145
10.37%
+1,088
28,233
10.73%
+901
29,134
11.20%
−29,134
Eliminated
Republican
Buzz Kelley (withdrew) [ a]
7,557
2.89%
+1,018
8,575
3.26%
−8,575
Eliminated
Write-in
2,028
0.77%
-2,028
Eliminated
Total votes
261,705
263,027
260,203
253,864
Blank or inactive ballots
3,770
+2,824
6,594
+6,339
12,933
Republican hold
^ a b Remained on the ballot because he withdrew after the deadline of 64 days ahead of the election.[ 17]
^ a b c Key: A – all adults RV – registered voters LV – likely voters V – unclear
^ a b Kelley eliminated.
^ a b Chesbro eliminated.
^ The margin of sampling error for the 500 statewide sample is ±4.4%; for the 840 total sample of voters 50+ is ±3.3%.
^ Standard polling question.
^ Kelley eliminated. Vote transfer breakdown: 29% to Tshibaka and 71% not ranked further.
^ Chesbro eliminated. Vote transfer breakdown: 77% to Murkowski, 8% to Tshibaka, and 15% not ranked further.
^ Would not vote with 1%
^ Excluding undecided voters
Partisan clients
^ Poll sponsored by AARP
^ This poll was sponsored by Kelly Tshibaka's campaign
^ This poll was sponsored by 314 Action
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^ Democratic State Sen. Elvi Gray-Jackson makes it official: She is withdrawing from the Alaska U.S. Senate race in order to run for re-election to the Alaska Legislature. Archived March 25, 2022, at the Wayback Machine James Brooks on Twitter
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^ Youtube
^ Youtube
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^ Alaska Survey Research
^ Alaska Survey Research
^ Fabrizio Ward (R)/Impact Research (D)
^ Alaska Survey Research
^ Cygnal (R)
^ Alaska Survey Research
^ Alaska Survey Research
^ Change Research (D)
^ Alaska Survey Research
^ "State of Alaska 2022 General Election RCV Detailed Report" (PDF) . Alaska Division of Elections . November 30, 2022. Retrieved January 9, 2023 .
^ "State of Alaska 2022 GENERAL ELECTION Election Summary Report" (PDF) . Alaska Division of Elections . November 30, 2022. Retrieved January 8, 2023 .
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