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The 1950 United States House of Representatives elections was an election for the United States House of Representatives to elect members to serve in the 82nd United States Congress. They were held for the most part on November 7, 1950, while Maine held theirs on September 11. These elections occurred in the middle of President Harry Truman's second term.
As the Korean War began and Truman's personal popularity plummeted for a second time during his presidency, his Democratic Party lost a net 28 seats to the Republican Party. This was the first election since 1908 where no third parties acquired any seats in the House.
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Transcription
Hi, I'm Craig and this is Crash Course Government and Politics, and today we're going to talk about what is, if you ask the general public, the most important part of politics: elections. If you ask me, it's hair styles. Look at Martin Van Buren's sideburns, how could he not be elected? Americans are kind of obsessed with elections, I mean when this was being recorded in early 2015, television, news and the internet were already talking about who would be Democrat and Republican candidates for president in 2016. And many of the candidates have unofficially been campaigning for years. I've been campaigning; your grandma's been campaigning. Presidential elections are exciting and you can gamble on them. Is that legal, can you gamble on them, Stan? Anyway, why we're so obsessed with them is a topic for another day. Right now I'm gonna tell you that the fixation on the presidential elections is wrong, but not because the president doesn't matter. No, today we're gonna look at the elections of the people that are supposed to matter the most, Congress. Constitutionally at least, Congress is the most important branch of government because it is the one that is supposed to be the most responsive to the people. One of the main reasons it's so responsive, at least in theory, is the frequency of elections. If a politician has to run for office often, he or she, because unlike the president we have women serving in Congress, kind of has to pay attention to what the constituents want, a little bit, maybe. By now, I'm sure that most of you have memorized the Constitution, so you recognize that despite their importance in the way we discuss politics, elections aren't really a big feature of the Constitution. Except of course for the ridiculously complex electoral college system for choosing the president, which we don't even want to think about for a few episodes. In fact, here's what the Constitution says about Congressional Elections in Article 1 Section 2: "The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen every second year by the people of the several states, and the electors in each state shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the state legislature." So the Constitution does establish that the whole of the house is up for election every 2 years, and 1/3 of the senate is too, but mainly it leaves the scheduling and rules of elections up to the states. The actual rules of elections, like when the polls are open and where they actually are, as well as the registration requirements, are pretty much up to the states, subject to some federal election law. If you really want to know the rules in your state, I'm sure that someone at the Board of Elections, will be happy to explain them to you. Really, you should give them a call; they're very, very lonely. In general though, here's what we can say about American elections. First stating the super obvious, in order to serve in congress, you need to win an election. In the House of Representatives, each election district chooses a single representative, which is why we call them single-member districts. The number of districts is determined by the Census, which happens every 10 years, and which means that elections ending in zeros are super important, for reasons that I'll explain in greater detail in a future episode. It's because of gerrymandering. The Senate is much easier to figure out because both of the state Senators are elected by the entire state. It's as if the state itself were a single district, which is true for states like Wyoming, which are so unpopulated as to have only 1 representative. Sometimes these elections are called at large elections. Before the election ever happens, you need candidates. How candidates are chosen differs from state to state, but usually it has something to do with political parties, although it doesn't have to. Why are things so complicated?! What we can say is that candidates, or at least good candidates, usually have certain characteristics. Sorry America. First off, if you are gonna run for office, you should have an unblemished record, free of, oh I don't know, felony convictions or sex scandals, except maybe in Louisiana or New York. This might lead to some pretty bland candidates or people who are so calculating that they have no skeletons in their closet, but we Americans are a moral people and like our candidates to reflect our ideals rather than our reality. The second characteristic that a candidate must possess is the ability to raise money. Now some candidates are billionaires and can finance their own campaigns. But most billionaires have better things to do: buying yachts, making even more money, building money forts, buying more yachts, so they don't have time to run for office. But most candidates get their money for their campaigns by asking for it. The ability to raise money is key, especially now, because running for office is expensive. Can I get a how expensive is it? "How expensive is it?!" Well, so expensive that the prices of elections continually rises and in 2012 winners of House races spent nearly 2 million each. Senate winners spent more than 10 million. By the time this episode airs, I'm sure the numbers will be much higher like a gajillion billion million. Money is important in winning an election, but even more important, statistically, is already being in Congress. Let's go to the Thought Bubble. The person holding an office who runs for that office again is called the incumbent and has a big advantage over any challenger. This is according to political scientists who, being almost as bad at naming things as historians, refer to this as incumbency advantage. There are a number of reasons why incumbents tend to hold onto their seats in congress, if they want to. The first is that a sitting congressman has a record to run on, which we hope includes some legislative accomplishments, although for the past few Congresses, these don't seem to matter. The record might include case work, which is providing direct services to constituents. This is usually done by congressional staffers and includes things like answering questions about how to get certain government benefits or writing recommendation letters to West Point. Congressmen can also provide jobs to constituents, which is usually a good way to get them to vote for you. These are either government jobs, kind of rare these days, called patronage or indirect employment through government contracts for programs within a Congressman's district. These programs are called earmarks or pork barrel programs, and they are much less common now because Congress has decided not to use them any more, sort of. The second advantage that incumbents have is that they have a record of winning elections, which if you think about it, is pretty obvious. Being a proven winner makes it easier for a congressmen to raise money, which helps them win, and long term incumbents tend to be more powerful in Congress which makes it even easier for them to raise money and win. The Constitution give incumbents one structural advantage too. Each elected congressman is allowed $100,000 and free postage to send out election materials. This is called the franking privilege. It's not so clear how great an advantage this is in the age of the internet, but at least according to the book The Victory Lab, direct mail from candidates can be surprisingly effective. How real is this incumbency advantage? Well if you look at the numbers, it seems pretty darn real. Over the past 60 years, almost 90% of members of The House of Representatives got re-elected. The Senate has been even more volatile, but even at the low point in 1980 more than 50% of sitting senators got to keep their jobs. Thanks, Thought Bubble. You're so great. So those are some of the features of congressional elections. Now, if you'll permit me to get a little politically sciencey, I'd like to try to explain why elections are so important to the way that Congressmen and Senators do their jobs. In 1974, political scientist David Mayhew published a book in which he described something he called "The Electoral Connection." This was the idea that Congressmen were primarily motivated by the desire to get re-elected, which intuitively makes a lot of sense, even though I'm not sure what evidence he had for this conclusion. Used to be able to get away with that kind of thing I guess, clearly David may-not-hew to the rules of evidence, pun [rim shot], high five, no. Anyway Mayhew's research methodology isn't as important as his idea itself because The Electoral Connection provides a frame work for understanding congressman's activities. Mayhew divided representatives' behaviors and activities into three categories. The first is advertising; congressmen work to develop their personal brand so that they are recognizable to voters. Al D'Amato used to be know in New York as Senator Pothole, because he was able to bring home so much pork that he could actually fix New York's streets. Not by filling them with pork, money, its money, remember pork barrel spending? The second activity is credit claiming; Congressmen get things done so that they can say they got them done. A lot of case work and especially pork barrel spending are done in the name of credit claiming. Related to credit claiming, but slightly different, is position taking. This means making a public judgmental statement on something likely to be of interest to voters. Senators can do this through filibusters. Representatives can't filibuster, but they can hold hearings, publicly supporting a hearing is a way of associating yourself with an idea without having to actually try to pass legislation. And of course they can go on the TV, especially on Sunday talk shows. What's a TV, who even watches TV? Now the idea of The Electoral Connection doesn't explain every action a member of Congress takes; sometimes they actually make laws to benefit the public good or maybe solve problems, huh, what an idea! But Mayhew's idea gives us a way of thinking about Congressional activity, an analytical lens that connects what Congressmen actually do with how most of us understand Congressmen, through elections. So the next time you see a Congressmen call for a hearing on a supposed horrible scandal or read about a Senator threatening to filibuster a policy that may have significant popular support, ask yourself, "Is this Representative claiming credit or taking a position, and how will this build their brand?" In other words: what's the electoral connection and how will whatever they're doing help them get elected? This might feel a little cynical, but the reality is Mayhew's thesis often seems to fit with today's politics. Thanks for watching, see you next week. Vote for me; I'm on the TV. I'm not -- I'm on the YouTube. Crash Course: Government and Politics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support for Crash Course US Government comes from Voqal. Voqal supports nonprofits that use technology and media to advance social equity. Learn more about their mission and initiatives at Voqal.org. Crash Course is made by all of these nice people. Thanks for watching. That guy isn't nice.
Special elections
There were six special elections throughout the year, listed here by date and district.
District | Incumbent | This race | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representative | Party | First elected | Results | Candidates | |
New Jersey 7 | J. Parnell Thomas | Republican | 1936 | Incumbent resigned January 2, 1950. New member elected February 6, 1950. Republican hold. Successor was re-elected in November. |
|
Massachusetts 6 | George J. Bates | Republican | 1936 | Incumbent died November 1, 1949. New member elected February 14, 1950. Republican hold. Successor was re-elected in November. |
|
Virginia 1 | S. Otis Bland | Democratic | 1918 (special) | Incumbent died February 16, 1950. New member elected May 2, 1950. Democratic hold. Successor was re-elected in November. |
|
Texas 18 | Eugene Worley | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent resigned April 3, 1950. New member elected May 6, 1950. Republican gain. Successor subsequently lost re-election in November. |
|
Kansas 3 | Herbert A. Meyer | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent died August 31, 1950. New member elected November 7, 1950. Republican hold. Successor was also elected to the next term. |
|
North Carolina 11 | Alfred L. Bulwinkle | Democratic | 1920 1928 (lost) 1930 |
Incumbent died August 31, 1950. New member elected November 7, 1950. Democratic hold. Successor was also elected to the next term. |
|
Overall results
235 | 1 | 199 |
Democratic | I | Republican |
Party | Total seats |
Change | Seat percentage |
Vote percentage |
Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic Party | 235 | -28 | 54.0% | 49.6% | 19,991,683 | |
Republican Party | 199 | +28 | 45.7% | 48.9% | 19,735,173 | |
American Labor Party | 0 | -1 | 0.0% | 0.6% | 225,368 | |
Progressive Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | 0.3% | 127,715 | |
Independents | 1 | +1 | 0.2% | 0.3% | 119,634 | |
Liberal Party | 0 | -1 | 0.0% | 0.2% | 87,827 | |
Prohibition Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | 0.1% | 34,761 | |
Independent People's Choice Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 7,072 | |
Socialist Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 4,626 | |
Socialist Workers Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 2,484 | |
Social Democratic Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 1,803 | |
Constitutional Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 865 | |
Christian Nationalist Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 594 | |
Fusion Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 426 | |
States' Rights Democratic Party | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 147 | |
Others | 0 | - | 0.0% | <0.1% | 1,705 | |
Totals | 435 | +0 | 100.0% | 100.0% | 40,341,883 |
Source: Election Statistics - Office of the Clerk
Alabama
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama 1 | Frank W. Boykin | Democratic | 1935 (special) | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 2 | George M. Grant | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 3 | George W. Andrews | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 4 | Sam Hobbs | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent retired. Democratic hold. |
|
Alabama 5 | Albert Rains | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 6 | Edward deGraffenried | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 7 | Carl Elliott | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 8 | Robert E. Jones Jr. | Democratic | 1947 (special) | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Alabama 9 | Laurie C. Battle | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arizona
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arizona 1 | John R. Murdock | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arizona 2 | Harold Patten | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arkansas 1 | Ezekiel C. Gathings | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas 2 | Wilbur Mills | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas 3 | James William Trimble | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas 4 | Boyd Anderson Tackett | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas 5 | Brooks Hays | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas 6 | William F. Norrell | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Arkansas 7 | Oren Harris | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
California 1 | Hubert B. Scudder | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 2 | Clair Engle | Democratic | 1943 (special) | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 3 | J. Leroy Johnson | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 4 | Franck R. Havenner | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 5 | John F. Shelley | Democratic | 1949 (special) | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 6 | George P. Miller | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 7 | John J. Allen Jr. | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 8 | Jack Z. Anderson | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 9 | Cecil F. White | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
California 10 | Thomas H. Werdel | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 11 | Ernest K. Bramblett | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 12 | Richard Nixon | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Republican hold. |
|
California 13 | Norris Poulson | Republican | 1932 1946 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 14 | Helen Gahagan Douglas | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Democratic hold. |
|
California 15 | Gordon L. McDonough | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 16 | Donald L. Jackson | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 17 | Cecil R. King | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 18 | Clyde Doyle | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 19 | Chet Holifield | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 20 | John Carl Hinshaw | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 21 | Harry R. Sheppard | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 22 | John Phillips | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
California 23 | Clinton D. McKinnon | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Colorado
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Colorado 1 | John A. Carroll | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Democratic hold. |
|
Colorado 2 | William S. Hill | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Colorado 3 | John H. Marsalis | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Colorado 4 | Wayne N. Aspinall | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Connecticut
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Connecticut 1 | Abraham Ribicoff | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Connecticut 2 | Chase G. Woodhouse | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Connecticut 3 | John A. McGuire | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Connecticut 4 | John Davis Lodge | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Connecticut. Republican hold. |
|
Connecticut 5 | James T. Patterson | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Connecticut at-large | Antoni Sadlak | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Delaware
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Delaware at-large | J. Caleb Boggs | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Florida
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Florida 1 | J. Hardin Peterson | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent retired. Democratic hold. |
|
Florida 2 | Charles E. Bennett | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Florida 3 | Bob Sikes | Democratic | 1940 1944 (resigned) 1974 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Florida 4 | George Smathers | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Democratic hold. |
|
Florida 5 | Syd Herlong | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Florida 6 | Dwight L. Rogers | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Georgia 1 | Prince Hulon Preston Jr. | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 2 | Edward E. Cox | Democratic | 1924 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 3 | Stephen Pace | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent retired. Democratic hold. |
|
Georgia 4 | Albert Sidney Camp | Democratic | 1939 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 5 | James C. Davis | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 6 | Carl Vinson | Democratic | 1914 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 7 | Henderson Lovelace Lanham | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 8 | William M. Wheeler | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 9 | John Stephens Wood | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Georgia 10 | Paul Brown | Democratic | 1933 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Idaho
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Idaho 1 | Compton I. White | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Republican gain. |
|
Idaho 2 | John C. Sanborn | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Republican hold. |
|
Illinois
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Illinois 1 | William L. Dawson | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 2 | Barratt O'Hara | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Illinois 3 | Neil J. Linehan | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Illinois 4 | James V. Buckley | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Illinois 5 | Martin Gorski | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent died. Democratic hold. |
|
Illinois 6 | Thomas J. O'Brien | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 7 | Adolph J. Sabath | Democratic | 1906 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 8 | Thomas S. Gordon | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 9 | Sidney R. Yates | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 10 | Richard W. Hoffman | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 11 | Chester A. Chesney | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Illinois 12 | Edgar A. Jonas | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 13 | Ralph E. Church | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent died. Republican hold. |
|
Illinois 14 | Chauncey W. Reed | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 15 | Noah M. Mason | Republican | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 16 | Leo E. Allen | Republican | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 17 | Leslie C. Arends | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 18 | Harold H. Velde | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 19 | Robert B. Chiperfield | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 20 | Sid Simpson | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 21 | Peter F. Mack Jr. | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 22 | Rolla C. McMillen | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Illinois 23 | Edward H. Jenison | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 24 | Charles W. Vursell | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 25 | Melvin Price | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Illinois 26 | C. W. Bishop | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Indiana 1 | Ray Madden | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana 2 | Charles A. Halleck | Republican | 1935 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana 3 | Thurman C. Crook | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Indiana 4 | Edward H. Kruse | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Indiana 5 | John R. Walsh | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Indiana 6 | Cecil M. Harden | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana 7 | James E. Noland | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Indiana 8 | Winfield K. Denton | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana 9 | Earl Wilson | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana 10 | Ralph Harvey | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Indiana 11 | Andrew Jacobs | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Iowa
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Iowa 1 | Thomas E. Martin | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Iowa 2 | Henry O. Talle | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Iowa 3 | H. R. Gross | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
Others
|
Iowa 4 | Karl M. LeCompte | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Iowa 5 | Paul Cunningham | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Iowa 6 | James I. Dolliver | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Iowa 7 | Ben F. Jensen | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Iowa 8 | Charles B. Hoeven | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kansas
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kansas 1 | Albert M. Cole | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kansas 2 | Errett P. Scrivner | Republican | 1943 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kansas 3 | Herbert A. Meyer | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent died October 2, 1950. Republican hold. |
|
Kansas 4 | Edward Herbert Rees | Republican | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kansas 5 | Clifford R. Hope | Republican | 1926 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kansas 6 | Wint Smith | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kentucky 1 | Noble Jones Gregory | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 2 | John A. Whitaker | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 3 | Thruston Ballard Morton | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 4 | Frank Chelf | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 5 | Brent Spence | Democratic | 1930 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 6 | Thomas R. Underwood | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 7 | Carl D. Perkins | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 8 | Joe B. Bates | Democratic | 1930 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Kentucky 9 | James S. Golden | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Louisiana 1 | F. Edward Hébert | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 2 | Hale Boggs | Democratic | 1940 1942 (lost) 1946 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 3 | Edwin E. Willis | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 4 | Overton Brooks | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 5 | Otto Passman | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 6 | James H. Morrison | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 7 | Henry D. Larcade Jr. | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Louisiana 8 | A. Leonard Allen | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maine
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maine 1 | Robert Hale | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maine 2 | Charles P. Nelson | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maine 3 | Frank Fellows | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maryland
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maryland 1 | Edward T. Miller | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maryland 2 | William P. Bolton | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Maryland 3 | Edward Garmatz | Democratic | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maryland 4 | George Hyde Fallon | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maryland 5 | Lansdale Sasscer | Democratic | 1939 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Maryland 6 | J. Glenn Beall | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Massachusetts 1 | John W. Heselton | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 2 | Foster Furcolo | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 3 | Philip J. Philbin | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 4 | Harold Donohue | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 5 | Edith Nourse Rogers | Republican | 1925 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 6 | William H. Bates | Republican | 1950 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 7 | Thomas J. Lane | Democratic | 1941 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 8 | Angier Goodwin | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 9 | Donald W. Nicholson | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 10 | Christian Herter | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 11 | John F. Kennedy | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 12 | John W. McCormack | Democratic | 1928 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 13 | Richard B. Wigglesworth | Republican | 1928 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Massachusetts 14 | Joseph W. Martin Jr. | Republican | 1924 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michigan 1 | George G. Sadowski | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent lost renomination. Democratic hold. |
|
Michigan 2 | Earl C. Michener | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Michigan 3 | Paul W. Shafer | Republican | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 4 | Clare Hoffman | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 5 | Gerald Ford | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 6 | William W. Blackney | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
Others
|
Michigan 7 | Jesse P. Wolcott | Republican | 1930 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 8 | Fred L. Crawford | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 9 | Albert J. Engel | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Michigan. Republican hold. |
|
Michigan 10 | Roy O. Woodruff | Republican | 1920 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 11 | Charles E. Potter | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 12 | John B. Bennett | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 13 | George D. O'Brien | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 14 | Louis C. Rabaut | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 15 | John Dingell Sr. | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Michigan 16 | John Lesinski Sr. | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent died. Democratic hold. |
Others
|
Michigan 17 | George A. Dondero | Republican | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minnesota 1 | August H. Andresen | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 2 | Joseph P. O'Hara | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 3 | Roy Wier | Democratic (DFL) | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 4 | Eugene McCarthy | Democratic (DFL) | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 5 | Walter Judd | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 6 | Fred Marshall | Democratic (DFL) | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 7 | H. Carl Andersen | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 8 | John Blatnik | Democratic (DFL) | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Minnesota 9 | Harold Hagen | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Mississippi
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mississippi 1 | John E. Rankin | Democratic | 1920 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Mississippi 2 | Jamie Whitten | Democratic | 1941 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Mississippi 3 | William Madison Whittington | Democratic | 1924 | Incumbent retired. Democratic hold. |
|
Mississippi 4 | Thomas Abernethy | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Mississippi 5 | W. Arthur Winstead | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Mississippi 6 | William M. Colmer | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Mississippi 7 | John Bell Williams | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Missouri 1 | Clare Magee | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 2 | Morgan M. Moulder | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 3 | Phil J. Welch | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 4 | Leonard Irving | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 5 | Richard Walker Bolling | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 6 | George H. Christopher | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Missouri 7 | Dewey Jackson Short | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 8 | A. S. J. Carnahan | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 9 | Clarence Cannon | Democratic | 1922 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 10 | Paul C. Jones | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 11 | John B. Sullivan | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Missouri 12 | Raymond W. Karst | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Missouri 13 | Frank M. Karsten | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Montana
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Montana 1 | Mike Mansfield | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Montana 2 | Wesley A. D'Ewart | Republican | 1945 (special) | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Nebraska
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nebraska 1 | Carl Curtis | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Nebraska 2 | Eugene D. O'Sullivan | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Nebraska 3 | Karl Stefan | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Nebraska 4 | Arthur L. Miller | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Nevada
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nevada at-large | Walter S. Baring Jr. | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Hampshire
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Hampshire 1 | Chester Earl Merrow | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Hampshire 2 | Norris Cotton | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Jersey 1 | Charles A. Wolverton | Republican | 1926 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 2 | T. Millet Hand | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 3 | James C. Auchincloss | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 4 | Charles R. Howell | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 5 | Charles A. Eaton | Republican | 1924 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 6 | Clifford P. Case | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 7 | William B. Widnall | Republican | 1950 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 8 | Gordon Canfield | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 9 | Harry L. Towe | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 10 | Peter W. Rodino | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 11 | Hugh J. Addonizio | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 12 | Robert Kean | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Jersey 13 | Mary Teresa Norton | Democratic | 1924 | Incumbent retired. Democratic hold. |
|
New Jersey 14 | Edward J. Hart | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Mexico
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Mexico at-large | Antonio M. Fernández | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New Mexico at-large | John E. Miles | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent retired. Democratic hold. |
New York
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
New York 1 | W. Kingsland Macy | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent lost re-election. Democratic gain. |
|
New York 2 | Leonard W. Hall | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 3 | Henry J. Latham | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 4 | L. Gary Clemente | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 5 | T. Vincent Quinn | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 6 | James J. Delaney | Democratic | 1944 1946 (lost) 1948 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 7 | Louis B. Heller | Democratic | 1949 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 8 | Joseph L. Pfeifer | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent lost renomination. Democratic hold. |
|
New York 9 | Eugene James Keogh | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 10 | Edna F. Kelly | Democratic | 1949 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 11 | James J. Heffernan | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 12 | John J. Rooney | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 13 | Donald L. O'Toole | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 14 | Abraham J. Multer | Democratic | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 15 | Emanuel Celler | Democratic | 1922 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 16 | James J. Murphy | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 17 | Frederic René Coudert Jr. | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 18 | Vito Marcantonio | American Labor |
1938 | Incumbent lost re-election. Democratic gain. |
|
New York 19 | Arthur George Klein | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 20 | Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. | Liberal | 1949 | Incumbent re-elected as a Democrat. Democratic gain. |
|
New York 21 | Jacob K. Javits | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 22 | Adam Clayton Powell Jr. | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 23 | Walter A. Lynch | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of New York. Democratic hold. |
|
New York 24 | Isidore Dollinger | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 25 | Charles A. Buckley | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 26 | Christopher C. McGrath | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 27 | Ralph W. Gwinn | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 28 | Ralph A. Gamble | Republican | 1937 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 29 | Katharine St. George | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 30 | Jay Le Fevre | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
New York 31 | Bernard W. Kearney | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 32 | William T. Byrne | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 33 | Dean P. Taylor | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 34 | Clarence E. Kilburn | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 35 | John C. Davies II | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
New York 36 | R. Walter Riehlman | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 37 | Edwin Arthur Hall | Republican | 1939 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 38 | John Taber | Republican | 1922 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 39 | W. Sterling Cole | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 40 | Kenneth B. Keating | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
New York 41 | James W. Wadsworth Jr. | Republican | 1932 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
New York 42 | William L. Pfeiffer | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
New York 43 | Anthony F. Tauriello | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
New York 44 | Chester C. Gorski | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
New York 45 | Daniel A. Reed | Republican | 1918 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
North Carolina 1 | Herbert C. Bonner | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 2 | John H. Kerr | Democratic | 1923 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 3 | Graham Arthur Barden | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 4 | Harold D. Cooley | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 5 | R. Thurmond Chatham | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 6 | Carl T. Durham | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 7 | Frank Ertel Carlyle | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 8 | Charles B. Deane | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 9 | Robert L. Doughton | Democratic | 1910 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 10 | Hamilton C. Jones | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Carolina 11 | Alfred L. Bulwinkle | Democratic | 1930 | Incumbent died. Democratic hold. |
|
North Carolina 12 | Monroe Minor Redden | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
North Dakota
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
North Dakota at-large | Usher L. Burdick | Republican-NPL | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
William Lemke | Republican-NPL | 1942 | Incumbent died. Republican hold. |
Ohio
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ohio 1 | Charles H. Elston | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 2 | Earl T. Wagner | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Ohio 3 | Edward G. Breen | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 4 | William Moore McCulloch | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 5 | Cliff Clevenger | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 6 | James G. Polk | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 7 | Clarence J. Brown | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 8 | Frederick Cleveland Smith | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Ohio 9 | Thomas Henry Burke | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Independent gain. |
|
Ohio 10 | Thomas A. Jenkins | Republican | 1924 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 11 | Walter E. Brehm | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 12 | John Martin Vorys | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 13 | Alvin F. Weichel | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 14 | Walter B. Huber | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Ohio 15 | Robert T. Secrest | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 16 | John McSweeney | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Ohio 17 | J. Harry McGregor | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 18 | Wayne Hays | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 19 | Michael J. Kirwan | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 20 | Michael A. Feighan | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 21 | Robert Crosser | Democratic | 1922 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio 22 | Frances P. Bolton | Republican | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Ohio at-large | Stephen M. Young | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Oklahoma
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oklahoma 1 | Dixie Gilmer | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Oklahoma 2 | William G. Stigler | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oklahoma 3 | Carl Albert | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oklahoma 4 | Tom Steed | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oklahoma 5 | Mike Monroney | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Democratic hold. |
|
Oklahoma 6 | Toby Morris | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oklahoma 7 | Victor Wickersham | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oklahoma 8 | George H. Wilson | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Oregon
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oregon 1 | A. Walter Norblad | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oregon 2 | Lowell Stockman | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oregon 3 | Homer D. Angell | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Oregon 4 | Harris Ellsworth | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pennsylvania 1 | William A. Barrett | Democratic | 1944 1946 (lost) 1948 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 2 | William T. Granahan | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 3 | Hardie Scott | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 4 | Earl Chudoff | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 5 | William J. Green Jr. | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 6 | Hugh Scott | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 7 | Benjamin F. James | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 8 | Franklin H. Lichtenwalter | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Pennsylvania 9 | Paul B. Dague | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 10 | Harry P. O'Neill | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 11 | Daniel Flood | Democratic | 1944 1946 (lost) 1948 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 12 | Ivor D. Fenton | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 13 | George M. Rhodes | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 14 | Wilson D. Gillette | Republican | 1941 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 15 | Robert F. Rich | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Pennsylvania 16 | Samuel K. McConnell Jr. | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 17 | Richard M. Simpson | Republican | 1937 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 18 | John C. Kunkel | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Republican hold. |
|
Pennsylvania 19 | Leon H. Gavin | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 20 | Francis E. Walter | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 21 | James F. Lind | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 22 | James E. Van Zandt | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 23 | Anthony Cavalcante | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Pennsylvania 24 | Thomas E. Morgan | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 25 | Louis E. Graham | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 26 | John P. Saylor | Republican | 1949 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 27 | Augustine B. Kelley | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 28 | Carroll D. Kearns | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 29 | Harry J. Davenport | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Pennsylvania 30 | Robert J. Corbett | Republican | 1938 1940 (lost) 1944 |
Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 31 | James G. Fulton | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 32 | Herman P. Eberharter | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Pennsylvania 33 | Frank Buchanan | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Rhode Island
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rhode Island 1 | Aime Forand | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Rhode Island 2 | John E. Fogarty | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
South Carolina
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
South Carolina 1 | L. Mendel Rivers | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
South Carolina 2 | Hugo S. Sims Jr. | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost renomination. Democratic hold. |
|
South Carolina 3 | James Butler Hare | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost renomination. Democratic hold. |
|
South Carolina 4 | Joseph R. Bryson | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
South Carolina 5 | James P. Richards | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
South Carolina 6 | John L. McMillan | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
South Dakota
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
South Dakota 1 | Harold Lovre | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
South Dakota 2 | Francis H. Case | Republican | 1936 | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator. Republican hold. |
|
Tennessee
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tennessee 1 | Dayton E. Phillips | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent lost renomination; defeated as an Independent. Republican hold. |
|
Tennessee 2 | John Jennings | Republican | 1939 | Incumbent lost renomination. Republican hold. |
|
Tennessee 3 | James B. Frazier Jr. | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 4 | Albert Gore Sr. | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 5 | Joe L. Evins | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 6 | Percy Priest | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 7 | James Patrick Sutton | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 8 | Tom J. Murray | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 9 | Jere Cooper | Democratic | 1928 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Tennessee 10 | Clifford Davis | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Texas 1 | Wright Patman | Democratic | 1928 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 2 | Jesse M. Combs | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 3 | Lindley Beckworth | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 4 | Sam Rayburn | Democratic | 1912 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 5 | Joseph Franklin Wilson | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 6 | Olin E. Teague | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 7 | Tom Pickett | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 8 | Albert Thomas | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 9 | Clark W. Thompson | Democratic | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 10 | Homer Thornberry | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 11 | William R. Poage | Democratic | 1936 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 12 | Wingate H. Lucas | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 13 | Ed Gossett | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 14 | John E. Lyle Jr. | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 15 | Lloyd Bentsen | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 16 | Kenneth M. Regan | Democratic | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 17 | Omar Burleson | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 18 | Ben H. Guill | Republican | 1950 | Incumbent lost re-election. Democratic gain. |
|
Texas 19 | George H. Mahon | Democratic | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 20 | Paul J. Kilday | Democratic | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Texas 21 | O. C. Fisher | Democratic | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Utah
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Utah 1 | Walter K. Granger | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Utah 2 | Reva Beck Bosone | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Vermont
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Vermont at-large | Charles Albert Plumley | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Virginia
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Virginia 1 | Edward J. Robeson Jr. | Democratic | 1950 (special) | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 2 | Porter Hardy Jr. | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 3 | J. Vaughan Gary | Democratic | 1945 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 4 | Watkins Abbitt | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 5 | Thomas B. Stanley | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 6 | Clarence G. Burton | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 7 | Burr Harrison | Democratic | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 8 | Howard W. Smith | Democratic | 1930 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Virginia 9 | Thomas B. Fugate | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Washington
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Washington 1 | Hugh Mitchell | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
Others
|
Washington 2 | Henry M. Jackson | Democratic | 1940 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Washington 3 | Russell V. Mack | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Washington 4 | Hal Holmes | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Washington 5 | Walt Horan | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Washington 6 | Thor C. Tollefson | Republican | 1946 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
West Virginia
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
West Virginia 1 | Robert L. Ramsay | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
West Virginia 2 | Harley Orrin Staggers | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
West Virginia 3 | Cleveland M. Bailey | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
West Virginia 4 | Maurice G. Burnside | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
West Virginia 5 | John Kee | Democratic | 1932 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
West Virginia 6 | E. H. Hedrick | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wisconsin 1 | Lawrence H. Smith | Republican | 1941 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 2 | Glenn Robert Davis | Republican | 1947 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 3 | Gardner R. Withrow | Republican | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 4 | Clement J. Zablocki | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 5 | Andrew Biemiller | Democratic | 1948 | Incumbent lost re-election. Republican gain. |
|
Wisconsin 6 | Frank Bateman Keefe | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent retired. Republican hold. |
|
Wisconsin 7 | Reid F. Murray | Republican | 1938 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 8 | John W. Byrnes | Republican | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 9 | Merlin Hull | Republican | 1934 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wisconsin 10 | Alvin O'Konski | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
Wyoming
District | Incumbent | Party | First elected |
Result | Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wyoming at-large | Frank A. Barrett | Republican | 1942 | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Wyoming. Republican hold. |
|
Non-voting delegates
Alaska Territory
District | Incumbent | This race | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representative | Party | First elected | Results | Candidates | |
Alaska Territory at-large | Bob Bartlett | Democratic | 1944 | Incumbent re-elected. |
|
See also
Notes
References
- ^ "Our Campaigns - KS District 3 - Special Election Race - Nov 07, 1950".
- ^ "Our Campaigns - NC - District 11 - Special Election Race - Nov 07, 1950".
- ^ "Our Campaigns - Container Detail Page".
- ^ "Our Campaigns - NC - District 11 - Special Election Race - Nov 07, 1950".
- ^ "Our Campaigns - AK Delegate Race - Nov 07, 1950".
