While 2023 is sandwiched between a consequential midterm cycle and a potentially wide-open presidential race, there are still several elections to watch this year.
Spanning legislative, executive and judicial races at the state and local level, the elections in the coming months stand to affect millions of Americans.
Here are six elections to watch this year:
Virginia General Assembly — Jan. 10/Nov. 7
The first significant state legislative election is next Tuesday in Virginia: A special election for Senate District 7. State Sen. Jen Kiggans (R) vacated this seat after winning election to represent Virginia's 2nd District in the U.S. House.
In 2019, Kiggans narrowly won the state Senate seat. The stakes are high given the chamber's narrow 21-18 Democratic majority. Democrats' numbers are poised to at least temporarily dip following the special U.S. House election in Virginia's 4th, which a Democratic state senator is favored to win (more on that below).
In November, control of both state legislative chambers is at stake. Republicans hold a small 51-47 majority in the House of Delegates (there are currently two vacancies). The November election will determine whether Virginia's legislature remains under divided control and the legislature's alignment with Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R).
Virginia's 4th District special election — Feb. 21
State Sen. Jennifer McClellan (D) and Leon Benjamin Sr. (R) are running to succeed Rep. Don McEachin (D), who died shortly after being reelected in November. McEachin defeated Benjamin by nearly 30 points.
The partisan breakdown of the House is set for 222 Republicans and 212 Democrats until the special election winner is sworn in. While the race isn't expected to be competitive, its effect on House partisan composition could matter with such a small majority.
Chicago mayor — Feb. 28 with possible April runoff
Voters in the nation's third-largest city will decide on their next mayor Feb. 28, with a runoff April 4 if nobody clears 50 percent of the vote next month. There are 10 candidates on the ballot (with one candidacy challenge outstanding). Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) is seeking reelection. We wrote more about this race last month.
Wisconsin Supreme Court — April 4
The Wisconsin Supreme Court's 4-3 conservative majority is at stake. Given the role of state supreme courts in everything from voting policy to redistricting to abortion policy, the election will be consequential for Wisconsinites.
Conservative Justice Patience Roggensack is retiring. At least two conservatives and two liberals are vying to succeed her. Tuesday is the filing deadline. A nonpartisan primary is on Feb. 21, and the two with the most votes go on to the April general. Local observers told WISN 12 News they expect one conservative and one liberal to advance.
Louisiana governor — Oct. 14 all-candidates primary, Nov. 18 election
Candidates of all affiliations running for Louisiana governor will be on the same ballot on Oct. 14. A candidate would win outright if they got more than 50 percent of the vote. Otherwise, the top two will advance to a Nov. 18 election.
Term-limited Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) won by almost 3 percentage points in 2019 after advancing from an initial election in which 51 percent split their votes between two Republican candidates. Attorney General Jeff Landry (R) is running, and several other names have been mentioned as potential GOP candidates, including Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser and Rep. Garret Graves (La.).
The filing deadline is Aug. 10.
Kentucky governor — Nov. 7
Gov. Andy Beshear (D) is seeking reelection after beating then-incumbent Matt Bevin (R) by less than 1 percentage point in 2019.
A number of prominent Republicans have announced for the May 16 primary, including Attorney General Daniel Cameron, former U.N. Ambassador Kelly Craft and Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles. The filing deadline is Friday.
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Other 2023 elections we'll be watching for developments throughout the year:
- State legislative elections in Louisiana, Mississippi and New Jersey
- Gubernatorial election in Mississippi (our colleague Caroline Vakil has more on 2023's gubernatorial races here)
- Mayoral elections in several of the nation's largest cities, including Houston and Philadelphia
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