Will Democrats Lose Control of the Senate?

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Democrats are reportedly concerned about losing control in the Senate as polls show Americans do not approve of Joe Biden and the Democrats.

There are at least 50 Senate seats up for election in 2024. This does not include incumbents who may choose to retire or run for another office.

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This would open up more seats for election.

There will also be a special election in Nebraska to fill the remaining two years of the term of Ben Sasse, who resigned in 2022.

Here’s the list of Senators facing an election in 2024:

• Alabama (Democrat Doug Jones)
• Alaska (Republican Lisa Murkowski)
• Arizona (Democrat Kyrsten Sinema)
• Arkansas (Republican John Boozman)
• California (Democrat Dianne Feinstein)
• Colorado (Democrat Michael Bennet)
• Connecticut (Democrat Chris Murphy)
• Delaware (Democrat Tom Carper)
• Florida (Republican Rick Scott)

• Georgia (Democrat Raphael Warnock)
• Hawaii (Democrat Mazie Hirono)
• Idaho (Republican Mike Crapo)
• Illinois (Democrat Tammy Duckworth)
• Indiana (Republican Mike Braun)
• Iowa (Republican Chuck Grassley)
• Kansas (Republican Jerry Moran)
• Kentucky (Republican Rand Paul)
• Louisiana (Democrat Bill Cassidy)
• Maine (Independent Angus King)

• Maryland (Democrat Ben Cardin)
• Massachusetts (Democrat Elizabeth Warren)
• Michigan (Democrat Gary Peters)
• Minnesota (Democrat Amy Klobuchar)
• Mississippi (Republican Cindy Hyde-Smith)
• Missouri (Republican Josh Hawley)
• Montana (Democrat Jon Tester)
• Nebraska (Republican Ben Sasse)
• Nevada (Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto)
• New Hampshire (Democrat Jeanne Shaheen)

• New Jersey (Democrat Bob Menendez)
• New Mexico (Democrat Martin Heinrich)
• New York (Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand)
• North Carolina (Republican Richard Burr)
• North Dakota (Republican Kevin Cramer)
• Ohio (Democrat Sherrod Brown)
• Oklahoma (Republican James Lankford)
• Oregon (Democrat Ron Wyden)
• Pennsylvania (Democrat Bob Casey, Jr.)
• Rhode Island (Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse)

• South Carolina (Republican Tim Scott)
• South Dakota (Republican John Thune)
• Tennessee (Republican Marsha Blackburn)
• Texas (Republican John Cornyn)
• Utah (Republican Mitt Romney)
• Vermont (Independent Bernie Sanders)
• Virginia (Democrat Tim Kaine)
• Washington (Democrat Maria Cantwell)
• West Virginia (Democrat Joe Manchin III)
• Wisconsin (Democrat Tammy Baldwin)
• Wyoming (Republican John Barrasso)

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