Who Is Running for Minnesota House of Representatives

2022 Minnesota
House Elections
Flag of Minnesota.png
Principal Baronial 9, 2022
General November 8, 2022
2022 Elections
Cull a bedroom beneath:

Elections for the Minnesota House of Representatives will have identify in 2022. The general election is on Nov eight, 2022. A primary is scheduled for August 9, 2022. The filing borderline is May 31, 2022.

The Minnesota House of Representatives is one of 88 state legislative chambers holding elections in 2022. There are 99 chambers throughout the state.

Party control

Encounter also: Partisan limerick of country houses and State government trifectas
Party Equally of February 2022
Democratic Party 69
Republican Party 64
Contained 1
Vacancies 0
Total 134

Candidates

Notation: The following list includes official candidates only. Ballotpedia defines official candidates every bit people who:

  • Register with a federal or state campaign finance bureau before the candidate filing deadline
  • Announced on candidate lists released past government election agencies

States are in the process of redistricting Congressional and state legislative boundaries following the 2022 demography. As a upshot, candidates may declare candidacy in districts that change before the state'due south filing deadline. This list volition be updated after the candidate filing deadline has passed and the official list of candidates becomes available. Please contact us if you discover an official candidate missing from the listing, the inclusion of a candidate who withdrew, or the inclusion of a candidate who has since changed the location of their candidacy.

Principal

Minnesota House of Representatives Primary 2022

  • Incumbents are marked with an (i) after their name.
  • The candidate list in this election may not be complete.
  • Delight contact Ballotpedia near candidate additions, withdrawals, or disqualifications.
Office Democratic Party Democratic Republican Party Republican Other
District 1A
District 1B
Commune 2A
Commune 2B
District 3A
Commune 3B
Commune 4A
District 4B
District 5A
Commune 5B
Commune 6A
District 6B

Matt Norri

District 7A
District 7B
District 8A
Commune 8B
District 9A
District 9B
District 10A
District 10B
District 11A
District 11B
District 12A
Commune 12B
District 13A
Commune 13B
District 14A
District 14B
District 15A
District 15B
Commune 16A
District 16B
District 17A
Commune 17B
District 18A
Commune 18B
Commune 19A

Jeff Brand

Commune 19B
District 20A
District 20B
District 21A
District 21B
District 22A
Commune 22B
Commune 23A
District 23B
District 24A
District 24B
District 25A
District 25B
District 26A
Commune 26B
Commune 27A
District 27B
Commune 28A
District 28B
Commune 29A
District 29B
District 30A
District 30B
District 31A
District 31B
District 32A
District 32B
Commune 33A
District 33B

Andrew MyersCandidate Connection

District 34A
District 34B
Commune 35A
District 35B
District 36A
District 36B
District 37A
District 37B
District 38A
District 38B

Justin Stofferahn

District 39A
Commune 39B
District 40A
Commune 40B
District 41A
District 41B
Commune 42A
District 42B
District 43A
Commune 43B
Commune 44A
District 44B
District 45A
District 45B
District 46A

Kimberly Sanberg

District 46B
District 47A
District 47B
District 48A
Commune 48B

Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn (i)

District 49A
District 49B
District 50A
District 50B
District 51A
District 51B
District 52A
District 52B
District 53A
Commune 53B
District 54A
District 54B
District 55A

Brad Tabke
Brendan Van Alstyne

District 55B
District 56A
District 56B
District 57A
District 57B
Commune 58A
District 58B
District 59A
Commune 59B
Commune 60A
Commune 60B
Commune 61A
Commune 61B
Commune 62A
District 62B
District 63A
District 63B
District 64A
District 64B
District 65A
District 65B
District 66A

Dave ThomasCandidate Connection

District 66B
District 67A
District 67B

General

Campaign finance

The campaign finance data analyzed and displayed below is gathered and fabricated available by Transparency Usa.

Campaign finance by commune

The section below contains data from fiscal reports submitted to country agencies. Districts and elections are grouped in sections of x. To view information for a commune, click on the appropriate bar below to expand it. The data is gathered and made available past Transparency United states of america.

Competitiveness

This department will be updated with information about the competitiveness of state legislative elections in Minnesota. For more information about Ballotpedia's Competitiveness Analysis of state legislative elections, please click here.

Open seats

The table below shows the number and percentage of open seats in the Minnesota Business firm of Representatives from 2010 to 2022.[1] It will be updated every bit information becomes available following the state's candidate filing deadline.

Open Seats in Minnesota House of Representatives elections: 2010 - 2022
Year Total seats Open seats Seats with incumbents running for re-election
2022 134 TBD TBD
2020 134 xv (11%) 119 (89%)
2018 134 23 (17%) 111 (83%)
2016 134 15 (11%) 119 (89%)
2014 134 15 (11%) 119 (89%)
2012 134 28 (21%) 106 (79%)
2010 134 fifteen (xi%) 119 (89%)

Procedure to become a candidate

See too: Election access requirements for political candidates in Minnesota

DocumentIcon.jpg Encounter statutes: 2013 Minnesota Statutes, "Chapter 204B. Elections; General Provisions"

For major party candidates

A major political party candidate seeking placement on the primary election must file an affidavit of candidacy. The affirmation must state the post-obit, regardless of the function being sought:[2] [3]

  • that the candidate is an eligible voter
  • that the candidate has no other affirmation on file as a candidate for whatever other office at the same primary or next ensuing general election
  • that the candidate is 21 years old, or will be at the time he or she assumes function, and that the candidate will maintain a residence in the commune in which he or she is seeking election for 30 days prior to the general ballot
  • that the candidate'south name as written on the affidavit for ballot designation is the candidate'southward truthful name or the name by which he or she is usually known in the community

The candidate must as well include his or her address and telephone number. The candidate must indicate on the affidavit that he or she has either participated in the party's near contempo precinct caucus or intends to vote for a bulk of the party'southward candidates at the next ensuing full general ballot. The affidavit includes office-specific information, equally well.[2] [3]

In improver the affidavit of candidacy, a major political party candidate must either pay a filing fee or submit a petition in lieu of paying the filing fee. Filing fees vary according to the office being sought and are as follows:[3] [4]

Filing fees
Office Filing fee
Governor, attorney general, auditor, secretary of land or United States Representative $300
United States Senator $400
State legislature $100

If a candidate elects to submit a petition in lieu of paying the filing fee, the petition must meet the post-obit signature requirements:[three] [4]

Signature requirements for petitions in lieu of filing fees
Part Required signatures
Governor, attorney general, accountant, secretary of state or United States Senator 2,000
United States Representative 1,000
State legislature 500

Candidates must file between the 84th twenty-four hours preceding the master election and the 70th twenty-four hour period preceding the primary. Candidates for federal function must file with the Minnesota Secretarial assistant of State. A candidate for state-level office may file with the county auditor of his or her county of residence or the Minnesota Secretary of State.[3] [5]

For modest party and independent candidates

A small political party or contained candidate seeking placement on the general election election must file an affidavit of candidacy coming together the same specifications as that filed by a major political party candidate. Instead of including the proper name of his or her political party, an contained candidate may designate a non-recognized party or political principle, provided that the designation is made in three words or less and does not suggest similarity with an existing recognized party.[2] [vi]

A modest political party or independent candidate must also submit a nominating petition. For federal or statewide offices, signatures must equal either 1 percent of the total number of individuals who voted in the state at the last preceding state general election, or 2,000, whichever is less. For congressional office, signatures must equal either 5 percent of the total number of individuals who voted in the district at the last preceding state general election, or 1,000, whichever is less. For land legislative office, signatures must equal either ten pct of the total number of individuals who voted in the legislative district at the last preceding state general ballot, or 500, whichever is less.[half dozen] [7] [8]

In improver to the affidavit of candidacy and nominating petition, a pocket-size party or independent candidate is liable for the aforementioned filing fee every bit a major party candidate. A nominating petition may be used in lieu of paying the filing fee, but the petition must include a prominent statement informing signers that the petition volition exist used in this way.[4] [half dozen]

Candidates must file between the 84th twenty-four hours preceding the primary election and the 70th twenty-four hour period preceding the primary. Candidates for federal role must file with the Minnesota Secretary of Country. A candidate for state-level part may file with the canton auditor of his or her county of residence or the Minnesota Secretarial assistant of Country.[5] [6]

For write-in candidates

A write-in candidate must file a written request in society to take his or her votes tallied. Such requests must be filed no subsequently than the seventh day earlier the general election. Write-in candidates for federal office must submit their requests to the Minnesota Secretarial assistant of State. A write-in candidate for country-level office may submit the request to the canton accountant of his or her county of residence or the Minnesota Secretary of Land.[five]

Qualifications

Meet also: State legislature candidate requirements past state

To exist eligible to run for the Minnesota Firm of Representatives, a candidate must:[9]

  • Exist eligible to vote in Minnesota
  • Have not filed for more than one part for the upcoming main or general election
  • Be at least 21 years old
  • Be a resident of Minnesota for at least 1 year
  • Be a resident of the legislative commune for at least six months earlier the general ballot date

Salaries and per diem

Run across also: Comparison of state legislative salaries
Land legislators
Salary Per diem
$48,250/year For senators: $86/day. For representatives: $66/24-hour interval.

When sworn in

See also: When country legislators assume function after a general ballot

Minnesota legislators presume part the first day of biennial (2-year) session.[10] Minnesota police force provides that: "The legislature shall meet at the seat of regime on the first Tuesday later the start Monday in January of each odd-numbered year. When the first Mon in January falls on Jan 1, it shall meet on the get-go Wednesday afterward the offset Monday. It shall besides come across when called by the governor to encounter in special session."[11]

Minnesota political history

Trifectas

A land government trifecta is a term that describes unmarried-political party regime, when one political party holds the governor's office and has majorities in both chambers of the legislature in a state authorities.

Minnesota Party Command: 1992-2022
Two years of Democratic trifectas  •No Republican trifectas
Scroll left and right on the table beneath to view more than years.

Year 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 xiv 15 16 17 18 19 twenty 21 22
Governor R R R R R R R I I I I R R R R R R R R D D D D D D D D D D D D
Senate D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D R R D D D D R R R R R R
Business firm D D D D D D D R R R R R R R R D D D D R R D D R R R R D D D D

Presidential politics in Minnesota

2016 Presidential ballot results

U.S. presidential election, Minnesota, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes Electoral votes
Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Hillary Clinton/Tim Kaine 46.4% one,367,716 10
Republican Donald Trump/Mike Pence 44.nine% one,322,951 0
Libertarian Gary Johnson/Bill Weld iii.eight% 112,972 0
Greenish Jill Stein/Ajamu Baraka 1.iii% 36,985 0
Constitution Darrell Castle/Scott Bradley 0.3% nine,456 0
Legal Marijuana At present Dan R. Vacek/Marker M. Elworth Jr. 0.iv% 11,291 0
Socialist Workers Party Alyson Kennedy/Osborne Hart 0.1% 1,672 0
American Delta Party Roque De La Fuente/Michael Steinberg 0% one,431 0
Independence Evan McMullin/Nathan Johnson 1.8% 53,076 0
- Write-in votes 0.9% 27,263 0
Total Votes ii,944,813 x
Election results via: Minnesota Secretarial assistant of State

Voter data

How the primary works

A primary election is an election in which registered voters select a candidate that they believe should exist a political party'south candidate for elected part to run in the full general election. They are also used to choose convention delegates and political party leaders. Primaries are country-level and local-level elections that have identify prior to a general election. Minnesota utilizes an open primary system, in which registered voters do not have to be members of a party to vote in that party's primary.[12] [13] [14] [fifteen]

For information virtually which offices are nominated via primary election, see this article.

Poll times

In Minnesota, most polling places are open from 7:00 a.one thousand. to eight:00 p.1000. Fundamental Time. However, some smaller municipalities may open their polls as belatedly equally 10:00 a.m. An individual who is in line at the time polls shut must be allowed to vote.[16]

Registration requirements

To vote in Minnesota, an individual must be 18 years quondam on Election Day. The private must be a United States citizen who has resided in Minnesota for the 20-solar day period preceding the election.[17]

An individual must annals to vote at least 21 days earlier Election Twenty-four hours or on Election Day at a polling place. An individual may register to vote by completing a registration application and submitting it by mail or in-person to a local election official. An private can as well annals online. To register at a polling place on Election Day, an private must present valid identification.[17]

Automated registration

Minnesota does not practice automatic voter registration.

Online registration

Run into also: Online voter registration

Minnesota has implemented an online voter registration system. Residents can register to vote by visiting this website.

Same-mean solar day registration

Minnesota allows for same-day voter registration.

Residency requirements

To annals to vote in Minnesota, you lot must be a resident of the country for at least twenty days.

Verification of citizenship

Meet too: Laws permitting noncitizens to vote in the United States

As of Nov 2019, Minnesota did not require proof of citizenship for voter registration.

Verifying your registration

The Minnesota Secretary of State allows residents to bank check their voter registration status online.

Voter ID requirements

Minnesota does not crave voters to nowadays identification while voting.[18]

If yous are registering to vote at the polls or have not voted in at least four years, you volition need to bring proof of residency to the polls. Click hither to encounter what qualifies equally acceptable proof of residency.

Early voting

Minnesota permits early on voting. Larn more by visiting this website.

Absentee voting

Redistricting following the 2022 demography

This section lists major events in the post-2020 census redistricting bike in reverse chronological order. Major events include the release of apportionment data, the release of census population data, the introduction of formal map proposals, the enactment of new maps, and noteworthy court challenges. Click the dates beneath for boosted information.

  • February fifteen, 2022: The Minnesota Judicial Branch Special Redistricting Panel adopted concluding congressional and legislative redistricting plans.
  • January 4, 2022: The Minnesota Judicial Co-operative Special Redistricting Console heard oral arguments from the sponsors of 4 submitted congressional and legislative redistricting plans.
  • September xvi, 2021: The U.Due south. Census Bureau released data from the 2022 census in an easier-to-employ format to land redistricting authorities and the public.
  • August 12, 2021: The U.S. Census Agency delivered redistricting information to states in a legacy format.
  • June 30, 2021: Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice Lorie Gildea establishes a five-justice special console on redistricting to hear legal challenges and to decide congressional and legislative district boundaries by February xv, 2022, if necessary.
  • April 26, 2021: The U.Due south. Demography Bureau delivered apportionment counts.

Run across also

Minnesota State Legislative Elections News and Analysis

Seal of Minnesota.png

SLP badge.png

Ballotpedia RSS.jpg

Minnesota Country Executive Offices
Minnesota Land Legislature
Minnesota Courts
2021 • 2022 • 2022 • 2022 • 2017
2016 • 2022 • 2014
Minnesota elections: 2022 • 2022 • 2022 • 2022 • 2022 • 2022 • 2015
Party control of state regime
State authorities trifectas
Partisan limerick of state legislatures
Partisan composition of state senates
Partisan composition of state houses

External links

  • Minnesota House of Representatives

Footnotes

  1. Ballotpedia defines a seat as open up if the incumbent did non file to run for re-election or filed but withdrew and did non appear on any ballot for his or her seat. If the incumbent withdrew from or did not participate in the principal simply later chose to seek re-election to his or her seat as a tertiary political party or independent candidate, the seat would non be counted equally open. If the incumbent retired or ran for a different seat in the same sleeping accommodation, his or her original seat would be counted as open unless another incumbent from the same bedchamber filed to run for that seat, in which case it would not be counted as open up due to the presence of an incumbent.
  2. two.0 2.1 2.2 2013 Minnesota Statutes, "Section 204B.06," accessed March 4, 2014
  3. 3.0 3.ane iii.ii 3.three iii.4 Minnesota Secretary of State, "Guide for Major Party or Nonpartisan Candidates," accessed March 4, 2014
  4. four.0 4.1 4.2 2013 Minnesota Statutes, "Section 204B.11," accessed March 4, 2014
  5. 5.0 v.i 5.2 2013 Minnesota Statutes, "Section 204B.09," accessed March 4, 2014
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Minnesota Secretary of State, "Guide for Minor Party or Independent Candidates," accessed March 4, 2018
  7. 2013 Minnesota Statutes, "Section 204B.08," accessed March four, 2014
  8. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named mnresults
  9. Minnesota Secretary of State, "Filing for Role," accessed June 23, 2014
  10. Minnesota Statutes, "Chapter 3, Section 3.05," accessed December 17, 2013
  11. Minnesota Statutes, "Affiliate 3, Department 3.011," accessed December 17, 2013
  12. NCSL,"State Primary Election Types," accessed Oct 25, 2019
  13. FairVote,"Primaries," accessed October 25, 2019
  14. Ballotpedia inquiry conducted Dec 26, 2013, through Jan three, 2014, researching and analyzing various land websites and codes.
  15. Function of the Minnesota Secretary of Land Steve Simon,"Primary Ballot," accessed October 25, 2019
  16. Minnesota Secretarial assistant of State, "Voting Hours," accessed October 17, 2019
  17. 17.0 17.1 Minnesota Secretarial assistant of State, "Annals to Vote," accessed October 4, 2019
  18. Minnesota Secretarial assistant of State, "Do I Demand to Bring ID?" accessed October 3, 2019

Leadership

Speaker of the House:Melissa Hortman

Representatives

Democratic Party (69)

Republican Political party (64)

Independent (1)

ortizsobjecold1950.blogspot.com

Source: https://ballotpedia.org/Minnesota_House_of_Representatives_elections,_2022

0 Response to "Who Is Running for Minnesota House of Representatives"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel