The current breakdown of the Senate is as follows (where we count the two independents as Democrats):
In a reversal from 2018, the Republicans will be playing defense, with many more seats up than the Democrats. The good news for the GOP is that most of these are in deep red states and are considered safe.
The Democratic-held seats are listed first below, in alphabetical order by state, with the Republican ones following.
Click on a picture for the candidate's webpage.
Click on a name for the candidate's entry in Wikipedia.
Click on a party (D) or (R) for the state party.
The indicates a race to watch.
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Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Doug Jones (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Doug Jones looked like dead meat until God decided that child predator Roy Moore should try again for the seat he barely missed after Jeff Sessions foolishly gave up a lifetime job for a short stint as AG. Moore is no sure bet, since the entire Republican establishment will attack him viciously until Election Day. However, they don't want to take sides except for ABM (Anybody But Moore), and in a multiway Republican primary, the not-Moore vote could be fragmented and Moore could come out on top. Rep. Bradley Byrne (R-AL) is already in, as is Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill. Former Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville, who has no political experience, has also entered the race, on the theory that "Hey, it worked for Donald Trump." Jones' only real chance is that a difficult GOP primary produces a flawed, damaged, and broke Roy Moore as the GOP nominee and that black voters and suburban women pull Jones over the finish line. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Chris Coons (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Chris Coons had the pleasure of running against Christine "I am not a witch" O'Donnell in a 2010 special election to fill the Senate seat that was vacated by Joe Biden when he became Vice President. In 2014, he won a full term by beating Kevin Wade (R) by 14 points. He will coast to an equally easy win in 2020. Delaware is a very blue state and the Republicans have no bench at all there, so he can serve another five or six terms in the Senate if he wants to. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Dick Durbin (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Dick Durbin is minority whip, the second most powerful position in the Senate Democratic caucus. He is also from a very blue state, Illinois. The Republicans will no doubt find some rich businessman or businesswoman who wants the Republican nomination just for the thrill of being a Senate candidate before being crushed, but it hardly matters. Durbin's fifth term is already in the bag. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Ed Markey (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
When then-President Barack Obama nominated Sen. John Kerry to be Secretary of State, it forced a special election for Kerry's seat. That was won by then-representative Ed Markey, who was positioned to spend as long as he wanted in the Senate, given how very blue Massachusetts is. He got 62% of the vote in 2014 and would do at least as well in 2020, now that he is better known. That is, if he makes it to the general election. Unfortunately for the senator, Rep. Joe Kennedy III (D-MA) threw his hat in the ring. Kennedy has big ambitions, a magic name, and lots of money, so he is a major threat to Markey. Polls give the Representative a lead of roughly 10 points over the Senator. The GOP bench is razor-thin, especially since Gov. Charlie Baker (R-MA) says he's not interested in running. That has left the red team with perennial candidate Shiva Ayyadurai, who is no real threat to either Markey or Kennedy. So, even if there's a bloody Democratic primary, the seat will stay in the blue team's hands. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Gary Peters (D) |
John James (R) |
Gary Peters won his first Senate term in 2014 when long-time senator Carl Levin retired. He is now running for his second term. Although Donald Trump carried Michigan in 2016 (by 11,000 votes), it is fundamentally a blue state and Peters shouldn't have too much trouble being reelected. That said, the GOP got their dream candidate in John James, who made Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) sweat a little in 2018. He's black, a veteran, a businessman, and quite charismatic, so maybe he can cobble enough votes together to make Peters sweat, too—especially with well more than a year to campaign. Still, in a presidential year, Peters remains the clear favorite. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Tina Smith (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Tina Smith won a special election in 2018 to fill out the rest of Al Franken's term. Now she has to decide if she wants to run for a full term. She didn't accept the appointment to the Senate with much enthusiasm, but she figured it was at least better than being lieutenant governor, a job whose only redeeming feature is that the governor might die in office. She campaigned and won in the 2018 special election, but there is a fairly good chance she might decide being in the Senate minority is even worse than being a lieutenant governor, and announce her retirement from politics. That will set up an open DFL primary since any Democrat has a good chance of being elected, especially in a presidential election year. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Jeanne Shaheen (D) |
Candidate Unknown (R) |
New Hampshire is one of the six states with two female senators. The others are Arizona, California, Minnesota, Nevada, and Washington. One of New Hampshire's two representatives is a woman and the previous governor was also a woman, so the Granite State is clearly a pretty friendly state for women in politics. Shaheen herself was the first woman elected as governor of the state. She was subsequently elected two more times as the state's chief executive before being elected to the Senate in 2008. She is safe, barring an unexpected run from a member of the Sununu family. Thus far, the Sununus have expressed no interest, and the leading Republican candidate is Brig. Gen. Donald Bolduc (ret.), who has an impressive military record, but no political experience. Barring a miracle campaign from him, that just won't get it done up against a popular incumbent in a bluish state. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Cory Booker (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
When Frank Lautenberg died in office at 89 in 2013, Gov. Chris Christie called a special election, which Newark Mayor Cory Booker won. He was easily elected to a full term in 2014 and is up for reelection in 2020. This caused a problem because he would then have to decide if he was going to run for president or for the Senate. Fortunately for him, the Democrats control the trifecta in New Jersey and they think Booker is a cool guy, so they conveniently changed state law to allow folks to run for president and senator at the same time. It is a safe bet to say he will win one of these elections, but we are not going to predict which one. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Tom Udall is a mere stripling at 70, but he nonetheless decided to throw in the towel and retire. Rep. Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) is going to try to succeed Udall for a second time, having already taken over the Senator's House seat when he vacated it back in 2009. Luján is a strong candidate, a Latino and a member of a prominent New Mexico family, and he will be a heavy favorite against anyone who tries to challenge him in the primary. If the GOP can coax former governor Susana Martinez out of retirement, she might make a race of it in the general election, but she would still be the underdog. And if she doesn't run, then the GOP candidate won't be an underdog so much as they will be a dead dog. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Jeff Merkley (D) |
Candidate Unknown (R) |
Jeff Merkley won a very narrow victory over then-senator Gordon Smith in 2008. He has since been a high-profile progressive and one of the leaders of the fight to abolish the filibuster. Oregon is a liberal state, and a young (62) progressive with clear left-of-center positions on many issues is certainly the overwhelming favorite. But Merkley is also toying with a presidential run, so he might not run for the Senate. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Jack Reed (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Jack Reed is a low-profile guy who avoids the media and concentrates on service to his constitutents. They apparently like that, since they elected him to his fourth term in the Senate in 2014 with 71% of the vote. In 2008 he got 73%. Usually the Republicans can find some self-funding candidate who thinks it would be neat to run for the Senate. Whomever they get, there is little chance Reed will get less than 60% of the vote. His worst Senate race was in in 1996 (his first), when he got a mere 63% of the vote. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Mark Warner (D) |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Multimillionaire Mark Warner, the former governor of Virginia, has announced that he intends to stay in the Senate. Virginia has long since ceased being a swing state and has become a blue state, like Maryland. The combination of being from a now-blue state, being an incumbent, and having unlimited personal campaign funds means that Warner is a shoo-in for his third term. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Dan Sullivan (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Alaska politics are a bit strange. A write-in candidate (Lisa Murkowski) was elected to the Senate in 2010 after she lost the Republican primary and an independent (Bill Walker) was elected governor in 2014. Then there was the matter of Sarah Palin coming from nowhere to be elected governor in 2006, and then resigning before her term was up so she could could get a better-paying gig on Fox News following her disastrous vice presidential campaign in 2008. Alaska ranks eighth in the list of states dependent on federal money, despite widespread resentment of big gubmint. The technical term for this is "biting the hand that feeds you." That all said, the Last Frontier State is fairly Republican and the Democratic bench is not deep, so Sullivan will probably get another term. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Martha McSally (R) |
Mark Kelly (D) |
Martha McSally was appointed to John McCain's seat in 2018 after she lost the race for Jeff Flake's seat. Democrats smell blood in the water here and will give her a very tough fight. Democrats avoided a primary by pressuring Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) into not running. Consequently, the Democratic nominee will be former astronaut and naval aviator who saw combat in the Gulf War, Mark Kelly. He is also the husband of former representative Gabrielle Giffords. If you combine war veteran with astronaut, you get someone who will command a lot of respect in a state full of veterans. It should be a close race, but remember that McSally already lost a Senate race in a conservative state to an openly bisexual woman with no military experience, and now she faces a veteran whose military record is as strong as hers. Fundraising on both sides has been off the charts, and Kelly (#1) and McSally (#2) led all Senate candidates in terms of Quarter 2 receipts (April 1 - June 30), with about $9 million between them. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Tom Cotton (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Assuming Tom Cotton wants to run for reelection, the seat is his. However, he is also buddy-buddy with Donald Trump, and at the rate people are fleeing the administration, Trump may need him to fill a job in the executive branch. IF that does happen, the Republican that will be appointed to fill Cotton's seat would still be a favorite to win in 2020. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Cory Gardner (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Colorado is turning blue and Cory Gardner is going to be one of the Democrats' top two targets (along with Martha McSally in Arizona). The blue team has won every presidential, senatorial, and gubernatorial race since 2008, with the exception of Gardner's race in 2014. The Democrats got their dream candidate when former governor John Hickenlooper dropped out of the presidential race and threw his hat into the ring for the Senate race. Early polls give Hickenlooper a double-digit lead. There are another dozen or so Democrats in the race, but Hickenlooper's entry will clear many of them out, and the rest will undoubtedly lose to him in the primary. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
David Perdue (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
The Democrats' preferred candidate, Stacey Abrams, opted out, very possibly to remain available for the #2 slot on the blue team's presidential ticket. This leaves the Democrats searching for someone who can give Perdue a race. Maybe Jason Carter, grandson of former president Jimmy, who did very well in an off-year (2014) race for the Georgia governor's mansion? Or maybe Teresa Tomlinson, who served for two terms as mayor of Columbus, Georgia, a mid-sized city (194K population) near the Alabama border. She had a very successful run in that position, but at the moment her name recognition statewide is pretty low. But on Sept. 9, Jon Ossoff joined the race. He ran in a special election in GA-06 in 2017 and raised $23 million but narrowly lost. He will be a force to be reckoned with, especially if Carter and Michelle Nunn opt for running in the special election or don't run at all. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Johnny Isakson is resigning from the Senate at the end of 2019. Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA) will appoint a successor who will have to stand for election in Nov. 2020. This race hasn't taken shape yet and won't until Kemp makes his pick, but with two Senate races going on at the same time, the Democrats are going to pull out all the stops. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Jim Risch (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Jim Risch has had an interesting history, running for lieutenant governor at a time when he was actually governor (as a result of a gubernatorial vacancy when then-governor Dirk Kempthorne resigned the governorship to become George W. Bush's secretary of the interior). In 2008, he ran for the Senate and won. In 2014 he ran again, and won in another landslide. The Democrats will probably find some clueless sucker to accept their nomination, but sometimes it is hard to understand why candidates who know they are going to get wiped out even try. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Joni Ernst (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
This race will another one of the Democrats' top targets. Ernst beat a relatively unknown congressman, Bruce Braley, in 2014, a non-presidential year. In a presidential year, with its generally higher Democratic turnout and people unhappy about Donald Trump's trade wars, it could get exciting. Her 2014 campaign ad about how she was going to cut pork because she grew up on a farm and castrated hogs as a kid was a real winner, but she made her point and it would get tiresome if she used it again. That said, Ernst does have pretty high approval ratings (mid-50s) in Iowa. Thus far, the Democrats have failed to recruit any of their top choices (former governor Tom Vilsack, Rep. Cindy Axne), and are pinning their hopes on real estate executive and 2018 House candidate Theresa Greenfield. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Pat Roberts has decided to call it quits. Four terms is enough for him, so he won't run for reelection in 2020. He is 82 and he just got a big farm bill through Congress, so there isn't a lot left on his agenda. He is an old-style, decent, hardworking conservative and knows no legislation is going to be passed until 2021 at the earliest, so why die in the saddle? In the running to replace him is former Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (R), whose far-right politics and voter suppression thrill some Republicans, but are a bridge too far for others, even in the ruby red Sunflower State. That is the profile of someone with enough support to claim their party's nomination in the primary, but enough not to win in the general election, which is exactly what happened when he lost the Kansas governor's race to a Democrat in 2018. If Kobach claims the nomination, and he's certainly the favorite with Mike Pompeo deciding to stay out of the race, then the seat will be "in play," despite the fact that no Democrat has represented Kansas in the Senate since the 1930s. That said, the list of potential Republican alternatives is long, including Kansas Reps. Roger Marshall (R) and Lynn Jenkins (R), former Rep. Kevin Yoder (R). It is likely to be a crowded and nasty primary because Kobach has his loyal base of support, and any serious non-Kobach Republican will have the support of the GOP establishment. The Democrats don't have an A-list candidate yet; their dream choice was former governor Kathleen Sebelius, but she declined to run. At the moment, only former representative Nancy Boyda and former U.S. attorney Barry Grissom have announced runs for the Democratic nomination, but others will likely join them. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Mitch McConnell (R) |
Amy McGrath (D) |
As majority leader, in principle Mitch McConnell ought to have no trouble getting reelected. But even though he compromises very little with the Democrats, tea partiers consider that far too much. While Kentucky generally casts its electoral votes for the Republican candidate, two of the statewide officers are Democrats, so Kentuckians do vote for the blue team sometimes. More than sometimes, actually; 8 of the last 10 governors were Democrats. To face McConnell, the blue team got its dream candidate, retired Marine Corps pilot Amy McGrath, who nearly won a House race in a deep red district in 2018 and who is a great campaigner and fundraiser. There's enough anti-McConnell energy out there that she raised $2.5 million in the 24 hours after she declared, in fact. McConnell has already unleashed the attack dogs, including an anti-McGrath website called wrongpathmcgrath.com. He's also counting on presidential coattails, as Donald Trump is much more popular with Kentucky Republicans than their senator is. The Majority Leader is the favorite for now, but this race is also squarely on the "watch" list. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Bill Cassidy (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Bill Cassidy beat then-senator Mary Landrieu in the 2014 runoff 56% to 44%, ending her political career. There aren't a lot of top Democrats left in Louisiana, with the possible exception of Landrieu's brother, Mitch Landrieu, who has served as lieutenant governor and mayor of New Orleans. He is said to be considering a presidential run, but if that doesn't pan out, he might consider a Senate race to win back the seat his sister once held. If Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) is booted out of the governor's mansion this year, he might also take a shot, figuring that a presidential electorate will be more friendly to him than an off-year electorate. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Susan Collins (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Susan Collins belongs to a vanishing breed that once roamed New England like the buffalo in South Dakota: a somewhat moderate Northeastern Republican. She is personally popular in the state, but Democrats hate her with a passion because she talks like a moderate all the time but votes like a conservative Republican nearly always. They already have raised $4 million for her opponent. Collins has a big target on her back, then, assuming she doesn't decide (at the young age of 66) to throw in the towel (which has been rumored). The list of potential candidates is long and there could be a multiway primary, though the Democratic pooh-bahs are throwing their weight behind Sara Gideon, who is currently the Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives. Polling of the race gives Collins a clear, but shaky, lead, and the Cook Political Report now has the race as a toss-up. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Cindy Hyde-Smith (R) |
Mike Espy (D) |
Cindy Hyde-Smith won a special election in 2018 following the retirement of Thad Cochran. Now she has to run for a full term. The fellow she beat, former Secretary of Agriculture Mike Epsy, wants a rematch. He is better known now and Democratic turnout is likely to be higher in 2020 than it was in 2018. His ace in the hole is his race. Espy is black, as are 37% of Mississippians, the highest of any state. If he can get enough white suburban women who hate Donald Trump and are sure to vote to also vote for him, he has an outside shot at it. Also somewhat helpful on that front is Hyde-Smith's less-than-stellar record in that area, from her "public hanging" jokes to her sending her kids to an all-white "segregation" private school. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Steve Daines (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Montana is very red in presidential elections, but purple in state elections. The governor, Steve Bullock, and the other senator, Jon Tester, are Democrats. If the Democrats can find a good candidate, this will be a real horserace. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Ben Sasse (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Ben Sasse's only fear is a primary challenge from the right, because he is often critical of Donald Trump. Still, he is conservative enough that it won't be easy for a challenger to beat him in a primary. And assuming he survives, Sasse will sail to victory in the general election. It's been a long time since Democrats like William Jennings Bryan ran the state's political machinery. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Thom Tillis (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
North Carolina is trending purple (Barack Obama won it in 2008) so this is going to be a competitive race. But first the Democrats need to find a candidate, which won't be easy, because the Tar Heel state is a particularly exhausting one in which to run. It has many big media markets and very close elections, which means that it's necessary to do endless fundraising on top of endless campaigning. There are currently three Democrats representing North Carolina in the House (G. K. Butterfield, David Price, and Alma Adams), but all three are in their seventies, which is a bit old to start a Senate career, and all three come from deep blue districts (D+17 in all three cases), which means they have a job for life in the lower chamber. The Democrats have two statewide elected officials, AG Josh Stein. and Gov. Roy Cooper, but neither one is interested. The blue team has several candidates that aren't as well known as those two; the establishment appears to be lining up behind military veteran and former state senator Cal Cunningham, but current state senator Erica D. Smith is also making some noice. One factor that could matter is that Tillis will face Garland Tucker III, a wealthy investment banker, in the GOP primary and could end up bloodied and broke before the general election even starts. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Special election |
James Inhofe (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Inhofe is in like Flynn, if he runs, but he's 84. If he decides enough is enough, there are plenty of Oklahoma Republicans who would love to be a senator. The Democrats' bench here is fairly thin and the chances of success are microscopic, so it is going to be hard for the blue team to find a top candidate. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Lindsey Graham (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Lindsey Graham has occasionally said things or done things that arch-conservatives do not like, so he could be primaried. On the other hand, he has cuddled up to Donald Trump like no one else, so he probably won't be primaried. The Democrats don't have a serious candidate, so Graham will win easily, unless he accepts a job in the administration, in which case some other Republican will win. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Mike Rounds (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
It is hard to see who could beat Rounds. The Democrats don't have a bench here and Rounds is popular. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Lamar Alexander is retiring, so this is an open seat. In 2018, the Democrats ran a moderate former governor, Phil Bredesen, against a Trump-loving right-wing firebrand, Marsha Blackburn, and Blackburn won easily. Unless Bredesen runs again, on the theory that a presidential electorate will be more favorable to him, the Democratic bench is basically empty. |
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes Polls |
John Cornyn (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Beto O'Rourke came close to beating Ted Cruz in 2018. If he had tried again in 2020, with a more Democratic electorate, he might have had a chance. On the other hand, a lot of Republicans in Texas hate Cruz. Not many hate Cornyn. In any case, the point became (temporarily?) moot when O'Rourke decided not to try for a Senate seat again. The Democrats managed to recruit MJ Hegar instead, which was a coup for them. Like Amy McGrath in Kentucky, she is a veteran who almost managed to steal a deep-red House district in 2018. Now that Hegar is in, the DSCC would strongly prefer that O'Rourke stay out of the race when and if his presidential run comes to an end. If he does not grant their wish, it will set up a rough primary that works strongly to Cornyn's advantage. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Shelley Moore-Capito (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
This is a very red state and the Democrats don't have a lot of potential candiates. Joe Manchin just won reelection, yes, but he is a very clever politician: He is economically quite populist and pro-union, but culturally very conservative. They don't make them like that any more, so it is hard to see who the Democrats might run against her. |
Challenger | Challenger | Notes Polls |
Candidate unknown (R) |
Candidate unknown (D) |
Wyoming is one of the most Republican states in the country. Michael Enzi could probably be reelected even if he was caught in bed with both a live boy and a dead girl. If there were a dead buffalo in the bed, too, maybe some people might look askance, but would probably still vote for him in the end. But he decided that four terms was enough, so he is not running in 2020. Wyoming's sole representative, Liz Cheney (R), probably wants the nomination to get the promotion that father Dick never got. But former representative Cynthia Lummis has already announced, so the primary could be a real barn burner. |