List of U.S. state senators
This is a list of U.S. state senators.
Summary
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- ^ The majority in the Alaska House of Representatives is held by a coalition of 14 Democrats, 2 Republicans and 5 Independents. The minority consists of 19 Republicans.
- ^ The majority in the Alaska Senate is held by a coalition of 9 Democrats and 5 Republicans. There are 6 Republicans outside the caucus.
- ^ The Constitution of California names it the "California Legislature", but the legislature brands itself as the "California State Legislature".
- ^ The Constitution of Louisiana vests legislative authority in "a legislature, consisting of a Senate and a House of Representatives," and refers to it as "the legislature" throughout, without officially designating a term for the two houses together. However, the two bodies do use the term "Louisiana State Legislature" in official references to itself.
- ^ There are 3 additional non-voting seats allocated to sovereign tribal nations within Maine. Since 2018, only one seat (belonging to the Passamaquoddy) is filled; the current tribal representative is a non-partisan/independent but is not counted in this total.
- ^ When Nebraska switched to a unicameral legislature in 1937, the lower house was abolished. All current Nebraskan legislators are referred to as "Senators", as the pre-1937 senate was the retained house.
- ^ Nebraska's legislature is de jure nonpartisan but senators' political affiliations are publicly known and voting often happens along party lines; the de facto composition is given here.
- ^ The Constitution of Utah names it the "Legislature of the State of Utah", but the legislature brands itself as the "Utah State Legislature".
- ^ One senator is registered with the Forward Party.
- ^ The majority in the Vermont House of Representatives is held by a coalition of 87 Democrats, 3 Vermont Progressives and 4 independents. The minority consists of 56 Republicans.
- ^ The majority in the Vermont Senate is held by a coalition of 16 Democrats and 1 Vermont Progressive. 13 Republicans make up the minority.
- ^ The Constitution of Washington names it "the legislature of the state of Washington", but the legislature brands itself as the "Washington State Legislature".
Superlatives
From the 50 state legislatures in the United States, the following superlatives emerge:
- Largest legislature: New Hampshire General Court (424 members)
- Smallest legislature: Nebraska Legislature (49 members)
- Largest upper house: Minnesota Senate (67 senators)
- Smallest upper house: Alaska Senate (20 senators)
- Largest lower house: New Hampshire House of Representatives (400 representatives)
- Smallest lower house: Alaska House of Representatives (40 representatives)
There are a total of 1,972 state senators nationwide, with the average state senate having 39 members.
Alabama
Alaska
| District | Name | Party | Residence | Assumed office |
Next election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Bert Stedman | Republican[a] | Sitka | 2003[b] | 2026 |
| B | Jesse Kiehl | Democratic | Juneau | 2019 | 2028 |
| C | Gary Stevens | Republican[a] | Kodiak | 2003[b] | 2026 |
| D | Jesse Bjorkman | Republican[a] | Nikiski | 2023 | 2028 |
| E | Cathy Giessel | Republican[a] | Anchorage | 2023 (2011–2021) |
2026 |
| F | James Kaufman | Republican | Anchorage | 2023 | 2028 |
| G | Elvi Gray-Jackson | Democratic | Anchorage | 2019 | 2026 |
| H | Matt Claman | Democratic | Anchorage | 2023 | 2028 |
| I | Löki Tobin | Democratic | Anchorage | 2023 | 2026 |
| J | Forrest Dunbar | Democratic | Anchorage | 2023 | 2028 |
| K | Bill Wielechowski | Democratic | Anchorage | 2007 | 2026 |
| L | Kelly Merrick | Republican[a] | Eagle River | 2023 | 2028 |
| M | Cathy Tilton | Republican | Wasilla | 2025[b] | 2026 |
| N | Robert Yundt | Republican | Wasilla | 2025 | 2028 |
| O | George Rauscher | Republican | Sutton | 2025[b] | 2026 |
| P | Scott Kawasaki | Democratic | Fairbanks | 2019 | 2028 |
| Q | Robert Myers | Republican | North Pole | 2021 | 2026 |
| R | Mike Cronk | Republican | Tok | 2025 | 2028 |
| S | Lyman Hoffman | Democratic | Bethel | 1995 | 2026 |
| T | Donny Olson | Democratic | Golovin | 2001 | 2028 |
Arizona
† Member was originally appointed.
Arkansas
| District | Name | Party | Residence | First elected | Seat up | Term-limited |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ben Gilmore | Rep | Crossett | 2020 | 2028 | 2036 |
| 2 | Matt Stone | Rep | Camden | 2022 | 2026 | 2038 |
| 3 | Steve Crowell | Rep | Magnolia | 2022 | 2028 | 2038 |
| 4 | Jimmy Hickey Jr. | Rep | Texarkana | 2012 | 2028 | 2028 |
| 5 | Terry Rice | Rep | Waldron | 2014 | 2028 | 2030 |
| 6 | Matt McKee | Rep | Pearcy | 2022 | 2028 | 2038 |
| 7 | Alan Clark | Rep | Lonsdale | 2012 | 2026 | 2028 |
| 8 | Stephanie Flowers | Dem | Pine Bluff | 2010 | 2028 | 2026 |
| 9 | Reginald Murdock | Dem | Marianna | 2010 | 2026 | 2026 |
| 10 | Ron Caldwell | Rep | Wynne | 2012 | 2026 | 2028 |
| 11 | Ricky Hill | Rep | Cabot | 2018 (special) | 2026 | 2034 |
| 12 | Jamie Scott | Dem | North Little Rock | 2024 | 2028 | 2034 |
| 13 | Jane English | Rep | North Little Rock | 2012 | 2026 | 2028 |
| 14 | Clarke Tucker | Dem | Little Rock | 2014 | 2026 | 2032 |
| 15 | Fredrick Love | Dem | Mabelvale | 2010 | 2026 | 2026 |
| 16 | Kim Hammer | Rep | Benton | 2018 | 2026 | 2034 |
| 17 | Mark Johnson | Rep | Little Rock | 2018 | 2028 | 2034 |
| 18 | Jonathan Dismang | Rep | Beebe | 2010 | 2028 | 2026 |
| 19 | David Wallace | Rep | Leachville | 2016 | 2028 | 2032 |
| 20 | Dan Sullivan | Rep | Jonesboro | 2014 | 2028 | 2030 |
| 21 | Blake Johnson | Rep | Corning | 2014 | 2026 | 2030 |
| 22 | John Payton | Rep | Wilburn | 2012 | 2028 | 2028 |
| 23 | Scott Flippo | Rep | Mountain Home | 2014 | 2028 | 2030 |
| 24 | Missy Irvin | Rep | Mountain View | 2010 | 2026 | 2026 |
| 25 | Breanne Davis | Rep | Russellville | 2018 (special) | 2028 | 2034 |
| 26 | Vacant[a] | 2028 | ||||
| 27 | Justin Boyd | Rep | Fort Smith | 2014 | 2026 | 2030 |
| 28 | Bryan King | Rep | Green Forest | 2013 | 2026 | 2034 |
| 29 | Jim Petty | Rep | Van Buren | 2022 | 2028 | 2038 |
| 30 | Greg Leding | Dem | Fayetteville | 2018 | 2026 | 2034 |
| 31 | Clint Penzo | Rep | Springdale | 2016 | 2026 | 2032 |
| 32 | Joshua P. Bryant | Rep | Rogers | 2020 | 2026 | 2036 |
| 33 | Bart Hester | Rep | Cave Springs | 2012 | 2028 | 2028 |
| 34 | Jim Dotson | Rep | Bentonville | 2012 | 2028 | 2028 |
| 35 | Tyler Dees | Rep | Siloam Springs | 2022 | 2026 | 2038 |
California
| District | Name | Party | Residence | First elected | Term limited | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Megan Dahle | Republican | Bieber | 2024 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2019 to 2024. | |
| 2 | Mike McGuire | Democratic | Healdsburg | 2014 | 2026 | ||
| 3 | Christopher Cabaldon | Democratic | West Sacramento | 2024 | 2036 | ||
| 4 | Marie Alvarado-Gil | Republican | Jackson | 2022 | 2034 | First elected as a Democrat before switching parties on August 8, 2024 | |
| 5 | Jerry McNerney | Democratic | Pleasanton | 2024 | 2036 | ||
| 6 | Roger Niello | Republican | Fair Oaks | 2022 | 2030 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2004 to 2010. | |
| 7 | Jesse Arreguín | Democratic | Berkeley | 2024 | 2036 | ||
| 8 | Angelique Ashby | Democratic | Natomas | 2022 | 2034 | Majority Leader since December 23, 2025. | |
| 9 | Tim Grayson | Democratic | Concord | 2024 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2016 to 2024. | |
| 10 | Aisha Wahab | Democratic | Hayward | 2022 | 2034 | ||
| 11 | Scott Wiener | Democratic | San Francisco | 2016 | 2028 | ||
| 12 | Shannon Grove | Republican | Bakersfield | 2018 | 2026 | Previously served as Minority Leader from 2019 to 2021 and in the Assembly from 2010 to 2016. | |
| 13 | Josh Becker | Democratic | Menlo Park | 2020 | 2032 | ||
| 14 | Anna Caballero | Democratic | Merced | 2018 | 2026 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2006 to 2010 and 2016 to 2018. | |
| 15 | Dave Cortese | Democratic | San Jose | 2020 | 2032 | ||
| 16 | Melissa Hurtado | Democratic | Bakersfield | 2018 | 2030 | ||
| 17 | John Laird | Democratic | Santa Cruz | 2020 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2002 to 2008. | |
| 18 | Steve Padilla | Democratic | Chula Vista | 2022 | 2034 | ||
| 19 | Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh | Republican | Yucaipa | 2020 | 2032 | ||
| 20 | Caroline Menjivar | Democratic | San Fernando | 2022 | 2034 | ||
| 21 | Monique Limón | Democratic | Santa Barbara | 2020 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2016 to 2020. President pro tempore | |
| 22 | Susan Rubio | Democratic | Baldwin Park | 2018 | 2030 | ||
| 23 | Suzette Martinez Valladares | Republican | Santa Clarita | 2024 | 2032 | Previously served the Assembly from 2020 to 2022. | |
| 24 | Benjamin Allen | Democratic | Santa Monica | 2014 | 2026 | ||
| 25 | Sasha Renée Pérez | Democratic | Alhambra | 2024 | 2036 | ||
| 26 | María Elena Durazo | Democratic | Los Angeles | 2018 | 2030 | ||
| 27 | Henry Stern | Democratic | Malibu | 2016 | 2028 | ||
| 28 | Lola Smallwood-Cuevas | Democratic | Los Angeles | 2022 | 2034 | ||
| 29 | Eloise Gómez Reyes | Democratic | Colton | 2024 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2016 to 2024 | |
| 30 | Bob Archuleta | Democratic | Pico Rivera | 2018 | 2030 | ||
| 31 | Sabrina Cervantes | Democratic | Riverside | 2024 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2016 to 2024 | |
| 32 | Kelly Seyarto | Republican | Murrieta | 2022 | 2030 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2020 to 2022. | |
| 33 | Lena Gonzalez | Democratic | Long Beach | 2019† | 2032 | ||
| 34 | Tom Umberg | Democratic | Santa Ana | 2018 | 2026 | Previously served in the Assembly from 1990 to 1994 and 2004 to 2006. | |
| 35 | Laura Richardson | Democratic | San Pedro | 2024 | 2032 | Previously served in the U.S. House from 2007 to 2013 and in the Assembly from 2006 to 2007. | |
| 36 | Tony Strickland | Republican | Huntington Beach | 2025† | 2030 | Previously served in the Assembly from 1998 to 2004 and in the State Senate from 2008 to 2012 | |
| 37 | Steven Choi | Republican | Irvine | 2024 | 2028 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2016 to 2022 | |
| 38 | Catherine Blakespear | Democratic | Encinitas | 2022 | 2034 | ||
| 39 | Akilah Weber | Democratic | San Diego | 2024 | 2032 | Previously served in the Assembly from 2021 to 2024 | |
| 40 | Brian Jones | Republican | Santee | 2018 | 2026 | Minority Leader. Previously served in the Assembly from 2010 to 2016. | |
- †: elected in a special election
Colorado
| District | Image | Senator | Party | Residence | First elected | Next election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Byron Pelton | Republican | Sterling | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 2 | Lisa Frizell | Republican | Castle Rock | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 3 | Nick Hinrichsen | Democratic | Pueblo | 2022* | 2026 | |
| 4 | Mark Baisley | Republican | Sedalia | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 5 | Marc Catlin | Republican | Montrose | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 6 | Cleave Simpson | Republican | Alamosa | 2020 | 2028# | |
| 7 | Janice Rich | Republican | Grand Junction | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 8 | Dylan Roberts | Democratic | Eagle | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 9 | Lynda Zamora Wilson | Republican | Air Force Academy | 2025* | 2026 | |
| 10 | Larry Liston | Republican | Colorado Springs | 2020 | 2028# | |
| 11 | Tony Exum | Democratic | Colorado Springs | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 12 | Marc Snyder | Democratic | Manitou Springs | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 13 | Scott Bright | Republican | Platteville | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 14 | Cathy Kipp | Democratic | Fort Collins | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 15 | Janice Marchman | Democratic | Loveland | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 16 | Chris Kolker | Democratic | Centennial | 2020 | 2028# | |
| 17 | Katie Wallace | Democratic | Longmont | 2025* | 2026 (special) | |
| 18 | Judy Amabile | Democratic | Boulder | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 19 | Lindsey Daugherty | Democratic | Arvada | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 20 | Lisa Cutter | Democratic | Evergreen | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 21 | Dafna Michaelson Jenet | Democratic | Commerce City | 2023* | 2028 | |
| 22 | Jessie Danielson | Democratic | Wheat Ridge | 2018 | 2026# | |
| 23 | Barbara Kirkmeyer | Republican | Brighton | 2020 | 2028# | |
| 24 | Kyle Mullica | Democratic | Northglenn | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 25 | William Lindstedt | Democratic | Broomfield | 2025* | 2026 | |
| 26 | Jeff Bridges | Democratic | Greenwood Village | 2019* | 2028# | |
| 27 | Tom Sullivan | Democratic | Centennial | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 28 | Mike Weissman | Democratic | Aurora | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 29 | Iman Jodeh | Democratic | Aurora | 2025* | 2026 (special) | |
| 30 | John Carson | Republican | Highlands Ranch | 2025* | 2026 | |
| 31 | Matthew Ball | Democratic | Denver | 2025* | 2026 (special) | |
| 32 | Robert Rodriguez | Democratic | Denver | 2018 | 2026# | |
| 33 | James Coleman | Democratic | Denver | 2020 | 2028# | |
| 34 | Julie Gonzales | Democratic | Denver | 2018 | 2026# | |
| 35 | Rod Pelton | Republican | Cheyenne Wells | 2022 | 2026 |
- *Senator was originally appointed
- #Senator is ineligible for re-election due to term limits
Connecticut
Current members of the Connecticut Senate, as of February 28, 2025.
| District | Name[3] | Party | Hometown | First elected | Towns represented | Occupation | Leadership Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | John Fonfara | Dem | Hartford | 1996 | Hartford (part), Wethersfield (part) | Marketing Consultant | |
| 2 | Douglas McCrory | Dem | Bloomfield | 2017^ | Bloomfield (part), Hartford (part), Windsor (part) | Educator | |
| 3 | Saud Anwar | Dem | South Windsor | 2019^ | East Hartford, East Windsor, Ellington (part), South Windsor | Physician | |
| 4 | MD Rahman | Dem | Manchester | 2022 | Andover, Bolton, Glastonbury, Manchester | Business Owner | |
| 5 | Derek Slap | Dem | West Hartford | 2019^ | Bloomfield (part), Burlington, Farmington (part), West Hartford | College Professor | |
| 6 | Rick Lopes | Dem | New Britain | 2020 | Berlin, Farmington (part), New Britain | Business Owner | |
| 7 | John Kissel | Rep | Enfield | 1993^ | East Granby, Ellington (part), Enfield, Granby (part), Somers, Suffield, Windsor (part), Windsor Locks | Corporate Attorney | |
| 8 | Paul Honig | Dem | Harwinton | 2024 | Avon, Barkhamsted, Canton, Colebrook, Granby (part), Hartland, Harwinton (part), New Hartford, Norfolk, Simsbury, Torrington (part) | Business Executive | |
| 9 | Matthew Lesser | Dem | Middletown | 2018 | Cromwell, Middletown (part), Newington, Rocky Hill, Wethersfield (part) | Former State Representative | |
| 10 | Gary Winfield | Dem | New Haven | 2014^ | New Haven (part), West Haven (part) | Photographer, Business Owner | |
| 11 | Martin Looney | Dem | New Haven | 1993 | Hamden (part), New Haven (part) | Attorney | President Pro-Tempore |
| 12 | Christine Cohen | Dem | Guilford | 2018 | Branford, Durham (part), East Haven (part), Guilford, Killingworth, Madison, Middlefield (part), North Branford (part) | Business Owner | |
| 13 | Jan Hochadel | Dem | Meriden | 2022 | Cheshire (part), Meriden, Middlefield (part), Middletown (part) | Union President | |
| 14 | James Maroney | Dem | Milford | 2018 | Milford, Orange, West Haven (part), Woodbridge (part) | Retired Attorney | |
| 15 | Joan Hartley | Dem | Waterbury | 2000 | Middlebury (part), Naugatuck (part), Waterbury (part) | Teacher | |
| 16 | Rob Sampson | Rep | Wolcott | 2018 | Cheshire (part), Prospect, Southington, Waterbury (part), Wolcott | Realtor | |
| 17 | Jorge Cabrera | Dem | Hamden | 2020 | Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Bethany, Derby, Hamden (part), Naugatuck (part), Woodbridge (part) | Union Organizer | |
| 18 | Heather Somers | Rep | Groton | 2016 | Griswold, Groton, North Stonington, Plainfield, Preston, Sterling, Stonington, Voluntown | Business Executive | |
| 19 | Catherine Osten | Dem | Sprague | 2012 | Columbia, Franklin, Hebron, Lebanon, Ledyard, Lisbon, Marlborough, Montville (part), Norwich, Sprague | Corrections Officer | |
| 20 | Martha Marx | Dem | New London | 2022 | Bozrah, East Lyme, Montville (part), New London, Old Lyme, Old Saybrook (part), Salem, Waterford | Nurse | |
| 21 | Jason Perillo | Rep | Shelton | 2025^ | Monroe (part), Seymour (part), Shelton, Stratford (part) | Former State Representative | |
| 22 | Sujata Gadkar-Wilcox | Dem | Trumbull | 2024 | Bridgeport (part), Monroe (part), Trumbull | Professor | |
| 23 | Herron Gaston | Dem | Bridgeport | 2022 | Bridgeport (part), Stratford (part) | Pastor | |
| 24 | Julie Kushner | Dem | Danbury | 2018 | Danbury, New Fairfield (part), Ridgefield (part) | Community Organizer | |
| 25 | Bob Duff | Dem | Norwalk | 2004 | Darien (part), Norwalk | Realtor | Majority Leader |
| 26 | Ceci Maher | Dem | Wilton | 2022 | Darien (part), New Canaan (part), Stamford (part), Redding, Ridgefield (part), Weston (part), Westport, Wilton | Social Worker | |
| 27 | Patricia Billie Miller | Dem | Stamford | 2021^ | Darien (part), Stamford (part) | Former State Representative | |
| 28 | Tony Hwang | Rep | Fairfield | 2014 | Bethel (part), Easton, Fairfield, Newtown, | Realtor | |
| 29 | Mae Flexer | Dem | Windham | 2014 | Brooklyn, Canterbury, Killingly, Mansfield, Pomfret, Putnam, Scotland, Thompson (part), Windham | Nonprofit Organizer | |
| 30 | Stephen Harding | Rep | Brookfield | 2022 | Bethlehem (part), Brookfield (part), Canaan, Cornwall, Goshen, Kent, Litchfield, Morris, New Fairfield (part), New Milford, North Canaan, Salisbury, Sharon, Sherman, Torrington (part), Warren, Washington (part), Winchester | Attorney | Minority Leader |
| 31 | Henri Martin | Rep | Bristol | 2014 | Bristol, Harwinton (part), Plainville, Plymouth, Thomaston | Real Estate Business Owner | |
| 32 | Eric Berthel | Rep | Watertown | 2017^ | Bethel (part), Bethlehem (part), Bridgewater, Brookfield (part), Middlebury (part), Oxford, Roxbury, Seymour (part), Southbury, Washington (part), Watertown, Woodbury | Strategic Outreach | |
| 33 | Norman Needleman | Dem | Essex | 2018 | Chester, Clinton, Colchester, Deep River, East Haddam, East Hampton, Essex, Haddam, Lyme, Old Saybrook (part), Portland, Westbrook | First Selectman | |
| 34 | Paul Cicarella | Rep | North Haven | 2020 | Durham (part), East Haven (part), North Branford (part), North Haven, Wallingford | Private Investigator | |
| 35 | Jeff Gordon | Rep | Woodstock | 2022 | Ashford, Chaplin, Coventry, Eastford, Ellington (part), Hampton,Stafford, Thompson (part), Tolland, Union, Vernon, Willington, Woodstock | Physician | |
| 36 | Ryan Fazio |
Rep |
Greenwich | 2021^ | Greenwich, New Canaan (part), Stamford (part) | Greenwich Representative Town Meeting Member |
- ^ Senator was first elected in a special election.
Delaware
Below are the Senators as of the 153rd General Assembly (2024–2026), following the most recent election.
| District | Name | Party | First elected | Residence | Seat up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Dan Cruce | Dem | 2025 | Wilmington | 2026 |
| 2nd | Darius J. Brown | Dem | 2018 | Wilmington | 2028 |
| 3rd | Elizabeth Lockman | Dem | 2018 | Wilmington | 2028 |
| 4th | Laura Sturgeon | Dem | 2018 | Brandywine Hundred | 2028 |
| 5th | Ray Seigfried | Dem | 2025 | Arden | 2026 |
| 6th | Russ Huxtable | Dem | 2022 | Lewes | 2028 |
| 7th | Spiros Mantzavinos | Dem | 2020 | Westgate Farms | 2026 |
| 8th | David Sokola | Dem | 1990 | Newark | 2026 |
| 9th | Jack Walsh | Dem | 2016 | Newport | 2026 |
| 10th | Stephanie Hansen | Dem | 2017 | Middletown | 2028 |
| 11th | Bryan Townsend | Dem | 2012 | Westover Woods | 2028 |
| 12th | Nicole Poore | Dem | 2012 | Barbs Farm | 2026 |
| 13th | Marie Pinkney | Dem | 2020 | New Castle County | 2026 |
| 14th | Kyra Hoffner | Dem | 2022 | Leipsic | 2026 |
| 15th | David G. Lawson | Rep | 2010 | Marydel | 2026 |
| 16th | Eric Buckson | Rep | 2022 | Camden | 2028 |
| 17th | W. Charles Paradee | Dem | 2018 | Dover | 2028 |
| 18th | David L. Wilson | Rep | 2018 | Lincoln | 2028 |
| 19th | Brian G. Pettyjohn | Rep | 2012 | Georgetown | 2026 |
| 20th | Gerald Hocker | Rep | 2012 | Ocean View | 2026 |
| 21st | Bryant Richardson | Rep | 2014 | Laurel | 2028 |
Florida
*Elected in a special election.
Georgia
As of January 2025, the Georgia State Senate is composed of 56 members:[5]
Hawaii
| District | Name | Party | County(ies) | Areas represented | First elected |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lorraine Inouye | Dem | Hawaiʻi | Hilo, Pauka‘a, Papaikou, Pepe‘ekeo | 2014[e] |
| 2 | Joy San Buenaventura | Dem | Puna | 2020[f] | |
| 3 | Dru Kanuha | Dem | Kona, Kaʻū, Volcano | 2018 | |
| 4 | Tim Richards III | Dem | Hilo, Hāmākua, Kohala, Waimea, Waikōloa, Kona | 2022 | |
| 5 | Troy Hashimoto[Note 1] | Dem | Maui | Wailuku, Waiheʻe, Kahului, Mauka, Wai'ehu | 2023[g][h] |
| 6 | Angus McKelvey | Dem | West and South Maui, Maalaea, Waikapu | 2022[i] | |
| 7 | Lynn DeCoite | Dem | Maui, Kalawao | Hāna, East and Upcountry Maui, Molokaʻi, Lānaʻi and Kahoʻolawe, Molokini | 2021[g][j] |
| 8 | Ron Kouchi | Dem | Kauaʻi | Kauaʻi, Niʻihau | 2010[g] |
| 9 | Stanley Chang | Dem | Honolulu | Hawaiʻi Kai, ʻĀina Haina, Waiʻalae-Kāhala, Diamond Head, Kaimuki, Kapahulu | 2016 |
| 10 | Les Ihara Jr. | Dem | Kaimukī, Kapahulu, Pālolo, Maunalani Heights, St. Louis Heights, Mōʻiliʻili, Ala Wai mauka, Kapahulu, Moiliili, McCully | 1994[k] | |
| 11 | Carol Fukunaga | Dem | Mānoa, Makiki, Punchbowl, Papakōlea, Tantalus | 2022[l] | |
| 12 | Sharon Moriwaki | Dem | Kakaʻako, Ala Moana, Waikīkī, McCully | 2018 | |
| 13 | Karl Rhoads | Dem | Liliha, Pālama, Iwilei, Nuʻuanu, Pacific Heights, Pauoa, Downtown, Chinatown, Dowsett Heights, Pu'unui | 2016[m] | |
| 14 | Donna Mercado Kim[Note 2] | Dem | Moanalua, ʻAiea, Fort Shafter, Kalihi Valley, Red Hill, Kapalama | 2000[n] | |
| 15 | Glenn Wakai | Dem | Kalihi, Māpunapuna, Airport, Salt Lake, Āliamanu, Foster Village, Hickam, Pearl Harbor, Aiea, Pearl City | 2010[o] | |
| 16 | Brandon Elefante | Dem | Pearl City, Momilani, Pearlridge, ʻAiea, Royal Summit, ʻAiea Heights, Newtown, Waimalu, Hālawa, Pearl Harbor, Waiau, Pacific Palisades | 2022 | |
| 17 | Donovan Dela Cruz | Dem | Mililani Town, Mililani Mauka, Waipi'o Acres, Launani Valley, Wahiawa, Whitmore Village | 2010 | |
| 18 | Michelle Kidani | Dem | Mililani Town, Waipiʻo Gentry, Crestview, Waikele, Village Park, Royal Kunia | 2008 | |
| 19 | Rachele Lamosao[Note 3] (Designate) | Dem | Pearl City, Waipahu, West Loch Estates, Hono'ui'uli, Ho'opii | 2025[g] | |
| 20 | Kurt Fevella | Rep | ʻEwa Beach, Ocean Pointe, ʻEwa by Gentry, Iroquois Point, ʻEwa Village | 2018 | |
| 21 | Mike Gabbard | Dem | Kalaeloa, Fernandez Village, ʻEwa, Kapolei, Makakilo, | 2006 | |
| 22 | Samantha DeCorte | Rep | Honokai Hale, Ko 'Olina, Nanakuli, Maili, Waianae, Makaha, Makua | 2024 | |
| 23 | Brenton Awa | Rep | Kane'ohe, Kahaluu thru Laie, Kahuku to Mokuleia, Schofield Barracks, Kunia Camp | 2022 | |
| 24 | Jarrett Keohokalole | Dem | Kāneʻohe, Kailua | 2018[p] | |
| 25 | Chris Lee | Dem | Kailua, Waimānalo, Hawaiʻi Kai | 2020[q] |
- ^ Democrat Gilbert Keith-Agaran resigned on October 31, 2023. State representative Troy Hashimoto was appointed on November 9, 2023 to fill the seat until a special election is held in November 2024.[6]
- ^ Became President of the Senate on December 28, 2012, after Shan Tsutsui was appointed by Governor Neil Abercrombie to be Lieutenant Governor.[7] Ousted as Senate President in unusual mid-year leadership reorganization on May 5, 2015.[8] First Filipina, but second Filipino American, Hawaiʻi Senate President[9][10]
- ^ Democrat Henry Aquino resigned on November 30, 2025. State representative Rachele Lamosao was appointed on December 3, 2025 to fill the seat.[11][12]
- ^ Republican Gary Stubblefield died September 2, 2025
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Kennedywas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Cite error: The named reference
Esteveswas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Cite error: The named reference
Moorewas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Previously served in Senate from 1998 to 2008
- ^ Previously served in House from 2014 to 2020
- ^ a b c d Senator was originally appointed
- ^ Previously served in House from 2018 to 2023
- ^ Previously served in House from 2006 to 2022
- ^ Previously served in House from 2015 to 2021
- ^ Previously served in House from 1986 to 1994
- ^ Previously served in House from 1979 to 1982, House from 1987 to 1992, and Senate from 1992 to 2012
- ^ Previously served in House from 2006 to 2016
- ^ Previously served in House from 1982 to 1985
- ^ Previously served in House from 2002 to 2010
- ^ Previously served in House from 2014 to 2018
- ^ Previously served in House from 2008 to 2020
Idaho
| District | Senator | Party | Residence | Counties represented | Took office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jim Woodward | Republican | Sagle | Bonner, Boundary | 2024 |
| 2 | Phil Hart | Republican | Kellogg | Benewah, Bonner, Clearwater, Kootenai, Shoshone | 2022 |
| 3 | Doug Okuniewicz | Republican | Hayden | Kootenai | 2022 |
| 4 | Ben Toews | Republican | Coeur d'Alene | Kootenai | 2022 |
| 5 | Carl Bjerke | Republican | Coeur d'Alene | Kootenai | 2022 |
| 6 | Dan Foreman | Republican | Viola | Latah, Lewis, Nez Perce | 2022 |
| 7 | Cindy Carlson | Republican | Riggins | Adams, Idaho, Nez Perce | 2022 |
| 8 | Christy Zito | Republican | Hammett | Boise, Custer, Elmore, Valley | 2024 |
| 9 | Brandon Shippy | Republican | New Plymouth | Canyon, Payette, Washington | 2024 |
| 10 | Tammy Nichols | Republican | Middleton | Ada, Canyon | 2022 |
| 11 | Camille Blaylock | Republican | Caldwell | Canyon | 2024 |
| 12 | Ben Adams | Republican | Nampa | Canyon | 2022 |
| 13 | Brian Lenney | Republican | Nampa | Canyon | 2022 |
| 14 | C. Scott Grow | Republican | Eagle | Ada, Gem | 2018 |
| 15 | Codi Galloway | Republican | Boise | Ada | 2024 |
| 16 | Alison Rabe | Democratic | Boise | Ada | 2022 |
| 17 | Carrie Semmelroth | Democratic | Boise | Ada | 2021 |
| 18 | Janie Ward-Engelking | Democratic | Boise | Ada | 2013 |
| 19 | Melissa Wintrow | Democratic | Boise | Ada | 2020 |
| 20 | Josh Keyser | Republican | Boise | Ada | 2024 |
| 21 | Treg Bernt | Republican | Meridian | Ada | 2022 |
| 22 | Lori Den Hartog | Republican | Meridian | Ada | 2014 |
| 23 | Todd Lakey | Republican | Nampa | Ada, Canyon, Owyhee | 2012 |
| 24 | Glenneda Zuiderveld | Republican | Twin Falls | Camas, Gooding, Twin Falls | 2022 |
| 25 | Josh Kohl | Republican | Twin Falls | Twin Falls | 2024 |
| 26 | Ron Taylor | Democratic | Hailey | Blaine, Jerome, Lincoln | 2022 |
| 27 | Kelly Anthon | Republican | Declo | Cassia, Minidoka, Oneida | 2015 |
| 28 | Jim Guthrie | Republican | McCammon | Bannock, Franklin, Power | 2012 |
| 29 | James Ruchti | Democratic | Pocatello | Bannock | 2022 |
| 30 | Julie VanOrden | Republican | Pingree | Bingham, Butte | 2022 |
| 31 | Van Burtenshaw | Republican | Terreton | Clark, Fremont, Jefferson, Lemhi | 2018 |
| 32 | Kevin Cook | Republican | Idaho Falls | Bonneville | 2020 |
| 33 | Dave Lent | Republican | Idaho Falls | Bonneville | 2018 |
| 34 | Doug Ricks | Republican | Rexburg | Madison | 2020 |
| 35 | Mark Harris | Republican | Soda Springs | Bannock, Bear Lake, Bonneville, Caribou, Teton | 2015 |
Illinois
In 1924, Florence Fifer Bohrer became the body's first female member and Adelbert H. Roberts became its first African American member.[13][14] In 1977, Earlean Collins became the first African American woman to serve in the Illinois Senate.[15] Barack Obama, later the first African-American President of the United States, served in the Illinois Senate from 1997 to 2004.[16]
As of February 14, 2025, the 104th General Assembly of the Illinois Senate consists of the following members:[17][18]
| District | Senator | Party | Residence | Assumed office |
Next election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Javier Cervantes ƗƗ | Democratic | Chicago | November 18, 2022 | 2028 |
| 2 | Omar Aquino Ɨ | Democratic | July 1, 2016 | 2026 | |
| 3 | Mattie Hunter | Democratic | January 8, 2003 | ||
| 4 | Kimberly A. Lightford Ɨ | Democratic | November 20, 1998 | 2028 | |
| 5 | Lakesia Collins Ɨ | Democratic | August 16, 2023 | 2026 | |
| 6 | Sara Feigenholtz Ɨ | Democratic | January 21, 2020 | ||
| 7 | Mike Simmons Ɨ | Democratic | February 6, 2021 | 2028 | |
| 8 | Ram Villivalam ƗƗ | Democratic | January 5, 2019 | 2026 | |
| 9 | Laura Fine ƗƗ | Democratic | Glenview | January 6, 2019 | |
| 10 | Robert Martwick Ɨ | Democratic | Chicago | June 28, 2019 | 2028 |
| 11 | Mike Porfirio | Democratic | Bridgeview | January 11, 2023 | 2026 |
| 12 | Celina Villanueva Ɨ | Democratic | Chicago | January 7, 2020 | |
| 13 | Robert Peters Ɨ | Democratic | January 6, 2019 | 2028 | |
| 14 | Emil Jones III | Democratic | January 14, 2009 | 2026 | |
| 15 | Napoleon Harris | Democratic | Harvey | January 9, 2013 | |
| 16 | Willie Preston | Democratic | Chicago | January 11, 2023 | 2028 |
| 17 | Elgie Sims Ɨ | Democratic | January 26, 2018 | 2026 | |
| 18 | William Cunningham | Democratic | January 9, 2013 | ||
| 19 | Michael Hastings | Democratic | Tinley Park | 2028 | |
| 20 | Graciela Guzmán | Democratic | Chicago | January 8, 2025 | 2026 |
| 21 | Laura Ellman | Democratic | Lisle | January 9, 2019 | |
| 22 | Cristina Castro | Democratic | Elgin | January 11, 2017 | 2028 |
| 23 | Suzy Glowiak | Democratic | Western Springs | January 9, 2019 | 2026 |
| 24 | Seth Lewis | Republican | Bartlett | January 11, 2023 | |
| 25 | Karina Villa | Democratic | West Chicago | January 13, 2021 | 2028 |
| 26 | Darby Hills Ɨ | Republican | Barrington Hills | February 14, 2025 | 2026 |
| 27 | Mark L. Walker Ɨ | Democratic | Arlington Heights | May 11, 2024 | |
| 28 | Laura Murphy Ɨ | Democratic | Des Plaines | October 5, 2015 | 2028 |
| 29 | Julie Morrison | Democratic | Deerfield | January 9, 2013 | 2026 |
| 30 | Adriane Johnson Ɨ | Democratic | Buffalo Grove | October 11, 2020 | |
| 31 | Mary Edly-Allen | Democratic | Libertyville | January 11, 2023 | 2028 |
| 32 | Craig Wilcox Ɨ | Republican | McHenry | October 1, 2018 | 2026 |
| 33 | Don DeWitte | Republican | St. Charles | January 9, 2019 | |
| 34 | Steve Stadelman | Democratic | Rockford | January 9, 2013 | 2028 |
| 35 | Dave Syverson | Republican | Rockford | January 13, 1993 | 2026 |
| 36 | Michael Halpin | Democratic | Rock Island | January 11, 2023 | |
| 37 | Li Arellano Jr | Republican | Dixon | January 8, 2025 | 2028 |
| 38 | Sue Rezin Ɨ | Republican | Morris | December 11, 2010 | 2026 |
| 39 | Don Harmon | Democratic | Oak Park | January 8, 2003 | |
| 40 | Patrick Joyce Ɨ | Democratic | Kankakee | November 8, 2019 | 2028 |
| 41 | John Curran Ɨ | Republican | Woodridge | July 23, 2017 | 2026 |
| 42 | Linda Holmes | Democratic | Aurora | January 10, 2007 | |
| 43 | Rachel Ventura | Democratic | Joliet | January 11, 2023 | 2028 |
| 44 | Sally Turner Ɨ | Republican | Beason | January 25, 2021 | 2026 |
| 45 | Andrew Chesney ƗƗ | Republican | Freeport | December 5, 2018 | |
| 46 | Dave Koehler ƗƗ | Democratic | Peoria | December 3, 2006 | 2028 |
| 47 | Neil Anderson | Republican | Andalusia | January 15, 2015 | 2026 |
| 48 | Doris Turner Ɨ | Democratic | Springfield | February 6, 2021 | |
| 49 | Meg Loughran Cappel ƗƗ | Democratic | Shorewood | December 10, 2020 | 2028 |
| 50 | Jil Tracy | Republican | Quincy | January 11, 2017 | 2026 |
| 51 | Chapin Rose | Republican | Mahomet | January 9, 2013 | |
| 52 | Paul Faraci Ɨ | Democratic | Champaign | January 11, 2023 | 2028 |
| 53 | Chris Balkema | Republican | Channahon | January 8, 2025 | 2026 |
| 54 | Steve McClure | Republican | Springfield | January 9, 2019 | |
| 55 | Jason Plummer | Republican | Edwardsville | 2028 | |
| 56 | Erica Harriss | Republican | Glen Carbon | January 11, 2023 | 2026 |
| 57 | Christopher Belt | Democratic | Cahokia Heights | January 9, 2019 | |
| 58 | Terri Bryant | Republican | Murphysboro | January 13, 2021 | 2028 |
| 59 | Dale Fowler | Republican | Harrisburg | January 11, 2017 | 2026 |
- Ɨ Legislator was appointed to the Illinois Senate prior to initial election.
- ƗƗ Legislator was appointed to the Illinois Senate after being elected, but prior to inauguration day of the General Assembly to which they were elected.
Indiana
†Member was originally appointed or won the seat in a special election.
- ^ Senator Young is currently not a member of the Republican caucus but maintains his Republican affiliation
Iowa
| District |
County(ies) represented |
Portrait |
Senator |
Party |
First elected |
Standing committee leader |
Appropriations subcommittee member |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Woodbury | Catelin Drey | Democratic | 2025[a] | TBA | TBA | |
| 2 | Plymouth and Sioux | Jeff Taylor | Republican | 2020 | Education (Vice Chair) | Education (Chair) | |
| 3 | Osceola, O'Brien, Clay, Cherokee, and Buena Vista | Lynn Evans | Republican | 2022 | Education | ||
| 4 | Calhoun, Pocahontas, Sac, and Webster | Tim Kraayenbrink | Republican | 2014 | Appropriations (Chair), Technology (Vice Chair) | ||
| 5 | Clay, Dickinson, Emmet, Kossuth, Palo Alto and Winnebago | Dave Rowley | Republican | 2020 | Administration and Regulation Appropriations (Chair) | ||
| 6 | Audubon, Carroll, Crawford, Ida, and Shelby | Jason Schultz | Republican | 2014 | State Government (Chair) | ||
| 7 | Cherokee, Monona, Plymouth, and Woodbury | Kevin Alons | Republican | 2022 | Health and Human Services | ||
| 8 | Fremont, Harrison, Mills, and Pottawattamie, | Mark Costello | Republican | 2014[b] | Ethics (Vice Chair) | Health and Human Services (Chair) | |
| 9 | Adams, Cass, Montgomery, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, and Union | Tom Shipley | Republican | 2014 | Ethics (Chair), Natural Resources and Environment (Vice Chair) | Agriculture and Natural Resources | |
| 10 | Pottawattamie | Dan Dawson | Republican | 2016 | Ways and Means (Chair) | ||
| 11 | Marion and Warren | Julian Garrett | Republican | 2013[c] | Judiciary (Vice Chair) | Justice System (Chair) | |
| 12 | Adair, Appanoose, Clarke, Dallas, Decatur, Lucas, Madison, Union and Wayne | Amy Sinclair | Republican | 2012 | Government Oversight (Chair), Rules and Administration (Vice Chair) | ||
| 13 | Appanoose, Davis, Monroe, and Wapello | Cherielynn Westrich | Republican | 2022 | Justice System (Vice Chair) | ||
| 14 | Dallas | Sarah Trone Garriott | Democratic | 2020 | Health and Human Services (Ranking Member) | Health and Human Services | |
| 15 | Polk | Tony Bisignano | Democratic | 2014 | State Government (Ranking Member), Agriculture (Ranking Member) | ||
| 16 | Dallas and Polk | Vacant[19] | |||||
| 17 | Polk | Izaah Knox | Democratic | 2022 | Natural Resources and Environment (Ranking Member) | Education | |
| 18 | Polk | Janet Petersen | Democratic | 2012 | Appropriations (Ranking Member) | Transportation, Infrastructure, and Capitals (Ranking Member) | |
| 19 | Jasper, Mahaska, and Marion | Ken Rozenboom | Republican | 2012 | Agriculture (Vice Chair), Education (Chair) | ||
| 20 | Polk | Mike Pike | Republican | 2024 | |||
| 21 | Polk | Mike Bousselot | Republican | 2022 | Commerce (Vice Chair) | Transportation, Infrastructure, and Capitals (Vice Chair) | |
| 22 | Polk | Matt Blake | Democratic | 2024 | |||
| 23 | Dallas and Polk | Jack Whitver | Republican | 2011[d] | Rules and Administration (Chair) | ||
| 24 | Boone, Dallas, Greene, Guthrie, and Story | Jesse Green | Republican | 2020 | Local Government (Chair) | ||
| 25 | Story | Herman Quirmbach | Democratic | 2002 | Education (Ranking Member) | Economic Development | |
| 26 | Marshall and Story | Kara Warme | Republican | 2024 | |||
| 27 | Black Hawk, Grundy, Hardin, Poweshiek, and Tama | Annette Sweeney | Republican | 2018 | Natural Resources and Environment (Chair) | Agriculture and Natural Resources (Vice Chair) | |
| 28 | Franklin, Hancock, Hamilton, Humbolt, and Wright | Dennis Guth | Republican | 2012 | N/A | Administration and Regulation (Vice Chair) | |
| 29 | Bremer, Butler, Chickasaw, and Floyd | Sandy Salmon | Republican | 2022 | Veterans Affairs (Vice Chair) | Justice System | |
| 30 | Cerro Gordo, Floyd, Mitchell, and Worth | Doug Campbell | Republican | 2024 | |||
| 31 | Black Hawk | William Dotzler | Democratic | 2002 | Veterans Affairs (Ranking Member) | Economic Development (Ranking Member) | |
| 32 | Allamakee, Clayton, Fayette, Howard, and Winneshiek | Mike Klimesh | Republican | 2020 | Government Oversight (Vice Chair); Transportation (Chair) | Health and Human Services | |
| 33 | Dubuque, Jones and Jackson | Carrie Koelker | Republican | 2018 | Was and Means (Vice Chair) | Transportation, Infrastructure, and Capitals (Chair) | |
| 34 | Black Hawk, Buchanan, Delaware, Dubuque, and Fayette | Dan Zumbach | Republican | 2012 | Appropriations(Vice Chair) | Agriculture and Natural Resources (Chair) | |
| 35 | Clinton, Jackson, and Scott | Mike Zimmer | Democratic | 2025[e] | |||
| 36 | Dubuque | Thomas Townsend | Democratic | 2024 | |||
| 37 | Linn | Molly Donahue | Democratic | 2022 | Workforce (Ranking Member) | Health and Human Services (Ranking Member) | |
| 38 | Benton, Black Hawk, and Tama | Dave Sires | Republican | 2024 | |||
| 39 | Linn | Liz Bennett | Democratic | 2022 | Technology (Ranking Member) | Transportation, Infrastructure, and Capitals | |
| 40 | Linn | Art Staed | Democratic | 2024 | |||
| 41 | Cedar, Muscatine, and Scott | Kerry Gruenhagen | Republican | 2022 | Economic Development | ||
| 42 | Benton and Linn | Charlie McClintock | Republican | 2022 | Workforce (Vice Chair) | Justice System | |
| 43 | Johnson | Zach Wahls | Democratic | 2018 | Rules and Administration (Ranking Member) | ||
| 44 | Henry, Jefferson, Keokuk, Mahaska, and Van Buren | Adrian Dickey | Republican | 2021[f] | Workforce (Chair); Transportation (Vice Chair) | Economic Development | |
| 45 | Johnson | Janice Weiner | Democratic | 2022 | Local Government (Ranking Member) | Agriculture and Natural Resources | |
| 46 | Iowa, Johnson and Washington | Dawn Driscoll | Republican | 2020 | Agriculture (Chair) | ||
| 47 | Scott | Scott Webster | Republican | 2022 | Administration and Regulation | ||
| 48 | Des Moines, Henry, Louisa, and Muscatine | Mark Lofgren | Republican | 2016 | Local Government (Vice Chair) | Economic Development (Chair) | |
| 49 | Scott | Cindy Winckler | Democratic | 2022 | Ethics (Ranking Member) | Education (Ranking Member) | |
| 50 | Des Moines and Lee | Jeff Reichman | Republican | 2020 | Veterans Affairs (Chair) |
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Districts are currently numbered starting with 1 from north to south. While this is often reversed in the decennial redistricting, it was not reversed in the redistricting which occurred in 2021 and which went into effect beginning with the 2022 primary and general elections. The previous district lines, which were drawn in 2013 and were first used in the 2014 primary and general elections, were only in effect for 8 years rather than the usual 10 as Maine adjusted its legislative redistricting cycle to conform with most other states.
↑ denotes that the Senator first won in a special election
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
| Constitution |
|---|
Mississippi
| District | Name | Party | Assumed office | Counties represented | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Michael McLendon | Rep | 2020 | DeSoto | |
| 2 | David Parker | Rep | 2013 | DeSoto | |
| 3 | Kathy Chism | Rep | 2020 | Benton, Marshall, Pontotoc, Prentiss, Union | |
| 4 | Rita Potts Parks | Rep | 2012 | Alcorn, Tippah | |
| 5 | Daniel Sparks | Rep | 2020 | Itawamba, Prentiss, Tishomingo | |
| 6 | Chad McMahan | Rep | 2016 | Lee | |
| 7 | Hob Bryan | Dem | 1984 | Itawamba, Lee, Monroe | |
| 8 | Benjamin Suber | Rep | 2020 | Calhoun, Chickasaw, Lafayette, Pontotoc, Yalobusha | |
| 9 | Nicole Akins Boyd | Rep | 2020 | Lafayette, Panola | |
| 10 | Neil Whaley | Rep | 2018 | Lafayette, Marshall, Tate, Union | |
| 11 | Reginald Jackson | Dem | 2024 | Coahoma, DeSoto, Quitman, Tate, Tunica | |
| 12 | Derrick Simmons | Dem | 2011 | Bolivar, Coahoma, Washington | |
| 13 | Sarita Simmons | Dem | 2020 | Bolivar, Sunflower, Tallahatchie | |
| 14 | Lydia Chassaniol | Rep | 2007 | Attala, Carroll, Grenada, Leflore, Montgomery | |
| 15 | Bart Williams | Rep | 2020 | Choctaw, Montgomery, Oktibbeha, Webster | |
| 16 | Angela Turner-Ford | Dem | 2013 | Clay, Lowndes, Noxubee, Oktibbeha | |
| 17 | Charles Younger | Rep | 2014 | Lowndes, Monroe, Oktibbeha | |
| 18 | Lane Taylor | Rep | 2025 | Leake, Neshoba, Winston | |
| 19 | Kevin Blackwell | Rep | 2016 | DeSoto | |
| 20 | Josh Harkins | Rep | 2012 | Rankin | |
| 21 | Bradford Blackmon | Dem | 2024 | Attala, Holmes, Leake, Madison | |
| 22 | Joseph C. Thomas | Dem | 2020 | Humphreys, Madison, Sharkey, Yazoo | Previously served from 2004–2008 |
| 23 | Briggs Hopson | Rep | 2008 | Issaquena, Madison, Warren, Yazoo | |
| 24 | Vacant[g] | Leflore, Panola, Tallahatchie | |||
| 25 | J. Walter Michel | Rep | 2016 | Hinds, Madison | Previously served from 1999–2011 |
| 26 | Vacant[h] | Hinds, Madison | |||
| 27 | Hillman Terome Frazier | Dem | 1993 | Hinds | |
| 28 | Sollie Norwood | Dem | 2013 | Hinds | |
| 29 | David Blount | Dem | 2008 | Hinds | |
| 30 | Dean Kirby | Rep | 1992 | Rankin | |
| 31 | Tyler McCaughn | Rep | 2020 | Lauderdale, Newton, Rankin, Scott | |
| 32 | Rod Hickman | Dem | 2021 | Kemper, Lauderdale, Noxubee, Winston | |
| 33 | Jeff Tate | Rep | 2020 | Clarke, Lauderdale | |
| 34 | Juan Barnett | Dem | 2016 | Forrest, Jasper, Jones | |
| 35 | Andy Berry | Rep | 2024 | Copiah, Jefferson Davis, Lawrence, Simpson | |
| 36 | Brian Rhodes | Rep | 2024 | Rankin, Smith | |
| 37 | Albert Butler | Dem | 2010 | Adams, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson | Represented district 36 prior to 2024 |
| 38 | Gary Brumfield | Dem | 2024 | Adams, Amite, Pike, Walthall, Wilkinson | |
| 39 | Jason Barrett | Rep | 2020 | Amite, Franklin, Lawrence, Lincoln, Pike | |
| 40 | Angela Burks Hill | Rep | 2012 | Pearl River, Stone | |
| 41 | Joey Fillingane | Rep | 2007 | Covington, Lamar, Marion, Walthall | |
| 42 | Robin Robinson | Rep | 2024 | Forrest, Greene, Jones, Wayne | |
| 43 | Dennis DeBar | Rep | 2016 | George, Greene, Wayne | |
| 44 | John A. Polk | Rep | 2012 | Lamar | |
| 45 | Chris Johnson | Rep | 2020 | Forrest, Perry | |
| 46 | Philman Ladner | Rep | 2024 | Hancock, Harrison | |
| 47 | Mike Seymour | Rep | 2016 | Harrison, Jackson, Stone | |
| 48 | Mike Thompson | Rep | 2020 | Hancock, Harrison | |
| 49 | Joel Carter | Rep | 2018 | Harrison | |
| 50 | Scott DeLano | Rep | 2020 | Harrison | |
| 51 | Jeremy England | Rep | 2020 | Jackson | |
| 52 | Brice Wiggins | Rep | 2012 | Jackson |
Missouri
† = elected in a special election
Source:[21]
Montana
- *Senator was originally appointed before the start of the 69th session
Nevada
Districts of the Nevada Assembly are nested inside the Senate districts, two per Senate district. The final Legislative redistricting plans as created by the Special Masters in 2011 and approved by District Court Judge James Todd Russell represent the first time since statehood Nevada's Assembly districts are wholly nested inside of a Senate district. Each Assembly district represents 1/42nd of Nevada's population and there are two Assembly districts per Senate district which represents 1/21st of Nevada's population.[22]
| District | Assembly Districts |
Name | Party | Residence | Assumed office | Next election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1, 17 | Michelee Crawford | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2024 | 2028 |
| 2 | 11, 28 | Edgar Flores | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2022 | 2026 |
| 3 | 3, 10 | Rochelle Nguyen | Democratic | Las Vegas | 20221 | 2028 |
| 4 | 6, 7 | Dina Neal | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2020 | 2028 |
| 5 | 22, 29 | Carrie Buck | Republican | Henderson | 2020 | 2028 |
| 6 | 34, 37 | Nicole Cannizzaro | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2016 | 20282 |
| 7 | 18, 20 | Roberta Lange | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2020 | 2028 |
| 8 | 2, 5 | Marilyn Dondero Loop | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2018 | 2026 |
| 9 | 9, 42 | Melanie Scheible | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2018 | 2026 |
| 10 | 15, 16 | Fabian Doñate | Democratic | Las Vegas | 20211 | 2026 |
| 11 | 8, 35 | Lori Rogich | Republican | Las Vegas | 2024 | 2028 |
| 12 | 21, 41 | Julie Pazina | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2022 | 2026 |
| 13 | 24, 30 | Skip Daly | Democratic | Sparks | 2022 | 2026 |
| 14 | 31, 32 | Ira Hansen | Republican | Sparks | 2018 | 2026 |
| 15 | 25, 27 | Angie Taylor | Democratic | Reno | 2024 | 2028 |
| 16 | 26, 40 | Lisa Krasner | Republican | Reno | 2022 | 2026 |
| 17 | 38, 39 | Robin Titus | Republican | Wellington | 2022 | 2026 |
| 18 | 4, 13 | John Steinbeck | Republican | Las Vegas | 2024 | 2028 |
| 19 | 33, 36 | John Ellison | Republican | Elko | 2024 | 2028 |
| 20 | 19, 23 | Jeff Stone | Republican | Las Vegas | 2022 | 2026 |
| 21 | 12, 14 | James Ohrenschall | Democratic | Las Vegas | 2018 | 2026 |
- 1 Senator was originally appointed.
- 2 Due to term limits in the Nevada Constitution this individual is not eligible for re-election or appointment to the Nevada Senate
Nebraska
| Affiliation | Party (Shading indicates majority caucus)
|
Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Ind | Democratic | Vacant | ||
| Start of 109th Legislature | 33 | 1 | 15 | 49 | 0 |
| Latest voting share | 67.3% | 2% | 30.6% | ||
The Nebraska Legislature officially recognizes no party affiliations; affiliations listed are based on state party endorsements. As of 2025, 33 members are Republicans, 15 are Democrats, and one is a registered nonpartisan.
| District | Senator | Party affiliation | Residence | Took office |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Robert Hallstrom | Republican | Syracuse | 2025 |
| 2 | Robert Clements | Republican | Elmwood | 2017 |
| 3 | Victor Rountree | Democratic | Bellevue | 2025 |
| 4 | Brad von Gillern | Republican | Elkhorn | 2023 |
| 5 | Margo Juarez | Democratic | Omaha | 2025 |
| 6 | Machaela Cavanaugh | Democratic | Omaha | 2019 |
| 7 | Dunixi Guereca | Democratic | Omaha | 2025 |
| 8 | Megan Hunt | Independent[23] | Omaha | 2019 |
| 9 | John Cavanaugh | Democratic | Omaha | 2021 |
| 10 | Wendy DeBoer | Democratic | Bennington | 2019 |
| 11 | Terrell McKinney | Democratic | Omaha | 2021 |
| 12 | Merv Riepe | Republican | Ralston | 2023[i] |
| 13 | Ashlei Spivey | Democratic | Omaha | 2025 |
| 14 | John Arch | Republican | LaVista | 2019 |
| 15 | Dave Wordekemper | Republican | Fremont | 2025 |
| 16 | Ben Hansen | Republican | Blair | 2019 |
| 17 | Glen Meyer | Republican | Pender | 2025 |
| 18 | Christy Armendariz | Republican | Omaha | 2023 |
| 19 | Rob Dover | Republican | Norfolk | 2022[24] |
| 20 | John Fredrickson | Democratic | Omaha | 2023 |
| 21 | Beau Ballard | Republican | Lincoln | 2023[25] |
| 22 | Mike Moser | Republican | Columbus | 2019 |
| 23 | Jared Storm | Republican | David City | 2025 |
| 24 | Jana Hughes | Republican | Seward | 2023 |
| 25 | Carolyn Bosn | Republican | Lincoln | 2023[26] |
| 26 | George Dungan III | Democratic | Lincoln | 2023 |
| 27 | Jason Prokop | Democratic | Lincoln | 2025 |
| 28 | Jane Raybould | Democratic | Lincoln | 2023 |
| 29 | Eliot Bostar | Democratic | Lincoln | 2021 |
| 30 | Myron Dorn | Republican | Adams | 2019 |
| 31 | Kathleen Kauth | Republican | Omaha | 2022[27] |
| 32 | Tom Brandt | Republican | Plymouth | 2019 |
| 33 | Dan Lonowski | Republican | Hastings | 2025 |
| 34 | Loren Lippincott | Republican | Central City | 2023 |
| 35 | Dan Quick | Democratic | Grand Island | 2025[j] |
| 36 | Rick Holdcroft | Republican | Bellevue | 2023 |
| 37 | Stan Clouse | Republican | Kearney | 2025 |
| 38 | Dave Murman | Republican | Glenvil | 2019 |
| 39 | Tony Sorrentino | Republican | Elkhorn | 2025 |
| 40 | Barry DeKay | Republican | Niobrara | 2023 |
| 41 | Dan McKeon | Republican | Amherst | 2025 |
| 42 | Mike Jacobson | Republican | North Platte | 2022 |
| 43 | Tanya Storer | Republican | Whitman | 2025 |
| 44 | Teresa Ibach | Republican | Sumner | 2023 |
| 45 | Rita Sanders | Republican | Bellevue | 2021 |
| 46 | Danielle Conrad | Democratic | Lincoln | 2023[k] |
| 47 | Paul Strommen | Republican | Sidney | 2025 |
| 48 | Brian Hardin | Republican | Gering | 2023 |
| 49 | Bob Andersen | Republican | Omaha | 2025 |
- ^ First elected in an August 26, 2025 special election
- ^ First elected in a December 30, 2014 special election.
- ^ First elected in a November 19, 2013 special election.
- ^ First elected in a January 18, 2011 special election.
- ^ First elected in a January 28, 2025 special election.
- ^ First elected in a January 26, 2021 special election.
- ^ Democrat David Lee Jordan retired.
- ^ Democrat John Horhn resigned after being elected mayor of Jackson.
- ^ Riepe previously served from 2015–2019.
- ^ Quick previously served from 2017–2021.
- ^ Conrad previously served from 2007–2015.
New Hampshire
| District[28] | Senator | Party | Residence | First elected |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | David Rochefort | Rep | Littleton | 2022 |
| 2 | Timothy Lang Sr. | Rep | Sanbornton | 2022 |
| 3 | Mark McConkey | Rep | Freedom | 2024 |
| 4 | David Watters | Dem | Dover | 2012 |
| 5 | Suzanne Prentiss | Dem | Lebanon | 2020 |
| 6 | James Gray | Rep | Rochester | 2016 |
| 7 | Daniel Innis | Rep | Bradford | 2022 (2016-2018) |
| 8 | Ruth Ward | Rep | Stoddard | 2016 |
| 9 | Denise Ricciardi | Rep | Bedford | 2020 |
| 10 | Donovan Fenton | Dem | Keene | 2022 |
| 11 | Tim McGough | Rep | Merrimack | 2024 |
| 12 | Kevin Avard | Rep | Nashua | 2020 (2014–2018) |
| 13 | Cindy Rosenwald | Dem | Nashua | 2018 |
| 14 | Sharon Carson | Rep | Londonderry | 2008 |
| 15 | Tara Reardon | Dem | Contoocook | 2024 |
| 16 | Keith Murphy | Rep | Manchester | 2022 |
| 17 | Howard Pearl | Rep | Loudon | 2022 |
| 18 | Victoria Sullivan | Rep | Manchester | 2024 |
| 19 | Regina Birdsell | Rep | Hampstead | 2014 |
| 20 | Patrick Long | Dem | Manchester | 2024 |
| 21 | Rebecca Kwoka | Dem | Portsmouth | 2020 |
| 22 | Daryl Abbas | Rep | Salem | 2022 |
| 23 | Bill Gannon | Rep | Sandown | 2020 (2016–2018) |
| 24 | Debra Altschiller | Dem | Stratham | 2022 |
New Jersey
New Mexico
| District | Senator[29] | Party | Residence | First elected | Counties represented |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | William Sharer | Rep | Farmington | 2000 | San Juan (part) |
| 2 | Steve D. Lanier | Rep | Aztec | 2024 | San Juan (part) |
| 3 | Shannon Pinto | Dem | Tohatchi | 2019† | McKinley (part), San Juan (part) |
| 4 | George Muñoz | Dem | Gallup | 2008 | Cibola (part), McKinley (part), San Juan (part) |
| 5 | Leo Jaramillo | Dem | Española | 2020 | Los Alamos (part), Rio Arriba (part), Sandoval (part), Santa Fe (part) |
| 6 | Roberto Gonzales | Dem | Ranchos de Taos | 2019† | Los Alamos (part), Rio Arriba (part), Santa Fe (part), Taos (part) |
| 7 | Pat Woods | Rep | Broadview | 2012† | Curry (part), Harding (part), Quay (part), Union |
| 8 | Pete Campos | Dem | Las Vegas | 1990 | Colfax, Guadalupe, Harding (part), Mora, Quay (part), San Miguel (part), Taos (part) |
| 9 | Cindy Nava | Dem | Bernalillo | 2024 | Bernalillo (part), Sandoval (part) |
| 10 | Katy Duhigg | Dem | Albuquerque | 2020 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 11 | Linda M. Lopez | Dem | Albuquerque | 1996 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 12 | Jay C. Block | Rep | Rio Rancho | 2024 | Bernalillo (part), Sandoval (part) |
| 13 | Debbie O'Malley | Dem | Albuquerque | 2024 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 14 | Michael Padilla | Dem | Albuquerque | 2012 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 15 | Heather Berghmans | Dem | Albuquerque | 2024 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 16 | Antoinette Sedillo Lopez | Dem | Albuquerque | 2019† | Bernalillo (part) |
| 17 | Mimi Stewart | Dem | Albuquerque | 2015† | Bernalillo (part) |
| 18 | Natalie Figueroa | Dem | Albuquerque | 2024 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 19 | Ant Thornton | Rep | Sandia Park | 2024 | Bernalillo (part), Sandoval (part), Santa Fe (part), Torrance (part) |
| 20 | Martin Hickey | Dem | Albuquerque | 2020 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 21 | Nicole Tobiassen | Rep | Albuquerque | 2024 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 22 | Benny Shendo | Dem | Jemez Pueblo | 2012 | Bernalillo (part), McKinley (part), Rio Arriba (part), San Juan (part), Sandoval (part) |
| 23 | Harold Pope Jr. | Dem | Albuquerque | 2020 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 24 | Linda Trujillo | Dem | Santa Fe | 2024 | Santa Fe (part), Socorro (part) |
| 25 | Peter Wirth | Dem | Santa Fe | 2008 | Santa Fe (part) |
| 26 | Moe Maestas | Dem | Albuquerque | 2022† | Bernalillo (part) |
| 27 | Pat Boone | Rep | Elida | 2024 | Chaves (part), Curry (part), De Baca, Lea (part), Roosevelt |
| 28 | Gabriel Ramos | Rep | Silver City | 2024[a] | Grant (part), Hidalgo (part), Luna (part) |
| 29 | Joshua A. Sanchez | Rep | Bosque | 2020 | Socorro (part), Valencia (part) |
| 30 | Angel Charley | Dem | Acoma | 2024 | Bernalillo (part) |
| 31 | Joe Cervantes | Dem | Las Cruces | 2012 | Chaves (part), Doña Ana (part), Otero (part) |
| 32 | Candy Ezzell | Rep | Roswell | 2024 | Chaves (part), Eddy (part) |
| 33 | Vacant[b] | Rep | Lincoln, Otero (part) | ||
| 34 | James G. Townsend | Rep | Artesia | 2024 | Eddy (part), Otero (part) |
| 35 | Crystal Brantley | Rep | Elephant Butte | 2020 | Catron, Doña Ana (part), Grant (part), Hidalgo (part), Luna (part), Sierra, Socorro (part) |
| 36 | Jeff Steinborn | Dem | Las Cruces | 2016 | Doña Ana (part) |
| 37 | William Soules | Dem | Las Cruces | 2012 | Doña Ana (part) |
| 38 | Carrie Hamblen | Dem | Las Cruces | 2020 | Doña Ana (part) |
| 39 | Liz Stefanics | Dem | Los Cerrillos | 2016 | San Miguel (part), Santa Fe (part), Torrance (part), Valencia (part) |
| 40 | Craig Brandt | Rep | Rio Rancho | 2012 | Sandoval (part) |
| 41 | David Gallegos | Rep | Eunice | 2020 | Eddy (part), Lea (part) |
| 42 | Larry R. Scott | Rep | Hobbs | 2024 | Chaves (part), Eddy (part), Lea (part) |
† Senator was originally appointed.
New York
* First elected in a special election.
North Carolina
- ↑: Member was originally appointed to fill the remainder of an unexpired term.
North Dakota
Source:[30]
| District | Senator | Party | Residence | First elected | Seat up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brad Bekkedahl | Rep | Williston | 2014 | 2026 |
| 2 | Mark Enget | Rep | Powers Lake | 2024 | 2028 |
| 3 | Bob Paulson | Rep | Minot | 2022 | 2026 |
| 4 | Chuck Walen | Rep | New Town | 2024 | 2028 |
| 5 | Randy Burckhard | Rep | Minot | 2010 | 2026 |
| 6 | Paul Thomas | Rep | Velva | 2024 | 2028 |
| 7 | Michelle Axtman | Rep | Bismarck | 2022 | 2026 |
| 8 | Jeffery Magrum | Rep | Hazelton | 2022 | 2028 |
| 9 | Richard Marcellais | Dem-NPL | Belcourt | 2024 (special) | 2026 |
| 10 | Ryan Braunberger | Dem-NPL | Fargo | 2022 | 2028 |
| 11 | Tim Mathern | Dem-NPL | Fargo | 1986 | 2026 |
| 12 | Cole Conley | Rep | Jamestown | 2020 | 2028 |
| 13 | Judy Lee | Rep | West Fargo | 1994 | 2026 |
| 14 | Jerry Klein | Rep | Fessenden | 1996 | 2028 |
| 15 | Kent Weston | Rep | Sarles | 2022[c] | 2026 |
| 16 | David Clemens | Rep | West Fargo | 2016 | 2028 |
| 17 | Jonathan Sickler | Rep | Grand Forks | 2022† | 2026 |
| 18 | Scott Meyer | Rep | Grand Forks | 2016 | 2028 |
| 19 | Janne Myrdal | Rep | Edinburg | 2016[d] | 2026 |
| 20 | Randy Lemm | Rep | Hillsboro | 2018 | 2028 |
| 21 | Kathy Hogan | Dem-NPL | Fargo | 2018 | 2026 |
| 22 | Mark Weber | Rep | Casselton | 2020 | 2028 |
| 23 | Todd Beard | Rep | Williston | 2022 | 2026 |
| 24 | Michael Wobbema | Rep | Valley City | 2020 | 2028 |
| 25 | Larry Luick | Rep | Fairmount | 2010 | 2026 |
| 26 | Dale Patten | Rep | Watford City | 2018[e] | 2028 |
| 27 | Kristin Roers | Rep | Fargo | 2018 | 2026 |
| 28 | Robert Erbele | Rep | Lehr | 2000 | 2028 |
| 29 | Terry Wanzek | Rep | Jamestown | 1994 | 2026 |
| 30 | Diane Larson | Rep | Bismarck | 2016 | 2028 |
| 31 | Donald Schaible | Rep | Mott | 2010 | 2026 |
| 32 | Dick Dever | Rep | Bismarck | 2008 | 2028 |
| 33 | Keith Boehm | Rep | Mandan | 2022 | 2026 |
| 34 | Justin Gerhardt | Rep | Mandan | 2023† | 2028 |
| 35 | Sean Cleary | Rep | Bismarck | 2022 | 2026 |
| 36 | Desiree Van Oosting | Rep | Judson | 2024 | 2028 |
| 37 | Dean Rummel | Rep | Dickinson | 2022 | 2026 |
| 38 | David Hogue | Rep | Minot | 2008 | 2028 |
| 39 | Greg Kessel | Rep | Belfield | 2022 | 2026 |
| 40 | Jose L. Castaneda | Rep | Minot | 2024 | 2028 |
| 41 | Kyle Davison | Rep | Fargo | 2014 | 2026 |
| 42 | Claire Cory | Rep | Grand Forks | 2024 | 2028 |
| 43 | Jeff Barta | Rep | Grand Forks | 2022 | 2026 |
| 44 | Joshua Boschee | Dem-NPL | Fargo | 2024 | 2028 |
| 45 | Ronald Sorvaag | Rep | Fargo | 2010 | 2026 |
| 46 | Michelle Powers | Rep | Fargo | 2024 | 2028 |
| 47 | Michael Dwyer | Rep | Bismarck | 2018 | 2026 |
†Senator was originally appointed
Ohio
- *Senator was originally appointed.
Oklahoma
| District | Name | Party | Hometown | First elected | Seat up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lt-Gov | Matt Pinnell | Rep | Oklahoma City | 2018 | 2026 |
| 1 | Micheal Bergstrom | Rep | Adair | 2016 | 2028* |
| 2 | Ally Seifried | Rep | Claremore | 2022 | 2026 |
| 3 | Julie McIntosh | Rep | Tahlequah | 2024 | 2028 |
| 4 | Tom Woods | Rep | Westville | 2022 | 2026 |
| 5 | George Burns | Rep | Pollard | 2020 | 2028 |
| 6 | David Bullard | Rep | Durant | 2018 | 2026 |
| 7 | Warren Hamilton | Rep | McCurtain | 2020 | 2028 |
| 8 | Bryan Logan | Rep | Paden | 2025† | 2026 |
| 9 | Avery Frix | Rep | Muskogee | 2024 | 2028 |
| 10 | Bill Coleman | Rep | Ponca City | 2018 | 2026 |
| 11 | Regina Goodwin | Dem | Tulsa | 2024 | 2028 |
| 12 | Todd Gollihare | Rep | Kellyville | 2022 | 2026 |
| 13 | Jonathan Wingard | Rep | Ada | 2024 | 2028 |
| 14 | Jerry Alvord | Rep | Wilson | 2022 | 2026 |
| 15 | Lisa Standridge | Rep | Norman | 2024 | 2028 |
| 16 | Mary B. Boren | Dem | Norman | 2018 | 2026 |
| 17 | Shane Jett | Rep | Tecumseh | 2020 | 2026* (special) |
| 18 | Jack Stewart | Rep | Yukon | 2022 | 2026 |
| 19 | Roland Pederson | Rep | Burlington | 2016 | 2028* |
| 20 | Chuck Hall | Rep | Perry | 2018 | 2026 |
| 21 | Randy Grellner | Rep | Stillwater | 2024 | 2028 |
| 22 | Kristen Thompson | Rep | Edmond | 2022 | 2026 |
| 23 | Lonnie Paxton | Rep | Tuttle | 2016 | 2028* |
| 24 | Darrell Weaver | Rep | Moore | 2018 | 2026 |
| 25 | Brian Guthrie | Rep | Broken Arrow | 2024 | 2028 |
| 26 | Darcy Jech | Rep | Kingfisher | 2014 | 2026* |
| 27 | Casey Murdock | Rep | Felt | 2018† | 2028 |
| 28 | Grant Green | Rep | Wellston | 2022 | 2026 |
| 29 | Julie Daniels | Rep | Bartlesville | 2016 | 2028* |
| 30 | Julia Kirt | Dem | Oklahoma City | 2018 | 2026 |
| 31 | Spencer Kern | Rep | Waurika | 2024 | 2028 |
| 32 | Dusty Deevers | Rep | Elgin | 2023† | 2026 |
| 33 | Christi Gillespie | Rep | Tulsa | 2024 | 2028 |
| 34 | Dana Prieto | Rep | Tulsa | 2022 | 2026 |
| 35 | Jo Anna Dossett | Dem | Tulsa | 2020 | 2028 |
| 36 | John Haste | Rep | Broken Arrow | 2018 | 2026 |
| 37 | Aaron Reinhardt | Rep | Tulsa | 2024 | 2028 |
| 38 | Brent Howard | Rep | Altus | 2018 | 2026 |
| 39 | David Rader | Rep | Tulsa | 2016 | 2028* |
| 40 | Carri Hicks | Dem | Oklahoma City | 2018 | 2026 |
| 41 | Adam Pugh | Rep | Edmond | 2016 | 2028* |
| 42 | Brenda Stanley | Rep | Midwest City | 2018 | 2026 |
| 43 | Kendal Sacchieri | Rep | Duncan | 2024 | 2028 |
| 44 | Michael Brooks-Jimenez | Dem | Oklahoma City | 2017† | 2026 |
| 45 | Paul Rosino | Rep | Oklahoma City | 2017† | 2028 |
| 46 | Mark Mann | Dem | Oklahoma City | 2024† | 2026 |
| 47 | Kelly E. Hines | Rep | Oklahoma City | 2024 | 2028 |
| 48 | Nikki Nice | Dem | Oklahoma City | 2024† | 2026 |
- † Elected in a special election
- * Term Limited
Oregon
Pennsylvania
- ^ John Blake resigned on February 15, 2021. Flynn was elected in a special election on May 18.
- ^ Ryan Aument resigned December 31, 2024 to become State Director to U.S. Senator Dave McCormick. Malone was elected in a special election on March 25, 2025, and was sworn in on May 5, 2025.
- ^ Dave Arnold died January 17, 2021. Gebhard was elected in a special election on May 18.
Rhode Island
- *Senator was elected in a special election
South Carolina
Except as noted, all senators were elected in November 2024 and terms began on January 14, 2025. All terms expire in January 2029.
| District | Representative | Party | Residence | First elected |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Thomas C. Alexander, president | Republican | Walhalla | 1994* |
| 2 | Rex Rice | Republican | Easley | 2016 |
| 3 | Richard Cash | Republican | Powdersville | 2017* |
| 4 | Michael Gambrell | Republican | Honea Path | 2016* |
| 5 | Tom Corbin | Republican | Travelers Rest | 2012 |
| 6 | Jason Elliott | Republican | Greenville | 2024 |
| 7 | Karl B. Allen | Democratic | Greenville | 2012 |
| 8 | Ross Turner | Republican | Greenville | 2012 |
| 9 | Danny Verdin | Republican | Laurens | 2000 |
| 10 | Billy Garrett | Republican | Greenwood | 2020 |
| 11 | Josh Kimbrell | Republican | Inman | 2020 |
| 12 | Roger Nutt | Republican | Moore | 2024 |
| 13 | Shane Martin | Republican | Spartanburg | 2008 |
| 14 | Harvey S. Peeler Jr. | Republican | Gaffney | 1980 |
| 15 | Wes Climer | Republican | Rock Hill | 2016 |
| 16 | Michael Johnson | Republican | Tega Cay | 2020 |
| 17 | Everett Stubbs | Republican | Rock Hill | 2024 |
| 18 | Ronnie Cromer | Republican | Prosperity | 2003* |
| 19 | Tameika Isaac Devine | Democratic | Columbia | 2024* |
| 20 | Ed Sutton | Democratic | North Charleston | 2024 |
| 21 | Darrell Jackson | Democratic | Hopkins | 1992 |
| 22 | Overture Walker | Democratic | Columbia | 2024 |
| 23 | Carlisle Kennedy | Republican | Lexington | 2024 |
| 24 | Tom Young Jr. | Republican | Aiken | 2012 |
| 25 | A. Shane Massey | Republican | Edgefield | 2007* |
| 26 | Russell Ott | Democratic | Columbia | 2024 |
| 27 | Allen Blackmon | Republican | Heath Springs | 2024 |
| 28 | Greg Hembree | Republican | North Myrtle Beach | 2012 |
| 29 | JD Chaplin | Republican | Darlington | 2024 |
| 30 | Kent M. Williams | Democratic | Marion | 2004 |
| 31 | Mike Reichenbach | Republican | Florence | 2022* |
| 32 | Ronnie A. Sabb | Democratic | Greeleyville | 2014* |
| 33 | Luke A. Rankin | Republican | Conway | 1992 |
| 34 | Stephen Goldfinch | Republican | Murrells Inlet | 2016 |
| 35 | Jeffrey R. Graham | Democratic | Camden | 2024 |
| 36 | Jeff Zell | Republican | Sumter | 2024 |
| 37 | Larry Grooms | Republican | Bonneau | 1997* |
| 38 | Sean Bennett | Republican | Summerville | 2012 |
| 39 | Tom Fernandez | Republican | Summerville | 2024 |
| 40 | Brad Hutto | Democratic | Orangeburg | 1996* |
| 41 | Matt Leber | Republican | John's Island | 2024 |
| 42 | Deon Tedder | Democratic | Charleston | 2023* |
| 43 | Chip Campsen | Republican | Isle of Palms | 2004 |
| 44 | Brian Adams | Republican | Goose Creek | 2020 |
| 45 | Margie Bright Matthews | Democratic | Charleston | 2015* |
| 46 | Tom Davis | Republican | Beaufort | 2008 |
- *Senator was first elected in a special election
South Dakota
Tennessee
- *Senator was originally elected in a special election or appointed
Texas
| District | Image | Senator | Party | Residence | First elected | Next election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bryan Hughes | Republican | Mineola | 2016 | 2026 | |
| 2 | Bob Hall | Republican | Edgewood | 2014 | 2026 | |
| 3 | Robert Nichols | Republican | Jacksonville | 2006 | 2026 | |
| 4 | Vacant[note 1] | 2026 | ||||
| 5 | Charles Schwertner | Republican | Georgetown | 2012 | 2026 | |
| 6 | Carol Alvarado | Democratic | Houston | 2018† | 2028 | |
| 7 | Paul Bettencourt | Republican | Houston | 2014 | 2028 | |
| 8 | Angela Paxton | Republican | McKinney | 2018 | 2028 | |
| 9 | Vacant[note 2] | 2026 | ||||
| 10 | Phil King | Republican | Weatherford | 2022 | 2028 | |
| 11 | Mayes Middleton | Republican | Friendswood | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 12 | Tan Parker | Republican | Flower Mound | 2022 | 2028 | |
| 13 | Borris Miles | Democratic | Houston | 2016 | 2026 | |
| 14 | Sarah Eckhardt | Democratic | Austin | 2020† | 2028 | |
| 15 | Molly Cook | Democratic | Houston | 2024† | 2028 | |
| 16 | Nathan Johnson | Democratic | Dallas | 2018 | 2028 | |
| 17 | Joan Huffman | Republican | Houston | 2008† | 2028 | |
| 18 | Lois Kolkhorst | Republican | Brenham | 2014† | 2026 | |
| 19 | Roland Gutierrez | Democratic | San Antonio | 2020 | 2026 | |
| 20 | Juan Hinojosa | Democratic | McAllen | 2002 | 2028 | |
| 21 | Judith Zaffirini | Democratic | Laredo | 1986 | 2026 | |
| 22 | Brian Birdwell | Republican | Granbury | 2010† | 2026 | |
| 23 | Royce West | Democratic | Dallas | 1992 | 2028 | |
| 24 | Pete Flores | Republican | Pleasanton | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 25 | Donna Campbell | Republican | New Braunfels | 2012 | 2028 | |
| 26 | Jose Menendez | Democratic | San Antonio | 2015† | 2026 | |
| 27 | Adam Hinojosa | Republican | Corpus Christi | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 28 | Charles Perry | Republican | Lubbock | 2014† | 2026 | |
| 29 | Cesar Blanco | Democratic | El Paso | 2020 | 2028 | |
| 30 | Brent Hagenbuch | Republican | Denton | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 31 | Kevin Sparks | Republican | Midland | 2022 | 2026 |
† Elected in a special election
Utah
↑: Senator was originally appointed
Vermont
- ↑: Member was originally appointed
Virginia
Washington
| District | Senator | Party | Residence[36] | Counties represented | First elected | Next election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Derek Stanford | Democratic | Maltby | King (part), Snohomish (part) | 2019† | 2028 |
| 2 | Jim McCune | Republican | Graham | Pierce (part), Thurston (part) | 2020 | 2028 |
| 3 | Marcus Riccelli | Democratic | Spokane | Spokane (part) | 2024 | 2028 |
| 4 | Leonard Christian | Republican | Spokane Valley | Spokane (part) | 2024 | 2028 |
| 5 | Victoria Hunt | Democratic | Issaquah | King (part) | 2025† | 2028 |
| 6 | Jeff Holy | Republican | Spokane | Spokane (part) | 2018 | 2026 |
| 7 | Shelly Short | Republican | Addy | Douglas (part), Ferry, Grant (part), Okanogan (part), Pend Oreille, Spokane (part), Stevens | 2017† | 2026 |
| 8 | Matt Boehnke | Republican | Kennewick | Benton (part), Franklin (part) | 2022 | 2026 |
| 9 | Mark Schoesler | Republican | Ritzville | Adams (part), Asotin, Columbia, Franklin (part), Garfield, Lincoln, Spokane (part), Whitman | 2004 | 2028 |
| 10 | Ron Muzzall | Republican | Oak Harbor | Island, Skagit (part), Snohomish (part) | 2019† | 2028 |
| 11 | Bob Hasegawa | Democratic | Seattle | King (part) | 2012 | 2028 |
| 12 | Keith Goehner | Republican | Dryden | Chelan, Douglas (part), King (part), Snohomish (part) | 2024 | 2028 |
| 13 | Judy Warnick | Republican | Moses Lake | Grant (part), Kittitas, Yakima (part) | 2014 | 2026 |
| 14 | Curtis King | Republican | Yakima | Klickitat, Yakima (part) | 2007^ | 2028 |
| 15 | Nikki Torres | Republican | Pasco | Adams (part), Benton (part), Franklin (part), Grant (part), Yakima (part) | 2022 | 2026 |
| 16 | Perry Dozier | Republican | Waitsburg | Benton (part), Walla Walla | 2020 | 2028 |
| 17 | Paul Harris | Republican | Vancouver | Clark (part), Skamania | 2024 | 2028 |
| 18 | Adrian Cortes | Democratic | La Center | Clark (part) | 2024 | 2028 |
| 19 | Jeff Wilson | Republican | Longview | Cowlitz (part), Grays Harbor (part), Lewis (part), Pacific, Thurston (part), Wahkiakum | 2020 | 2028 |
| 20 | John Braun | Republican | Centralia | Clark (part), Cowlitz (part), Lewis (part), Thurston (part) | 2012 | 2028 |
| 21 | Marko Liias | Democratic | Lynnwood | Snohomish (part) | 2014† | 2026 |
| 22 | Jessica Bateman | Democratic | Olympia | Thurston (part) | 2024 | 2028 |
| 23 | Drew Hansen | Democratic | Bainbridge Island | Kitsap (part) | 2023† | 2028 |
| 24 | Mike Chapman | Democratic | Port Angeles | Clallam, Grays Harbor (part), Jefferson | 2024# | 2028 |
| 25 | Chris Gildon | Republican | Puyallup | Pierce (part) | 2020 | 2028 |
| 26 | Deborah Krishnadasan | Democratic | Gig Harbor | Kitsap (part), Pierce (part) | 2024† | 2026 |
| 27 | Yasmin Trudeau | Democratic | Tacoma | Pierce (part) | 2021† | 2028 |
| 28 | T'wina Nobles | Democratic | Fircrest | Pierce (part) | 2020 | 2028 |
| 29 | Steve Conway | Democratic | Tacoma | Pierce (part) | 2010 | 2026 |
| 30 | Claire Wilson | Democratic | Auburn | King (part) | 2018 | 2026 |
| 31 | Phil Fortunato | Republican | Auburn | King (part), Pierce (part) | 2017† | 2026 |
| 32 | Jesse Salomon | Democratic | Shoreline | King (part), Snohomish (part) | 2018 | 2026 |
| 33 | Tina Orwall | Democratic | Des Moines | King (part) | 2024† | 2026 |
| 34 | Emily Alvarado | Democratic | West Seattle | King (part) | 2025† | 2026 |
| 35 | Drew MacEwen | Republican | Union | Kitsap (part), Mason, Thurston (part) | 2022 | 2026 |
| 36 | Noel Frame | Democratic | Seattle | King (part) | 2022 | 2026 |
| 37 | Rebecca Saldaña | Democratic | Seattle | King (part) | 2016† | 2026 |
| 38 | June Robinson | Democratic | Everett | Snohomish (part) | 2020† | 2026 |
| 39 | Keith Wagoner | Republican | Sedro-Woolley | Skagit (part), Snohomish (part) | 2018† | 2028 |
| 40 | Liz Lovelett | Democratic | Anacortes | San Juan, Skagit (part), Whatcom (part) | 2019† | 2028 |
| 41 | Lisa Wellman | Democratic | Mercer Island | King (part) | 2016 | 2028 |
| 42 | Sharon Shewmake | Democratic | Bellingham | Whatcom (part) | 2022# | 2026 |
| 43 | Jamie Pedersen | Democratic | Seattle | King (part) | 2013† | 2026 |
| 44 | John Lovick | Democratic | Mill Creek | Snohomish (part) | 2021† | 2026 |
| 45 | Manka Dhingra | Democratic | Redmond | King (part) | 2017^ | 2026 |
| 46 | Javier Valdez | Democratic | Seattle | King (part) | 2022 | 2026 |
| 47 | Claudia Kauffman | Democratic | Kent | King (part) | 2022 | 2026 |
| 48 | Vandana Slatter | Democratic | Bellevue | King (part) | 2025† | 2026 |
| 49 | Annette Cleveland | Democratic | Vancouver | Clark (part) | 2012 | 2028 |
- † Originally appointed
- ^ Originally elected in special election
- # Sworn in early to fill vacant seat
West Virginia
- ^ Served from 2019 to 2020 as a Democrat
- ^ Nick Paul resigned on October 14, 2025
- ^ Represented District 9 prior to 2024
- ^ Represented District 10 prior to 2022
- ^ Represented District 39 prior to 2022
- ^ Incumbent Democrat Sandra Cano resigned September 12, 2024, and Urso was selected to replace her on the ballot.
- ^ Republican Larry Hart (Orange) resigned on November 14, 2025.[35]
- ^ Multi-county districts (all but District 17) must elect Senators from different counties
- ^ Appointed on October 30, 2025, following Michael B. Stuart's resignation after being confirmed as general counsel of the United States Department of Health and Human Services
- ^ Oliverio previously served in the Senate from 1994 to 2010.
Wisconsin
Wyoming
| District | Representative | Party | Residence | Counties represented | Nested House districts[38] | First elected | Next election | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ogden Driskill | Republican | Devils Tower | Campbell, Crook, Weston | HD 1, HD 52 | 2010 | 2026 | |
| 2 | Brian Boner | Republican | Douglas | Converse, Platte | HD 6, HD 62 | 2015* | 2028 | |
| 3 | Cheri Steinmetz | Republican | Lingle | Goshen, Niobrara, Weston | HD 2, HD 5 | 2018 | 2026 | |
| 4 | Tara Nethercott | Republican | Cheyenne | Laramie | HD 7, HD 8 | 2016 | 2028 | |
| 5 | Lynn Hutchings | Republican | Cheyenne | Laramie | HD 12, HD 42 | 2018 | 2026 | |
| 6 | Taft Love | Republican | Cheyenne | Laramie | HD 4, HD 10 | 2025* | 2026 (special) | |
| 7 | Stephan Pappas | Republican | Cheyenne | Laramie | HD 9, HD 41 | 2014 | 2026 | |
| 8 | Jared Olsen | Republican | Cheyenne | Laramie | HD 11, HD 44 | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 9 | Chris Rothfuss | Democratic | Laramie | Albany | HD 13, HD 45 | 2010 | 2026 | |
| 10 | Gary Crum | Republican | Laramie | Albany | HD 14, HD 46 | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 11 | Larry S. Hicks | Republican | Baggs | Albany, Carbon | HD 13, HD 45 | 2010 | 2026 | |
| 12 | John Kolb | Republican | Rock Springs | Fremont, Sweetwater | HD 17, HD 48 | 2020 | 2028 | |
| 13 | Stacy Jones | Republican | Rock Springs | Sweetwater | HD 39, HD 60 | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 14 | Laura Taliaferro Pearson | Republican | Kemmerer | Lincoln, Sublette, Sweetwater, Uinta | HD 18, HD 20 | 2024 | 2028 | |
| 15 | Wendy Davis Schuler | Republican | Evanston | Uinta | HD 19, HD 49 | 2018 | 2026 | |
| 16 | Dan Dockstader | Republican | Afton | Lincoln, Sublette, Teton | HD 21, HD 22 | 2008 | 2028 | |
| 17 | Mike Gierau | Democratic | Jackson Hole | Teton | HD 16, HD 23 | 2018 | 2026 | |
| 18 | Tim French | Republican | Powell | Park | HD 24, HD 50 | 2020 | 2028 | |
| 19 | Dan Laursen | Republican | Powell | Big Horn, Park | HD 25, HD 26 | 2014 | 2026 | |
| 20 | Ed Cooper | Republican | Ten Sleep | Big Horn, Hot Springs, Park, Washakie | HD 27, HD 28 | 2020 | 2028 | |
| 21 | Bo Biteman | Republican | Ranchester | Sheridan | HD 29, HD 30, HD 40, HD 51[a] | 2018 | 2026 | |
| 22 | Barry Crago | Republican | Buffalo | Sheridan, Johnson | 2024 | 2028 | ||
| 23 | Eric Barlow | Republican | Gillette | Campbell | HD 3, HD 31 | 2022 | 2026 | |
| 24 | Troy McKeown | Republican | Gillette | Campbell | HD 32, HD 53 | 2020 | 2028 | |
| 25 | Cale Case | Republican | Lander | Fremont | HD 33, HD 54 | 1998 | 2026 | |
| 26 | Tim Salazar | Republican | Riverton | Fremont | HD 34, HD 55 | 2020 | 2028 | |
| 27 | Bill Landen | Republican | Casper | Natrona | HD 35, HD 36 | 2007* | 2026 | |
| 28 | James Lee Anderson | Republican | Casper | Natrona | HD 56, HD 57 | 2012 | 2028 | |
| 29 | Bob Ide | Republican | Casper | Natrona | HD 37, HD 59 | 2022*[39] | 2026 | |
| 30 | Charles Scott | Republican | Casper | Natrona | HD 38, HD 58 | 1982 | 2028 | |
| 31 | Evie Brennan | Republican | Cheyenne | Laramie | HD 43, HD 61 | 2022 | 2026 | |
- *Senator was originally appointed
See also
- List of United States state legislatures
- List of U.S. state representatives (Alabama to Missouri)
- List of U.S. state representatives (Montana to Wyoming)
Notes
- ^ Republican Brandon Creighton resigned on October 2, 2025, to become chancellor of the Texas Tech University System.[31]
- ^ Republican Kelly Hancock resigned on June 18, 2025, to become chief clerk for the Texas Comptroller’s Office.[32]
- ^ Only two senate districts not nested.
References
- ^ a b The Book of the States (53 ed.). The Council of State Governments. January 7, 2022. Retrieved July 10, 2022.
- ^ "Open Letter Raises Questions About Wendy Rogers Candidacy – Arizona Daily Independent". May 25, 2020.
- ^ "Senate Members (listed alphabetically)". Connecticut General Assembly. Retrieved February 14, 2013.
- ^ And previous terms of service, if any.
- ^ "Senators (2023-24 Regular Session)". Georgia State Senate. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
- ^ "Hawaii Governor Appoints Troy Hashimoto To State Senate". Honolulu Civil Beat. November 9, 2023. Archived from the original on November 16, 2023. Retrieved November 14, 2023.
- ^ "State Senate chooses Donna Kim as new president". Honolulu Star-Advertiser. December 28, 2012. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved February 3, 2013.
- ^ Dayton, Kevin (May 5, 2015). "Kauai's Kouchi replaces Kim as Senate president". Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Archived from the original on May 6, 2015. Retrieved May 5, 2015.
- ^ Medina, Andrei (January 16, 2013). "Donna Kim makes history as first Filipina-American Hawaiʻi Senate President". GMA News. Archived from the original on April 9, 2015. Retrieved January 19, 2013.
Hawaiʻi Senate Vice President Donna Mercado Kim will make history on Thursday as she is installed as the first Filipina-American State Senate President.
- ^ "Senator Donna Mercado Kim's Biography". Project Vote Smart. One Common Ground. 2012. Archived from the original on November 17, 2018. Retrieved January 19, 2013.
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