2018 West Virginia Senate election

2018 West Virginia Senate election

← 2016 November 6, 2018 2020 →

17 of the 34 seats in the West Virginia Senate
18 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Mitch Carmichael Roman Prezioso
Party Republican Democratic
Leader since January 11, 2017 January 11, 2017
Leader's seat 4th district 13th district
Seats before 22 12
Seats after 20 14
Seat change Decrease 2 Increase 2
Popular vote 306,182 252,564
Percentage 53.4% 44.1%
Swing Increase 1.1% Decrease 3.6%
Seats up 11 6
Races won 9 8

Results of the elections:
     Democratic gain
     Democratic hold      Republican hold

Senate President before election

Mitch Carmichael
Republican

Elected Senate President

Mitch Carmichael
Republican

The 2018 West Virginia Senate elections were held on November 6, 2018, as part of the biennial United States elections. Seventeen of West Virginia's 34 state senators were up for election. West Virginia Senate districts each have two elected representatives. State senators serve staggered four-year terms in West Virginia, with one senator from each district up in even-numbered years corresponding to presidential election years (most recently held in 2016), and the other up in even-numbered years corresponding to presidential midterm years.

Primary elections in the state were held on May 8. After the previous 2016 state elections, Republicans held a majority in the Senate, holding 22 seats to the Democrats' 12. The Republican Party had long been the minority party in West Virginia, but the decline of the strength of coal worker unions, the Democratic Party's increasing focus on environmentalism, the unpopularity of President Barack Obama, and the increasing social conservatism of the Republican Party have helped the GOP solidify power in the state rapidly since 2000.

Despite the high popularity of President Donald Trump within the state and his 42-point margin of victory there in 2016, the Democrats gained two seats in the West Virginia Senate in 2018. This can be attributed to the competitive U.S. Senate race at the top of the ticket (which was won by incumbent Democrat Joe Manchin), the increasing insulation of the West Virginia Democratic Party from the national Democratic Party (particularly on social issues, such as abortion), and a strong year for the Democratic Party nationally, in which they gained control of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Following the state's 2018 Senate elections, Republicans maintained control of the Senate with 20 seats to the Democrats' 14.