WASHINGTON, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Democrats face an uphill battle to recapture a U.S. Senate majority in the November 2026 midterm elections, as Republicans are defending just two seats seen as competitive by nonpartisan analysts and hold a 53-47 majority.
Democrats are defending four competitive seats and would need to pick up another four to take the majority. Elections will be held for 33 of the chamber's 100 seats next year.
Below are the key Senate races to watch:
MAINE
Five-term
Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine is no stranger to a competitive
election. As chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, she oversees
government spending levels, a job that has also led to clashes with the Trump
administration this year.
A party moderate, she is deemed the Republicans' best chance at holding the seat.
NORTH
CAROLINA
Republicans will look to defend an open seat in North Carolina, since Senator Thom Tillis opted to retire after clashing with Trump over the president's tax and spending law. The state's former Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, has launched a run, aiming to bring his southern, moderate style to Washington.
GEORGIA
In
the four competitive Senate races that Democrats need to defend, two are in
states with Republican governors, underscoring the political challenge.
Democratic Senator Jon Ossoff is running for reelection in Georgia after
flipping the seat in 2020.
Ossoff,
38, is the youngest current senator. He has mostly kept his head down in his
first term, primarily speaking in defense of his state, such as when the
administration started reworking the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
Trump has not endorsed anyone ahead of the May 19 Republican primary, extending the three-way competition between two U.S. representatives, Mike Collins and Buddy Carter, and the Republican governor's pick Derek Dooley, an attorney and former college football coach.
NEW
HAMPSHIRE
In
the Northeast is another state with a Republican governor that Senate Democrats
need to defend, after the retirement of three-term Senator Jeanne Shaheen. The
New Hampshire race's three main contenders are familiar to the state's
electorate, famous for civic engagement.
U.S.
Representative Chris Pappas, a four-term centrist Democrat, would be the first
openly gay man elected to the Senate.
In an unusual twist for the September 8 Republican primary, both challengers have already served in the Senate. Former Senator John E. Sununu represented the state for one term until he lost in 2008, and more recently, former Senator Scott Brown served in the Senate until 2013, representing neighboring Massachusetts.
MICHIGAN
Another
battleground state that most recently picked Trump in the close 2024 election,
Michigan's Senate race is open after the retirement of Senator Gary Peters, a
Democrat.
Multiple
Democrats, spanning the party's ideological bounds, plan to contest the August
4 primary. Four-term U.S. Representative Haley Stevens is courting her party's
leadership, as Michigan state Senator Mallory McMorrow and Abdul El-Sayed, a
progressive activist, try to show they can break the establishment mold.
Trump endorsed former longtime U.S. Representative Mike Rogers for his second Senate campaign. The Republican served in the Army, worked in the FBI, and ran unsuccessfully for the Senate in 2024.
MINNESOTA
The
election to replace retiring Senator Tina Smith, a Minnesota Democrat, is
focused within her own party. U.S. Representative Angie Craig, the top
agriculture Democrat leading the charge on criticizing the impact of Trump's
tariffs on the heartland, is making an electability argument in the contest
against the more progressive Lieutenant Governor Peggy Flanagan, who would be
the first Native American female senator, and is also contesting the August 11
primary.
Republicans have only one main candidate: former NBA player Royce White, a second-time candidate who lost in the 2024 Senate election by more than 15 points.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/six-races-watch-2026-us-senate-midterm-election-2025
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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