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2018 Alaska House of Representatives election

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2018 Alaska House of Representatives election
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The 2018 Alaska House of Representatives election were held on Tuesday, November 6, 2018, with the primary election on August 21, 2018. Voters in the 40 districts of the Alaska House of Representatives elected their representatives. The elections coincided with the elections for other state offices, including the gubernatorial election and the state senate elections. While Republicans gained a nominal majority in the chamber, when the new House convened in 2019, Democratic members formed a coalition with independents and dissident Republicans to re-elect Bryce Edgmon as speaker.[1]

Quick Facts All 40 seats in the Alaska House of Representatives, Majority party ...
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Overview

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Predictions

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Results

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District 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940

District 1

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After originally being tied, a recount was ordered, which put LeBon ahead by only one vote. On December 5, Dodge appealed the result to the Alaska Supreme Court.[3] However, on January 4, the court denied Dodge's appeal, officially making LeBon the winner.[4]

District 2

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District 3

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District 4

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District 5

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District 6

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District 7

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District 8

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District 9

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District 10

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District 11

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District 12

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District 13

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On December 5, Governor Mike Dunleavy named Dahlstrom the new Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Corrections.[5] 15 days later, Dunleavy appointed former lieutenant governor candidate Sharon Jackson to fill Dahlstrom's seat.[6]

District 14

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District 15

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District 16

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District 17

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District 18

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District 19

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District 20

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District 21

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District 22

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District 23

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District 24

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District 25

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District 26

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District 27

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District 28

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District 29

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District 30

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District 31

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District 32

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District 33

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District 34

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District 35

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District 36

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District 37

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District 38

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District 39

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District 40

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See also

Notes

  1. 3 Republicans and 2 Independents joined all 17 Democrats to form a governing coalition
  2. Filed as an independent candidate but also received the Democratic nomination in the primary.
  3. Elected as a Republican in 2002 and in every election until 2016, Seaton caucused with the Democrats in the 30th legislature. Facing a competitive Republican primary, Seaton instead filed to run for reelection as an Independent and ran in the Democratic primary, winning the nomination.
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References

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