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The 2005 United States elections were held on Tuesday, November 8. During this off-year election, the only seats up for election in the United States Congress were special elections held throughout the year. None of these congressional seats changed party hands. There were also two gubernatorial races, state legislative elections in two states, numerous citizen initiatives, mayoral races in several major cities, and a variety of local offices on the ballot.
← 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 → Off-year elections | |
Election day | November 8 |
---|---|
Congressional special elections | |
Seats contested | 3 |
Net seat change | 0 |
Gubernatorial elections | |
Seats contested | 3 (2 states, 1 territory) |
Net seat change | 0 |
2005 Gubernatorial election results map | |
Legend | |
Democratic hold Covenant gain No election |
There were three total special elections to the United States House of Representatives during 2005: California's 5th congressional district, California's 48th, and Ohio's 2nd. In each of these special elections, the incumbent party won.[1]
Only New Jersey, Virginia, and the Northern Mariana Islands featured off-year gubernatorial races in 2005.
Democratic U.S. Senator Jon Corzine defeated Republican businessman Doug Forrester 53% to 43%, taking the open seat held by acting governor Richard Codey since Democrat Jim McGreevey resigned in 2004.[2]
Democratic Lieutenant Governor Tim Kaine defeated former Republican Attorney General Jerry Kilgore 52% to 46%, in the race to succeed term-limited Democratic Governor Mark Warner.[2]
Benigno Fitial, who belonged to the local Covenant Party, narrowly defeated independent Heinz Hofschneider and incumbent Republican Governor Juan N. Babauta to win the governorship in that U.S. territory.[3]
Legislative elections were held for the New Jersey General Assembly, the Virginia House of Delegates, and the Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth Legislature. Democrats maintained a comfortable majority in the lower house of the New Jersey legislature, while Republicans maintained control of the lower chamber of the Virginia legislature.
Perceiving the Supreme Court's decisions as supporting corruption and secrecy in Harrisburg, voters refused to grant State Supreme Court Justice Russell Nigro a retention vote. Nigro lost very narrowly, becoming the first justice in Pennsylvania history to lose a retention vote. Fellow Justice Sandra Schultz Newman was retained. The vote was closely connected with the backlash against the Harrisburg establishment and the 2005 legislative pay raise which increased judges' and legislators' salaries.
Many additional cities across the United States held mayoral elections; this list is representative, not inclusive. Nationally, the vast majority of mayors were reelected, often by wide margins, and there were few partisan upsets.
Some of the major races included:
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