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2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa

The 2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa were held on November 6, 2018, to elect the four U.S. representatives from the State of Iowa, one from each of the state's four congressional districts. The elections coincided with the gubernatorial election, as well as other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate, and various state and local elections. The state congressional delegation flipped from a 3–1 Republican majority to a 3–1 Democratic majority. The Democrats had last won the majority of Iowa's seats in the 2010 elections.

2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa

← 2016 November 6, 2018 (2018-11-06) 2020 →

All 4 Iowa seats to the United States House of Representatives
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party Democratic Republican
Last election 1 3
Seats won 3 1
Seat change 2 2
Popular vote 664,676 612,338
Percentage 50.5% 46.5%
Swing 6.05% 7.11%

     Democratic hold      Democratic gain
     Republican hold

Overview edit

Statewide edit

Party Candidates Votes Seats
No. % No. +/– %
Democratic 4 664,676 50.48% 3  2 75.00%
Republican 4 612,338 46.51% 1  2 25.00%
Libertarian 4 29,894 2.27% 0   0.00%
Independent 3 5,100 0.39% 0   0.00%
Legal Marijuana Now 1 2,015 0.15% 0   0.00%
Green 1 1,888 0.14% 0   0.00%
Write-in 732 0.06% 0   0.00%
Total 17 1,316,643 100.00% 4   100.00%
Popular vote
Democratic
50.48%
Republican
46.51%
Libertarian
2.27%
Other
0.74%
House seats
Democratic
75.00%
Republican
25.00%

By district edit

Results of the 2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa by district:[1]

District Democratic Republican Others Total Result
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
District 1 170,342 50.96% 153,442 45.91% 10,459 3.13% 334,243 100.0% Democratic gain
District 2 171,446 54.79% 133,287 42.60% 8,180 2.61% 312,913 100% Democratic hold
District 3 175,642 49.30% 167,933 47.14% 12,666 3.56% 356,241 100.0% Democratic gain
District 4 147,246 47.04% 157,676 50.37% 8,123 2.59% 313,045 100.0% Republican hold
Total 664,676 50.49% 612,338 46.51% 39,428 3.00% 1,316,442 100.0%

District 1 edit

2018 Iowa's 1st congressional district election
 
← 2016
2020 →
     
Nominee Abby Finkenauer Rod Blum
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 170,342 153,442
Percentage 51.0% 45.9%

 
County results
Finkenauer:      50–60%
Blum:      40-50%      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Rod Blum
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Abby Finkenauer
Democratic

Incumbent Republican Rod Blum, who had represented the district since 2015, ran for re-election. He was re-elected with 54% of the vote in 2016. The district had a PVI of D+1.

The 1st district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 49% to 45% margin, after voting for Barack Obama with a 56% to 43% margin in 2012.[2]

Republican primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 1st congressional district Republican primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Blum—100%
  •   Blum—≥90%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Rod Blum (incumbent) 14,737 98.9
Republican Write-ins 167 1.1
Total votes 14,904 100.0

Democratic primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
Eliminated in primary edit
  • Thomas Heckroth, former staffer for United States Senator Tom Harkin[4][5]
  • George Ramsey III, former military recruiter[5]
  • Courtney Rowe, engineer and Bernie Sanders delegate at the 2016 state convention[6]
Declined edit

Endorsements edit

Abby Finkenauer
State legislators
Individuals
Thomas Heckroth
State legislators
Individuals
Courtney Rowe
Organizations

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 1st congressional district Democratic primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Finkenauer—80–90%
  •   Finkenauer—70–80%
  •   Finkenauer—60–70%
  •   Finkenauer—50–60%
  •   Heckroth—50–60%
Democratic primary results[14]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Abby Finkenauer 29,745 66.8
Democratic Thomas Heckroth 8,516 19.1
Democratic Courtney Rowe 3,381 7.6
Democratic George Ramsey 2,837 6.4
Democratic Write-ins 50 0.1
Total votes 44,529 100

Libertarian primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
  • Troy Hageman, activist

Green primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Gaff was only 18, meaning he would not have met the U.S. Constitution's required minimum age of 25 to be elected to the House of Representatives.[15]

General election edit

Debates edit

2018 Iowa's 1st congressional district debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Republican Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Rod Blum Abby Finkenauer
1 October 5, 2018 KWWL-TV Ron Steele
Abby Turpin
C-SPAN P P
2 October 16, 2018 KGAN
KXEL
Jeff Stein
Nick Weig
C-SPAN P P

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Rod
Blum (R)
Abby
Finkenauer (D)
Troy
Hageman (L)
Undecided
Emerson College October 29 – November 1, 2018 353 ± 5.5% 41% 53% 4% 2%
NYT Upshot/Siena College October 28–31, 2018 452 ± 4.9% 39% 46% 4% 11%
The Polling Company (R-Blum) October 12–13, 2018 400 ± 4.9% 43% 45% 4% 6%
The Polling Company (R-Blum) October 3–4, 2018 400 ± 4.9% 43% 44% 3% 8%
NYT Upshot/Siena College September 18–20, 2018 502 ± 4.6% 37% 52% 11%
Emerson College September 6–8, 2018 250 ± 6.4% 38% 43% 12%
DCCC (D) February 13–14, 2018 41% 47%
Public Policy Polling (D) February 12–13, 2018 742 ± 3.6% 42% 43% 15%
Public Policy Polling (D-Heckroth) November 2–3, 2017 737 42% 43% 16%
Public Policy Polling (D) October 6–8, 2017 1,093 ± 3.0% 40% 42% 18%

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[16] Lean D (flip) November 5, 2018
Inside Elections[17] Lean D (flip) November 5, 2018
Sabato's Crystal Ball[18] Lean D (flip) November 5, 2018
RCP[19] Lean D (flip) November 5, 2018
Daily Kos[20] Lean D (flip) November 5, 2018
538[21] Safe D (flip) November 7, 2018
CNN[22] Lean D (flip) October 31, 2018
Fox News[23] Lean D (flip) September 21, 2018
Politico[24] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2018

Results edit

Finkenauer went on to flip the district, being one of many victories in swing districts for Democrats in a blue wave election.

Iowa's 1st congressional district, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Abby Finkenauer 170,342 51.0
Republican Rod Blum (incumbent) 153,442 45.9
Libertarian Troy Hageman 10,285 3.1
Write-in 174 0.0
Total votes 334,243 100.0
Democratic gain from Republican

District 2 edit

2018 Iowa's 2nd congressional district election
 
← 2016
2020 →
     
Nominee Dave Loebsack Christopher Peters
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 171,446 133,287
Percentage 54.8% 42.6%

 
County results
Loebsack:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Peters:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Dave Loebsack
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Dave Loebsack
Democratic

Democratic representative Dave Loebsack, who has represented the district since 2007, was reelected to a sixth term with 54% of the vote in 2016. Loebsack ran for reelection.[25]

The 2nd district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 49% to 45% margin, after voting for Barack Obama with a 56% to 43% margin in 2012.[2]

Democratic primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 2nd congressional district Democratic primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Loebsack—100%
  •   Loebsack—≥90%
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dave Loebsack (incumbent) 42,378 99.3
Democratic Write-ins 314 0.7
Total votes 42,692 100.0

Republican primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
  • Christopher Peters, thoracic surgeon and nominee for this seat in 2016[26]
Eliminated in primary edit
  • Ginny Caligiuri, businesswoman (write-in)[27][28]
Declined edit

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 2nd congressional district Republican primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Peters—≥90%
  •   Peters—80–90%
  •   Peters—70–80%
  •   Peters—50–60%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Christopher Peters 18,056 85.7
Republican Ginny Caligiuri (write-in) 2,839 13.5
Republican Other write-ins 181 0.9
Total votes 21,076 100.0

Independents edit

General election edit

Polling edit

Poll source Dates
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Dave
Loebsack (D)
Christopher
Peters (R)
Other Undecided
Emerson College October 29 – November 1, 2018 373 ± 5.3% 53% 40% 2% 5%
Gravis Marketing (R-Peters) September 8–11, 2018 425 ± 4.8% 46% 38% 16%
43% 37% 3%[30] 17%
Emerson College September 6–8, 2018 250 ± 6.4% 45% 21% 28%

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[16] Safe D November 5, 2018
Inside Elections[17] Safe D November 5, 2018
Sabato's Crystal Ball[18] Safe D November 5, 2018
RCP[19] Likely D November 5, 2018
Daily Kos[20] Safe D November 5, 2018
538[21] Safe D November 7, 2018
Fox News[23] Likely D September 28, 2018
CNN[22] Safe D October 31, 2018
Politico[24] Likely D November 2, 2018

Results edit

Iowa's 2nd congressional district, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dave Loebsack (incumbent) 171,446 54.8
Republican Christopher Peters 133,287 42.6
Libertarian Mark Strauss 6,181 2.0
Independent Daniel Clark 1,837 0.6
Write-in 162 0.0
Total votes 312,913 100.0
Democratic hold

District 3 edit

2018 Iowa's 3rd congressional district election
 
← 2016
2020 →
     
Nominee Cindy Axne David Young
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 175,642 167,933
Percentage 49.3% 47.1%

 
County results
Axne:      50–60%
Young:      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

David Young
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Cindy Axne
Democratic

Incumbent Republican David Young, who had represented the district since 2015, ran for re-election. He was re-elected with 53% of the vote in 2016. The district had a PVI of D+1.

The 3rd district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 49% to 45% margin, after voting for Barack Obama with a 51% to 47% margin in 2012.[2]

Republican primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 3rd congressional district Republican primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Young—100%
  •   Young—≥90%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Young (incumbent) 21,712 98.9
Republican Write-ins 234 1.1
Total votes 21,946 100

Democratic primary edit

After Greenfield's campaign manager was fired for forging signatures on nominating papers, she attempted to re-collect the 1,790 signatures necessary to make the ballot, but did not get enough signatures.[31]

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
Eliminated in primary edit
Did not make ballot edit
Withdrew edit
  • Austin Frerick, former Treasury Department economist[38][39]
  • Paul Knupp, psychiatric rehabilitation practitioner and minister,[40] withdrew from the Democratic primary to join the Green party[citation needed]
  • Heather Ryan, nominee for KY-01 in 2008[41][42]
  • Anna Ryon, attorney with the Office of Consumer Advocate[43]
  • Mike Sherzan, businessman and candidate in 2016[44][45]
Declined

Endorsements edit

Austin Frerick (withdrawn)
U.S. Representatives
Pete D'Alessandro
U.S. Senators
State legislators
Labor unions
Organizations
Individuals
  • Sue Dvorsky, former Iowa Democratic Committee Chair[48]
  • Derek Eadon, former Iowa Democratic Committee Chair[48]
  • Ben Jacobs, Bernie Sanders’s 2016 campaign manager[52]

Polling edit

Poll source Dates
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Cindy
Axne
Pete
D'Alessandro
Eddie
Mauro
Undecided
Selzer & Co. May 13–16, 2018 400 ± 4.9% 26% 11% 27% 36%

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 3rd congressional district Democratic primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Axne—70–80%
  •   Axne—60–70%
  •   Axne—50–60%
  •   Mauro—40–50%
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Cindy Axne 32,910 57.8
Democratic Eddie J. Mauro 15,006 26.4
Democratic Pete D'Alessandro 8,874 15.6
Democratic Write-ins 150 0.3
Total votes 56,940 100

General election edit

Debate edit

2018 Iowa's 3rd congressional district debates
No. Date Host Moderator Link Republican Democratic
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
David Young Cindy Axne
1 October 11, 2018 Iowa Public Television David Yepsen C-SPAN P P

Polling edit

Poll source Dates
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
David
Young (R)
Cindy
Axne (D)
Undecided
Emerson College October 29 – November 1, 2018 380 ± 5.3% 45% 46% 3%
NYT Upshot/Siena College October 25–27, 2018 504 ± 4.6% 41% 43% 11%
NYT Upshot/Siena College September 27–30, 2018 502 ± 4.6% 43% 44% 13%
Emerson College September 6–8, 2018 260 ± 6.4% 47% 31% 15%
DCCC (D) September 4–5, 2018 575 ± 4.1% 43% 46% 11%
ALG Research (D-Axne) July 8–12, 2018 500 ± 4.4% 41% 45% 14%
Hypothetical polling
Poll source Dates
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
David
Young (R)
Democratic
candidate
Other Undecided
PPP/Patriot Majority USA October 6–8, 2017 693 ± 3.7% 44% 43%

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[16] Tossup November 5, 2018
Inside Elections[17] Tossup November 5, 2018
Sabato's Crystal Ball[18] Lean D (flip) November 5, 2018
RCP[19] Tossup November 5, 2018
Daily Kos[20] Tossup November 5, 2018
538[21] Lean D (flip) November 7, 2018
CNN[22] Tossup October 31, 2018
Fox News[23] Tossup September 21, 2018
Politico[24] Tossup November 2, 2018

Results edit

Iowa's 3rd congressional district, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Cindy Axne 175,642 49.3
Republican David Young (incumbent) 167,933 47.1
Libertarian Bryan Holder 7,267 2.0
Legal Marijuana Now Mark Elworth Jr. 2,015 0.6
Green Paul Knupp 1,888 0.5
Independent Joe Grandanette 1,301 0.4
Write-in 195 0.1
Total votes 356,241 100.0
Democratic gain from Republican

District 4 edit

2018 Iowa's 4th congressional district election
 
← 2016
2020 →
     
Nominee Steve King J. D. Scholten
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 157,676 147,246
Percentage 50.3% 47.0%

 
County results
King:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Scholten:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Steve King
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Steve King
Republican

Incumbent Republican Steve King, who had represented the district since 2013, and previously represented the 5th district from 2003 to 2013, ran for re-election. He was re-elected with 61% of the vote in 2016. The district had a PVI of R+11.

The 4th district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 61% to 34% margin, after voting for Mitt Romney with a 53% to 45% margin in 2012.[2]

Republican primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
Eliminated in primary edit
  • Cyndi Hanson, educational administrator[54]
Declined edit

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 4th congressional district Republican primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   King—80–90%
  •   King—70–80%
  •   King—60–70%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve King (incumbent) 28,053 74.7
Republican Cyndi Hanson 9,437 25.1
Republican Write-ins 44 0.1
Total votes 37,534 100

Democratic primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit
Eliminated in primary edit
Withdrawn edit
Declined edit

Results edit

 
2018 Iowa's 4th congressional district Democratic primary results by county:
Map legend
  •   Scholten—70–80%
  •   Scholten—60–70%
  •   Scholten—50–60%
  •   Scholten—40–50%
  •   Scholten—30–40%
  •   Jacobsen—40–50%
  •   Jacobsen—50–60%
  •   Jacobsen—60–70%
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic J. D. Scholten 14,733 51.3
Democratic Leann Jacobsen 9,176 31.9
Democratic John Paschen 4,806 16.7
Democratic Write-ins 29 0.1
Total votes 28,744 100.0

General election edit

King declined to debate Scholten during the general election campaign.[63][64]

Endorsements edit

J. D. Scholten (D)
U.S. Senators

Polling edit

Poll source Dates
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Steve
King (R)
J.D.
Scholten (D)
Other Undecided
NYT Upshot/Siena College October 31 – November 4, 2018 423 ± 5.0% 47% 42% 1% 9%
Emerson College October 29 – November 1, 2018 356 ± 5.5% 51% 42% 4%
Change Research (D) October 27–29, 2018 631 45% 44%
WPA Intelligence (R-King) October 22–24, 2018 401 ± 4.9% 52% 34% 3% 11%
Expedition Strategies (D-Scholten) September 5–9, 2018 380 ± 5.0% 43% 37%
Emerson College September 6–8, 2018 240 ± 6.5% 41% 31% 16%

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[16] Lean R November 5, 2018
Inside Elections[17] Likely R November 5, 2018
Sabato's Crystal Ball[18] Lean R November 5, 2018
RCP[19] Lean R November 5, 2018
Daily Kos[20] Likely R November 5, 2018
538[21] Likely R November 7, 2018
Fox News[23] Lean R September 21, 2018
CNN[22] Likely R October 31, 2018
Politico[24] Likely R November 2, 2018

Results edit

King won by the slimmest margin of victory in his congressional electoral career.[66]

Iowa's 4th congressional district, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve King (incumbent) 157,676 50.3
Democratic J. D. Scholten 147,246 47.0
Libertarian Charles Aldrich 6,161 2.0
Independent Edward Peterson 1,962 0.6
Write-in 206 0.0
Total votes 313,256 100.0
Republican hold

References edit

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  6. ^ James Q. Lynch (May 30, 2017). "Cedar Rapids engineer Courtney Rowe joins 1st District Democratic race". The Gazette. Retrieved May 31, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c "Democrats set to target Blum in IA-01; GOP will go after Loebsack in IA-02". Bleeding Heartland. February 3, 2017. Retrieved February 3, 2017.
  8. ^ Steele, Ron (September 21, 2017). . KWWL. Archived from the original on September 22, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
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  27. ^ "Ginny Caligiuri announces bid for Congress in Iowa's 2nd District". Des Moines Register.
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  30. ^ Daniel Clark (I) with 2%, Mark Strauss (L) with 1%
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  54. ^ Katie Copple (December 6, 2017). "Longtime Sioux Citian Dr. Cyndi Hanson announces House run against incumbent Steve King". siouxlandnews.com. Siouxland News. Retrieved August 10, 2023.
  55. ^ Hayworth, Bret (June 18, 2016). "Content with primary outcome, Bertrand could challenge King again". Sioux City Journal. Retrieved January 18, 2017.
  56. ^ Noble, Jason (July 25, 2017). "Former Sioux City baseball player J.D. Scholten to run for Congress in Iowa's 4th". The Des Moines Register. Retrieved July 25, 2017.
  57. ^ Cauthron, Randy M. (August 10, 2017). "'Anybody with a strong vision can win here'". Spencer Daily Reporter. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
  58. ^ Cannon, Austin (September 18, 2017). "Ames physician to run for Congress". Ames Tribune. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  59. ^ Petroski, William (August 21, 2017). "Dahl to seek Democratic nomination for Iowa's 4th District Congress seat". The Des Moines Register. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  60. ^ "Kim Weaver withdraws her candidacy in Iowa's 4th District race for Congress". Des Moines Register. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  61. ^ Rynard, Pat (April 26, 2017). "Dirk Deam Passes On 4th District, Fred Hubbell Rumors Heat Up". Iowa Starting Line. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  62. ^ Hayworth, Bret (May 1, 2017). "Sioux City's Hall mulls run for governor". Sioux City Journal. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  63. ^ "Is Steve King in trouble? Democrat J.D. Scholten bets hustle and grit are keys to upset". Des Moines Register. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  64. ^ "No King versus Scholten debate in Iowa's fourth district - Radio Iowa". Radio Iowa. October 17, 2018. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  65. ^ "Why Jeff Flake is backing an Iowa Democrat over Republican Steve King".
  66. ^ "Steve King, scourge of immigrants, squeaks out a win". www.yahoo.com. November 7, 2018.

External links edit

Official campaign websites for first district candidates
  • Rod Blum (R) for Congress
  • Abby Finkenauer (D) for Congress
Official campaign websites for second district candidates
  • Daniel Clark (G) for Congress
  • Dave Loebsack (D) for Congress
  • Dr. Christopher Peters (R) for Congress
Official campaign websites for third district candidates
  • David Young (R) for Congress
  • Cindy Axne (D) for Congress
Official campaign websites for fourth district candidates
  • Steve King (R) for Congress
  • JD Scholten (D) for Congress

2018, united, states, house, representatives, elections, iowa, were, held, november, 2018, elect, four, representatives, from, state, iowa, from, each, state, four, congressional, districts, elections, coincided, with, gubernatorial, election, well, other, ele. The 2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa were held on November 6 2018 to elect the four U S representatives from the State of Iowa one from each of the state s four congressional districts The elections coincided with the gubernatorial election as well as other elections to the House of Representatives elections to the United States Senate and various state and local elections The state congressional delegation flipped from a 3 1 Republican majority to a 3 1 Democratic majority The Democrats had last won the majority of Iowa s seats in the 2010 elections 2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa 2016 November 6 2018 2018 11 06 2020 All 4 Iowa seats to the United States House of Representatives Majority party Minority party Party Democratic Republican Last election 1 3 Seats won 3 1 Seat change 2 2 Popular vote 664 676 612 338 Percentage 50 5 46 5 Swing 6 05 7 11 Result by party gainsElection results by districtElection results by county Democratic hold Democratic gain Republican hold Democratic 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Republican 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Statewide 1 2 By district 2 District 1 2 1 Republican primary 2 1 1 Candidates 2 1 1 1 Nominee 2 1 2 Results 2 2 Democratic primary 2 2 1 Candidates 2 2 1 1 Nominee 2 2 1 2 Eliminated in primary 2 2 1 3 Declined 2 2 2 Endorsements 2 2 3 Results 2 3 Libertarian primary 2 3 1 Candidates 2 3 1 1 Nominee 2 4 Green primary 2 4 1 Candidates 2 4 1 1 Nominee 2 5 General election 2 5 1 Debates 2 5 2 Polling 2 5 3 Predictions 2 5 4 Results 3 District 2 3 1 Democratic primary 3 1 1 Candidates 3 1 1 1 Nominee 3 1 2 Results 3 2 Republican primary 3 2 1 Candidates 3 2 1 1 Nominee 3 2 1 2 Eliminated in primary 3 2 1 3 Declined 3 2 2 Results 3 3 Independents 3 4 General election 3 4 1 Polling 3 4 2 Predictions 3 4 3 Results 4 District 3 4 1 Republican primary 4 1 1 Candidates 4 1 1 1 Nominee 4 1 2 Results 4 2 Democratic primary 4 2 1 Candidates 4 2 1 1 Nominee 4 2 1 2 Eliminated in primary 4 2 1 3 Did not make ballot 4 2 1 4 Withdrew 4 2 2 Endorsements 4 2 3 Polling 4 2 4 Results 4 3 General election 4 3 1 Debate 4 3 2 Polling 4 3 3 Predictions 4 3 4 Results 5 District 4 5 1 Republican primary 5 1 1 Candidates 5 1 1 1 Nominee 5 1 1 2 Eliminated in primary 5 1 1 3 Declined 5 1 2 Results 5 2 Democratic primary 5 2 1 Candidates 5 2 1 1 Nominee 5 2 1 2 Eliminated in primary 5 2 1 3 Withdrawn 5 2 1 4 Declined 5 2 2 Results 5 3 General election 5 3 1 Endorsements 5 3 2 Polling 5 3 3 Predictions 5 3 4 Results 6 References 7 External linksOverview editStatewide edit Party Candidates Votes Seats No No Democratic 4 664 676 50 48 3 nbsp 2 75 00 Republican 4 612 338 46 51 1 nbsp 2 25 00 Libertarian 4 29 894 2 27 0 nbsp 0 00 Independent 3 5 100 0 39 0 nbsp 0 00 Legal Marijuana Now 1 2 015 0 15 0 nbsp 0 00 Green 1 1 888 0 14 0 nbsp 0 00 Write in 732 0 06 0 nbsp 0 00 Total 17 1 316 643 100 00 4 nbsp 100 00 Popular vote Democratic 50 48 Republican 46 51 Libertarian 2 27 Other 0 74 House seats Democratic 75 00 Republican 25 00 By district edit Results of the 2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa by district 1 District Democratic Republican Others Total Result Votes Votes Votes Votes District 1 170 342 50 96 153 442 45 91 10 459 3 13 334 243 100 0 Democratic gain District 2 171 446 54 79 133 287 42 60 8 180 2 61 312 913 100 Democratic hold District 3 175 642 49 30 167 933 47 14 12 666 3 56 356 241 100 0 Democratic gain District 4 147 246 47 04 157 676 50 37 8 123 2 59 313 045 100 0 Republican hold Total 664 676 50 49 612 338 46 51 39 428 3 00 1 316 442 100 0 District 1 edit2018 Iowa s 1st congressional district election nbsp 20162020 nbsp nbsp Nominee Abby Finkenauer Rod Blum Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 170 342 153 442 Percentage 51 0 45 9 nbsp County resultsFinkenauer 50 60 Blum 40 50 50 60 U S Representative before election Rod Blum Republican Elected U S Representative Abby Finkenauer Democratic See also Iowa s 1st congressional district Incumbent Republican Rod Blum who had represented the district since 2015 ran for re election He was re elected with 54 of the vote in 2016 The district had a PVI of D 1 The 1st district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 49 to 45 margin after voting for Barack Obama with a 56 to 43 margin in 2012 2 Republican primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Rod Blum incumbent U S Representative Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 1st congressional district Republican primary results by county Map legend Blum 100 Blum 90 Republican primary results Party Candidate Votes Republican Rod Blum incumbent 14 737 98 9 Republican Write ins 167 1 1 Total votes 14 904 100 0 Democratic primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Abby Finkenauer state representative 3 Eliminated in primary edit Thomas Heckroth former staffer for United States Senator Tom Harkin 4 5 George Ramsey III former military recruiter 5 Courtney Rowe engineer and Bernie Sanders delegate at the 2016 state convention 6 Declined edit Jeff Danielson state senator 7 8 Liz Mathis state senator 9 Brent Oleson Linn County Supervisor 7 10 Steve Sodders former state senator 11 Stacey Walker Linn County Supervisor 4 10 Endorsements edit Abby FinkenauerState legislators Ako Abdul Samad state representative 12 Liz Bennett state representative 12 Timi Brown Powers state representative 12 Pam Jochum State Senator and former President of the Iowa Senate 12 Tyler Olson former state representative 12 Janet Petersen state senator 12 Kirsten Running Marquardt state representative 12 Ras Smith state representative 12 Todd Taylor state representative 12 Individuals Sue Dvorsky former Iowa Democratic Party chair 12 Thomas HeckrothState legislators Ro Foege former state representative 13 Brian Schoenjahn former state senator 13 Steve Sodders former state senator 13 Individuals Brent Oleson Linn County Supervisor 13 10 Peggy Sherets Oelwein Mayor 13 Courtney RoweOrganizations Justice Democrats Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 1st congressional district Democratic primary results by county Map legend Finkenauer 80 90 Finkenauer 70 80 Finkenauer 60 70 Finkenauer 50 60 Heckroth 50 60 Democratic primary results 14 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Abby Finkenauer 29 745 66 8 Democratic Thomas Heckroth 8 516 19 1 Democratic Courtney Rowe 3 381 7 6 Democratic George Ramsey 2 837 6 4 Democratic Write ins 50 0 1 Total votes 44 529 100 Libertarian primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Troy Hageman activist Green primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Henry Gaff co chair of the Iowa Green Party 15 Gaff was only 18 meaning he would not have met the U S Constitution s required minimum age of 25 to be elected to the House of Representatives 15 General election edit Debates edit 2018 Iowa s 1st congressional district debates No Date Host Moderator Link Republican Democratic Key P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn Rod Blum Abby Finkenauer 1 October 5 2018 KWWL TV Ron SteeleAbby Turpin C SPAN P P 2 October 16 2018 KGANKXEL Jeff SteinNick Weig C SPAN P P Polling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror RodBlum R AbbyFinkenauer D TroyHageman L Undecided Emerson College October 29 November 1 2018 353 5 5 41 53 4 2 NYT Upshot Siena College October 28 31 2018 452 4 9 39 46 4 11 The Polling Company R Blum October 12 13 2018 400 4 9 43 45 4 6 The Polling Company R Blum October 3 4 2018 400 4 9 43 44 3 8 NYT Upshot Siena College September 18 20 2018 502 4 6 37 52 11 Emerson College September 6 8 2018 250 6 4 38 43 12 DCCC D February 13 14 2018 41 47 Public Policy Polling D February 12 13 2018 742 3 6 42 43 15 Public Policy Polling D Heckroth November 2 3 2017 737 42 43 16 Public Policy Polling D October 6 8 2017 1 093 3 0 40 42 18 Predictions edit Source Ranking As of The Cook Political Report 16 Lean D flip November 5 2018 Inside Elections 17 Lean D flip November 5 2018 Sabato s Crystal Ball 18 Lean D flip November 5 2018 RCP 19 Lean D flip November 5 2018 Daily Kos 20 Lean D flip November 5 2018 538 21 Safe D flip November 7 2018 CNN 22 Lean D flip October 31 2018 Fox News 23 Lean D flip September 21 2018 Politico 24 Lean D flip November 2 2018 Results edit Finkenauer went on to flip the district being one of many victories in swing districts for Democrats in a blue wave election Iowa s 1st congressional district 2018 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Abby Finkenauer 170 342 51 0 Republican Rod Blum incumbent 153 442 45 9 Libertarian Troy Hageman 10 285 3 1 Write in 174 0 0 Total votes 334 243 100 0 Democratic gain from RepublicanDistrict 2 edit2018 Iowa s 2nd congressional district election nbsp 20162020 nbsp nbsp Nominee Dave Loebsack Christopher Peters Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 171 446 133 287 Percentage 54 8 42 6 nbsp County resultsLoebsack 50 60 60 70 70 80 Peters 40 50 50 60 60 70 U S Representative before election Dave Loebsack Democratic Elected U S Representative Dave Loebsack Democratic See also Iowa s 2nd congressional district Democratic representative Dave Loebsack who has represented the district since 2007 was reelected to a sixth term with 54 of the vote in 2016 Loebsack ran for reelection 25 The 2nd district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 49 to 45 margin after voting for Barack Obama with a 56 to 43 margin in 2012 2 Democratic primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Dave Loebsack incumbent U S Representative Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 2nd congressional district Democratic primary results by county Map legend Loebsack 100 Loebsack 90 Democratic primary results Party Candidate Votes Democratic Dave Loebsack incumbent 42 378 99 3 Democratic Write ins 314 0 7 Total votes 42 692 100 0 Republican primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Christopher Peters thoracic surgeon and nominee for this seat in 2016 26 Eliminated in primary edit Ginny Caligiuri businesswoman write in 27 28 Declined edit Bobby Kaufmann state representative 7 Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 2nd congressional district Republican primary results by county Map legend Peters 90 Peters 80 90 Peters 70 80 Peters 50 60 Republican primary results Party Candidate Votes Republican Christopher Peters 18 056 85 7 Republican Ginny Caligiuri write in 2 839 13 5 Republican Other write ins 181 0 9 Total votes 21 076 100 0 Independents edit Daniel Clark 29 General election edit Polling edit Poll source Datesadministered Samplesize Margin oferror DaveLoebsack D ChristopherPeters R Other Undecided Emerson College October 29 November 1 2018 373 5 3 53 40 2 5 Gravis Marketing R Peters September 8 11 2018 425 4 8 46 38 16 43 37 3 30 17 Emerson College September 6 8 2018 250 6 4 45 21 28 Predictions edit Source Ranking As of The Cook Political Report 16 Safe D November 5 2018 Inside Elections 17 Safe D November 5 2018 Sabato s Crystal Ball 18 Safe D November 5 2018 RCP 19 Likely D November 5 2018 Daily Kos 20 Safe D November 5 2018 538 21 Safe D November 7 2018 Fox News 23 Likely D September 28 2018 CNN 22 Safe D October 31 2018 Politico 24 Likely D November 2 2018 Results edit Iowa s 2nd congressional district 2018 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Dave Loebsack incumbent 171 446 54 8 Republican Christopher Peters 133 287 42 6 Libertarian Mark Strauss 6 181 2 0 Independent Daniel Clark 1 837 0 6 Write in 162 0 0 Total votes 312 913 100 0 Democratic holdDistrict 3 edit2018 Iowa s 3rd congressional district election nbsp 20162020 nbsp nbsp Nominee Cindy Axne David Young Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 175 642 167 933 Percentage 49 3 47 1 nbsp County resultsAxne 50 60 Young 50 60 60 70 U S Representative before election David Young Republican Elected U S Representative Cindy Axne Democratic See also Iowa s 3rd congressional district Incumbent Republican David Young who had represented the district since 2015 ran for re election He was re elected with 53 of the vote in 2016 The district had a PVI of D 1 The 3rd district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 49 to 45 margin after voting for Barack Obama with a 51 to 47 margin in 2012 2 Republican primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit David Young incumbent U S Representative Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 3rd congressional district Republican primary results by county Map legend Young 100 Young 90 Republican primary results Party Candidate Votes Republican David Young incumbent 21 712 98 9 Republican Write ins 234 1 1 Total votes 21 946 100 Democratic primary edit After Greenfield s campaign manager was fired for forging signatures on nominating papers she attempted to re collect the 1 790 signatures necessary to make the ballot but did not get enough signatures 31 Candidates edit Nominee edit Cindy Axne businesswoman 32 33 Eliminated in primary edit Pete D Alessandro political consultant 34 35 33 Eddie Mauro activist 36 33 Did not make ballot edit Theresa Greenfield real estate executive 37 Withdrew edit Austin Frerick former Treasury Department economist 38 39 Paul Knupp psychiatric rehabilitation practitioner and minister 40 withdrew from the Democratic primary to join the Green party citation needed Heather Ryan nominee for KY 01 in 2008 41 42 Anna Ryon attorney with the Office of Consumer Advocate 43 Mike Sherzan businessman and candidate in 2016 44 45 Declined John Norris former chief of staff to Governor Tom Vilsack former Federal Energy Regulatory Commission member and nominee for IA 04 in 2002 running for Governor 45 Endorsements edit Austin Frerick withdrawn U S Representatives Ro Khanna U S Representative CA 17 38 Pete D AlessandroU S Senators Bernie Sanders U S Senator from Vermont 46 47 State legislators Marti Anderson state representative 48 Brian Meyer state representative 48 Labor unions National Nurses United 49 Organizations Justice Democrats Our Revolution 50 The People for Bernie Sanders 51 Individuals Sue Dvorsky former Iowa Democratic Committee Chair 48 Derek Eadon former Iowa Democratic Committee Chair 48 Ben Jacobs Bernie Sanders s 2016 campaign manager 52 Polling edit Poll source Datesadministered Samplesize Margin oferror CindyAxne PeteD Alessandro EddieMauro Undecided Selzer amp Co May 13 16 2018 400 4 9 26 11 27 36 Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 3rd congressional district Democratic primary results by county Map legend Axne 70 80 Axne 60 70 Axne 50 60 Mauro 40 50 Democratic primary results Party Candidate Votes Democratic Cindy Axne 32 910 57 8 Democratic Eddie J Mauro 15 006 26 4 Democratic Pete D Alessandro 8 874 15 6 Democratic Write ins 150 0 3 Total votes 56 940 100 General election edit Debate edit 2018 Iowa s 3rd congressional district debates No Date Host Moderator Link Republican Democratic Key P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W Withdrawn David Young Cindy Axne 1 October 11 2018 Iowa Public Television David Yepsen C SPAN P P Polling edit Poll source Datesadministered Samplesize Margin oferror DavidYoung R CindyAxne D Undecided Emerson College October 29 November 1 2018 380 5 3 45 46 3 NYT Upshot Siena College October 25 27 2018 504 4 6 41 43 11 NYT Upshot Siena College September 27 30 2018 502 4 6 43 44 13 Emerson College September 6 8 2018 260 6 4 47 31 15 DCCC D September 4 5 2018 575 4 1 43 46 11 ALG Research D Axne July 8 12 2018 500 4 4 41 45 14 Hypothetical pollingPoll source Datesadministered Samplesize Margin oferror DavidYoung R Democraticcandidate Other Undecided PPP Patriot Majority USA October 6 8 2017 693 3 7 44 43 Predictions edit Source Ranking As of The Cook Political Report 16 Tossup November 5 2018 Inside Elections 17 Tossup November 5 2018 Sabato s Crystal Ball 18 Lean D flip November 5 2018 RCP 19 Tossup November 5 2018 Daily Kos 20 Tossup November 5 2018 538 21 Lean D flip November 7 2018 CNN 22 Tossup October 31 2018 Fox News 23 Tossup September 21 2018 Politico 24 Tossup November 2 2018 Results edit Iowa s 3rd congressional district 2018 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Cindy Axne 175 642 49 3 Republican David Young incumbent 167 933 47 1 Libertarian Bryan Holder 7 267 2 0 Legal Marijuana Now Mark Elworth Jr 2 015 0 6 Green Paul Knupp 1 888 0 5 Independent Joe Grandanette 1 301 0 4 Write in 195 0 1 Total votes 356 241 100 0 Democratic gain from RepublicanDistrict 4 edit2018 Iowa s 4th congressional district election nbsp 20162020 nbsp nbsp Nominee Steve King J D Scholten Party Republican Democratic Popular vote 157 676 147 246 Percentage 50 3 47 0 nbsp County resultsKing 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Scholten 40 50 50 60 60 70 U S Representative before election Steve King Republican Elected U S Representative Steve King Republican See also Iowa s 4th congressional district Incumbent Republican Steve King who had represented the district since 2013 and previously represented the 5th district from 2003 to 2013 ran for re election He was re elected with 61 of the vote in 2016 The district had a PVI of R 11 The 4th district went for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election with a 61 to 34 margin after voting for Mitt Romney with a 53 to 45 margin in 2012 2 Republican primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit Steve King incumbent U S Representative 53 Eliminated in primary edit Cyndi Hanson educational administrator 54 Declined edit Rick Bertrand state senator and candidate for this seat in 2016 55 Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 4th congressional district Republican primary results by county Map legend King 80 90 King 70 80 King 60 70 Republican primary results Party Candidate Votes Republican Steve King incumbent 28 053 74 7 Republican Cyndi Hanson 9 437 25 1 Republican Write ins 44 0 1 Total votes 37 534 100 Democratic primary edit Candidates edit Nominee edit J D Scholten paralegal and former professional baseball player 56 Eliminated in primary edit Leann Jacobsen Spencer City Councilwoman 57 John Paschen physician 58 Withdrawn edit Paul Dahl candidate for Governor in 2014 59 Kim Weaver nominee in 2016 60 Declined edit Dirk Deam Iowa State University political science professor 61 Chris Hall state representative 62 Results edit nbsp 2018 Iowa s 4th congressional district Democratic primary results by county Map legend Scholten 70 80 Scholten 60 70 Scholten 50 60 Scholten 40 50 Scholten 30 40 Jacobsen 40 50 Jacobsen 50 60 Jacobsen 60 70 Democratic primary results Party Candidate Votes Democratic J D Scholten 14 733 51 3 Democratic Leann Jacobsen 9 176 31 9 Democratic John Paschen 4 806 16 7 Democratic Write ins 29 0 1 Total votes 28 744 100 0 General election edit King declined to debate Scholten during the general election campaign 63 64 Endorsements edit J D Scholten D U S Senators Jeff Flake U S Senator from Arizona Republican 65 Polling edit Poll source Datesadministered Samplesize Margin oferror SteveKing R J D Scholten D Other Undecided NYT Upshot Siena College October 31 November 4 2018 423 5 0 47 42 1 9 Emerson College October 29 November 1 2018 356 5 5 51 42 4 Change Research D October 27 29 2018 631 45 44 WPA Intelligence R King October 22 24 2018 401 4 9 52 34 3 11 Expedition Strategies D Scholten September 5 9 2018 380 5 0 43 37 Emerson College September 6 8 2018 240 6 5 41 31 16 Predictions edit Source Ranking As of The Cook Political Report 16 Lean R November 5 2018 Inside Elections 17 Likely R November 5 2018 Sabato s Crystal Ball 18 Lean R November 5 2018 RCP 19 Lean R November 5 2018 Daily Kos 20 Likely R November 5 2018 538 21 Likely R November 7 2018 Fox News 23 Lean R September 21 2018 CNN 22 Likely R October 31 2018 Politico 24 Likely R November 2 2018 Results edit King won by the slimmest margin of victory in his congressional electoral career 66 Iowa s 4th congressional district 2018 Party Candidate Votes Republican Steve King incumbent 157 676 50 3 Democratic J D Scholten 147 246 47 0 Libertarian Charles Aldrich 6 161 2 0 Independent Edward Peterson 1 962 0 6 Write in 206 0 0 Total votes 313 256 100 0 Republican holdReferences edit Johnson Cheryl L February 28 2019 Statistics of the Congressional Election of November 6 2018 Clerk of the U S House of Representatives Retrieved April 27 2019 a b c d Morning Digest Facing reality Pat McCrory finally concedes North Carolina governor s race Daily Kos Elections December 6 2016 Retrieved January 18 2017 Pat Rynard May 3 2017 ABBY FINKENAUER LAUNCHES CONGRESSIONAL BID ON WORKING CLASS MESSAGE Iowa Starting Line Retrieved May 3 2017 a b Stacey Walker may run for Congress in IA 01 Bleeding Heartland June 13 2017 Retrieved June 13 2017 a b James Q Lynch July 10 2017 Thomas Heckroth joins field of candidates seeking to unseat U S Rep Rod Blum Mason City Globe Gazette Retrieved July 10 2017 James Q Lynch May 30 2017 Cedar Rapids engineer Courtney Rowe joins 1st District Democratic race The Gazette Retrieved May 31 2017 a b c Democrats set to target Blum in IA 01 GOP will go after Loebsack in IA 02 Bleeding Heartland February 3 2017 Retrieved February 3 2017 Steele Ron September 21 2017 Senator Danielson says he will not run for Congress in 2018 KWWL Archived from the original on September 22 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 Lynch James Q January 18 2017 Mathis rules out running for Iowa governor in 2018 The Gazette Retrieved January 18 2017 a b c James Q Lynch July 17 2017 Linn County Supervisor Stacy Walker won t run for U S House Muscatine Journal Retrieved July 27 2017 Steve Sodders rules out running for Congress in IA 01 Bleeding Heartland April 17 2017 Retrieved May 3 2017 a b c d e f g h i j Team Abby is Growing Abby Finkenauer for Congress May 12 2017 Retrieved May 12 2017 a b c d e Join Team Heckroth Thomas Heckroth for Congress Archived from the original on July 24 2017 Retrieved July 27 2017 Primary election 2018 canvass summary PDF sos iowa gov Retrieved March 6 2023 a b Crippes Christinia Green Party candidate announces 1st District bid Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier Retrieved September 14 2017 a b c d 2018 House Race Ratings Cook Political Report Retrieved October 30 2018 a b c d 2018 House Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved November 5 2018 a b c d 2018 House Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved November 5 2018 a b c d Battle for the House 2018 RCP Retrieved November 5 2018 a b c d Daily Kos Elections 2018 race ratings Daily Kos Retrieved November 5 2018 permanent dead link a b c d Silver Nate August 16 2018 2018 House Forecast FiveThirtyEight Retrieved November 6 2018 a b c d CNN s 2018 Race Ratings cnn com Turner Broadcasting System Archived from the original on October 31 2018 Retrieved July 30 2023 a b c d Fox News Midterms 2018 America s Election HQ Fox News Retrieved August 18 2018 a b c d Who wins 2018 Predictions for Every House amp Senate Election POLITICO Retrieved September 7 2018 Dolmage David August 3 2017 Loebsack lays out plan for 2018 Newton Daily News Retrieved August 3 2017 Christopher Peters announces run for U S Congress daily iowan Com 2017 07 19 Ginny Caligiuri announces bid for Congress in Iowa s 2nd District Des Moines Register Iowa Starting Line on Twitter Retrieved August 29 2018 danielclarkforcongress com danielclarkforcongress Daniel Clark I with 2 Mark Strauss L with 1 Democratic Candidate Theresa Greenfield Fails to Make it on Primary Ballot whotv com March 19 2018 Retrieved March 19 2018 Pfannenstiel Brianne June 2 2017 Cynthia Axne announces candidacy challenging David Young The Des Moines Register Retrieved June 2 2017 a b c Candidate List PDF sos iowa gov Retrieved March 6 2023 Democrat Pete D Alessando exploring congressional run in Iowa s 3rd District The Des Moines Register April 25 2017 Retrieved August 26 2017 Pfannenstiel Brianne Ufheil Angela August 26 2017 Democrat Pete D Alessandro will challenge David Young for Congress The Des Moines Register Retrieved August 27 2017 Noble Jason July 27 2017 Eddie Mauro exploring run for Congress in Iowa s 3rd District The Des Moines Register Retrieved July 28 2017 Noble Jason July 5 2017 Real estate executive Theresa Greenfield joins 3rd District race for Congress The Des Moines Register Retrieved July 5 2017 a b Noble Jason August 4 2017 Democrat Austin Frerick is running for Congress in Iowa s 3rd The Des Moines Register Retrieved August 8 2017 Iowa Congressional Candidate Drops Out of Race whotv com March 17 2018 Background on Paul Knupp another Democratic candidate in IA 03 Bleeding Heartland June 12 2017 Retrieved June 13 2017 Heather Ryan launches untraditional Democratic campaign in IA 03 Bleeding Heartland June 7 2017 Retrieved June 7 2017 Rynard Pat July 5 2017 3rd District Candidate Heather Ryan s Disturbing Past Comments Videos Iowa Starting Line Retrieved June 7 2017 IA 03 Democrat Anna Ryon is thinking about it Bleeding Heartland February 1 2017 Retrieved February 2 2017 Obradovich Katie March 1 2017 Democrat Mike Sherzan to run for Congress in Iowa s 3rd District The Des Moines Register Retrieved March 1 2017 a b IA 03 Mike Sherzan is out Pete D Alessandro to decide soon Bleeding Heartland April 13 2017 Retrieved June 16 2017 Bernie Sanders endorses Pete D Alessandro in Iowa s 3rd District race The Des Moines Register Retrieved August 29 2018 Bernie s with Pete Add your name Retrieved August 29 2018 a b c d Who s endorsed the seven Democrats running for Congress in IA 03 Bleeding Heartland January 11 2018 Retrieved August 29 2018 National Nurses United Endorses Cathy Glasson for Governor and Pete D Alessandro for Congress National Nurses United December 8 2017 Retrieved August 29 2018 Pete D Alessandro Our Revolution Retrieved August 29 2018 The People For Bernie Sanders www facebook com Retrieved August 29 2018 Ben Jacobs on Twitter Retrieved August 29 2018 Koss Emily June 2 2017 Steve King Running for Another Term in Congress WHO DT Retrieved June 2 2017 Katie Copple December 6 2017 Longtime Sioux Citian Dr Cyndi Hanson announces House run against incumbent Steve King siouxlandnews com Siouxland News Retrieved August 10 2023 Hayworth Bret June 18 2016 Content with primary outcome Bertrand could challenge King again Sioux City Journal Retrieved January 18 2017 Noble Jason July 25 2017 Former Sioux City baseball player J D Scholten to run for Congress in Iowa s 4th The Des Moines Register Retrieved July 25 2017 Cauthron Randy M August 10 2017 Anybody with a strong vision can win here Spencer Daily Reporter Retrieved August 10 2017 Cannon Austin September 18 2017 Ames physician to run for Congress Ames Tribune Retrieved September 21 2017 Petroski William August 21 2017 Dahl to seek Democratic nomination for Iowa s 4th District Congress seat The Des Moines Register Retrieved August 21 2017 Kim Weaver withdraws her candidacy in Iowa s 4th District race for Congress Des Moines Register Retrieved August 17 2017 Rynard Pat April 26 2017 Dirk Deam Passes On 4th District Fred Hubbell Rumors Heat Up Iowa Starting Line Retrieved August 17 2017 Hayworth Bret May 1 2017 Sioux City s Hall mulls run for governor Sioux City Journal Retrieved May 12 2017 Is Steve King in trouble Democrat J D Scholten bets hustle and grit are keys to upset Des Moines Register Retrieved October 28 2018 No King versus Scholten debate in Iowa s fourth district Radio Iowa Radio Iowa October 17 2018 Retrieved October 28 2018 Why Jeff Flake is backing an Iowa Democrat over Republican Steve King Steve King scourge of immigrants squeaks out a win www yahoo com November 7 2018 External links editCandidates at Vote Smart Candidates at Ballotpedia Campaign finance at FEC Campaign finance at OpenSecrets Official campaign websites for first district candidates Rod Blum R for Congress Abby Finkenauer D for Congress Official campaign websites for second district candidates Daniel Clark G for Congress Dave Loebsack D for Congress Dr Christopher Peters R for Congress Official campaign websites for third district candidates David Young R for Congress Cindy Axne D for Congress Official campaign websites for fourth district candidates Steve King R for Congress JD Scholten D for Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2018 United States House of Representatives elections in Iowa amp oldid 1215626177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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