2011 Virginia House of Delegates election

2011 Virginia House of Delegates elections

← 2009 November 8, 2011 2013 →

All 100 seats in the Virginia House of Delegates
51 seats needed for a majority
Turnout28.6% Decrease 11.8[1]
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Bill Howell Ward Armstrong
(lost re-election)
Party Republican Democratic
Leader since January 8, 2003 February 24, 2007
Leader's seat 28th 9th
Last election 59 39
Seats won 67 32
Seat change Increase 8 Decrease 7
Popular vote 762,993 438,174
Percentage 59.8% 34.4%
Swing Increase 3.0% Decrease 1.8%

Results:
     Republican hold      Republican gain
     Democratic hold      Independent hold

Speaker before election

Bill Howell
Republican

Elected Speaker

Bill Howell
Republican

The Virginia House of Delegates election of 2011 was held on Tuesday, November 8. Before the election, the House of Delegates consisted of 58 Republicans, 39 Democrats, 2 Independents, with one vacant seat previously held by a Republican (Glenn Oder of the 94th district, who resigned in August 2011). Redistricting eliminated three seats: Southwestern Virginia's 2nd district, the Martinsville-area 10th district, and the Norfolk-based 87th district. These three seats were moved to Northern Virginia. Republicans gained seven seats from the Democrats and one seat from a retiring independent, making the House's composition 67 Republicans, 32 Democrats, and 1 Independent.

Thirteen incumbents chose not to seek another term in the House: Bud Phillips (D-2), Bill Carrico (R-5), Dave Nutter (R-7), Jim Shuler (D-12), Bill Cleaveland (R-17), Clay Athey (R-18), Adam Ebbin (D-49), Bill Janis (R-56), Watkins Abbitt, Jr. (I-59), Paula Miller (D-87), Glenn Oder (R-94), Harvey Morgan (R-98), and Albert C. Pollard (R-99).

Three Delegates retired in order to seek State Senate seats: Bill Carrico (R-5) opted to run for the open 40th district seat, Dave Nutter (R-7) decided to challenge incumbent Democratic Senator John Edwards in the 21st district, and Adam Ebbin (D-49) chose to run for the open 30th district seat. Del. Ward Armstrong (D-10) decided to challenge Republican Del. Charles Poindexter in the 9th district rather than retire.[2]

  1. ^ "Registration/Turnout Statistics". Virginia Department of Elections. Archived from the original on October 18, 2018. Retrieved January 26, 2018.
  2. ^ 2011 Official General Assembly Candidates List[permanent dead link]

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search