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The 2026 Wisconsin Senate election is scheduled to be held on Tuesday, November 3, 2026. Seventeen of the 33 seats in the Wisconsin Senate are up for election—the odd-numbered districts. This election will be significantly affected by the legislative maps drawn as a result of the Wisconsin Supreme Court decision in Clarke v.
April 1, 2025: 2025 Wisconsin Spring election: 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court election. An amendment to the Wisconsin Constitution will appear on the ballot relating to voter ID requirements. April 7, 2026: 2026 Wisconsin Spring election. November 3, 2026: 2026 United States general election: 2026 Wisconsin gubernatorial election.
All 33 Class 2 Senate seats and 2 Class 3 seats are up for election in 2026; Class 2 currently consists of 20 Republicans and 13 Democrats. If vacancies occur in Class 1 or 3 Senate seats, that state might require a special election to take place during the 119th Congress, possibly concurrently with the other 2026 Senate elections.
Republicans currently hold 64 out of 99 seats in the Assembly and a supermajority of 22 out of 33 seats in the Senate, but Wisconsin’s new maps could help Democrats win more seats.
Here are the seven most competitive Senate races to watch for in 2026: Maine. Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) has been a top target for Democrats for years as a Republican senator in a state that ...
The election handicapper Cook Political Report found Republicans with an advantage to keep control of the Senate in the 2026 midterm elections in its initial ratings set for next year. The ratings ...
Elections are scheduled to be held in the United States, in large part, on November 3, 2026. In this U.S. midterm election, which will occur during Republican President Donald Trump's non-consecutive second term, all 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and 33 of the 100 seats in the U.S. Senate will be contested to determine the 120th United States Congress.
Wisconsin is considered to be a purple state at the federal and state levels with a uniquely competitive track record (presidential races decided by less than a point in 2016, 2020, 2024, Senate races decided by roughly a point in 2022 and 2024, a governor’s race decided by a point in 2018). [1]