Click here to contact us for media inquiries, and please donate here to support our continued expansion. Share this page Follow Ballotpedia. What's on your ballot? Jump to: navigation , search. Leader: Kim Ward R Min. Twenty-five of the chamber's 50 seats were up for election in The chamber's Republican majority remained with one independent member.
Click to read more » Pennsylvania has a divided government where neither party holds a trifecta. This page contains the following information on the Pennsylvania State Senate. Which party controls the chamber The chamber's current membership Partisan control of the chamber over time Elections in the chamber and how vacancies are filled A district map How redistricting works in the state Legislation under consideration Legislative session dates Legislative procedures , such as veto overrides and the state budget process A list of committees Contents.
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For more information on changes to state legislative sessions as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, click here. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source. Passage of vetoed bill. Voter information What's on my ballot? Where do I vote? How do I register to vote? How do I request a ballot? When do I vote? When are polls open? Who Represents Me? Congress special elections Governors State executives State legislatures Ballot measures State judges Municipal officials School boards.
How do I update a page? Election results. Privacy policy About Ballotpedia Disclaimers Login. Pennsylvania State Senate. General Information. Session start: [1]. Session end: [1]. November 3, November 8, Click to read more ». Pennsylvania State Senate District 1. Nikil Saval. Pennsylvania State Senate District 2. Christine Tartaglione.
Pennsylvania State Senate District 3. Sharif Street. Pennsylvania State Senate District 4. Art Haywood. Pennsylvania State Senate District 5. John Sabatina Jr.
Pennsylvania State Senate District 6. Robert Tomlinson. Pennsylvania State Senate District 7. Vincent Hughes. Pennsylvania State Senate District 8. Anthony Williams. Pennsylvania State Senate District 9. John Kane. Pennsylvania State Senate District Steve Santarsiero. Judy Schwank. Maria Collett. Scott Martin. John Yudichak. John DiSanto. Pat Browne. Amanda Cappelletti. Lisa Boscola. Carolyn Comitta. Lisa Baker. Scott Hutchinson. Martin Flynn. Gene Yaw. Bob Mensch.
Cris Dush. Timothy Kearney. John Gordner. Kristin Phillips-Hill. David Argall. Judith Ward. Mike Regan. Patrick Stefano. Doug Mastriano. Jake Corman III. Wayne Langerholc. Ryan Aument. Devlin Robinson. Lindsey Williams. Kim Ward.
Mario Scavello. Joe Pittman. Wayne Fontana. Jay Costa. Katie Muth. James Brewster. Camera Bartolotta. Elder Vogel. Chris Gebhard. Daniel Laughlin. Michele Brooks. Senators shall be at least twenty-five years of age and Representatives twenty-one years of age. They shall have been citizens and inhabitants of their respective districts one year next before their election unless absent on the public business of the United States or of this State and shall reside in their respective districts during their terms of service.
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This is part of a new project to develop better tools for bringing real-time legislative data into the classroom. We hope to enable educators to build lesson plans centered around any bill or vote in Congress, even those as recent as yesterday. If you teach United States government and would like to speak with us about bringing legislative data into your classroom, please reach out! RSS Available. Click here for a print-friendly version. Argall, David G. R District Aument, Ryan P. Baker, Lisa R District Bartolotta, Camera R District Boscola, Lisa M.
D District Brewster, James R. Brooks, Michele R District Browne, Patrick M. Cappelletti, Amanda M. Collett, Maria D District Comitta, Carolyn T. Corman, Jake R District Costa, Jay D District DiSanto, John R District Dush, Cris R District Flynn, Marty D District Fontana, Wayne D.
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