Below is our 2022 Cook Partisan Voting Index (Cook PVIā ) score for all 435 districts. A Partisan Voting Index (Cook PVI) score of D+2, for example, means that in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, the state or district performed about two points more Democratic in terms of two-party vote share than the nation did as a whole, while a score of R+4 means the state or district performed about four points more Republican. If a state or district performed within half a point of the nation in either direction, we assign it a score of EVEN.
KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE The new House landscape is fairly similar to the old one. However, there is a notable increase in the number of super-safe Republican seats and a modest decline in the overall number of competitive districts. New Hampshire, the final state to complete redistricting, kept its old map basically intact, which means the state should feature a couple of competitive races. Now that redistricting appears to be complete for 2022, we have brought back our traditional House rating tables, which are available at the bottom of this article and at our Crystal Ball House page.
Median House seat will still sit a couple of points to the right of the nationKEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE With the national House map nearly complete, it appears that the overall map still leans toward Republicans. However, this GOP bias is not nearly as strong as it was a decade ago. We rate and analyze the new Missouri and New York congressional maps.
Many candidates have announced plans to run for one of the many federal, state and judicial races on the ballot. They have to file for office during a three-day window that starts Wednesday.