Advertisement

 
 

Virginia Senate

Filing Deadline: April 16, 2008 • Primary Date: June 10, 2008 • General Election: Nov. 4, 2008

Republican


Jim Gilmore

Gilmore, a former governor, was nominated by a GOP convention with 50.31% of the vote in a two-way contest.

Campaign Web site

Democrat


Mark Warner

Warner, a former governor, was unopposed in the primary.

Campaign Web site


Please send comments or corrections to AlmanacEditorial@nationaljournal.com.

Ranking and Analysis
from Amy Walter and Quinn McCord of the Hotline Race Ranking: 1

Moderate Republicans should probably be glad that Jim Gilmore, not Tom Davis, was their nominee. In future statewide nominating contests, moderates might well say to conservatives, "We tried it your way the last few times and it didn't work."

Ad Spotlight

View all political ads for this race:

All senate Ads

Previous Election Results

2002 General Total Votes Percent Expenditures
John Warner (R) 1,229,893 83% $1,709,202
Nancy Spannaus (I) 145,102 10% $61,984
Jacob Hornberger (I) 106,055 7% $66,480

2002 Primary Total Votes Percent Expenditures
John Warner (R) Unopposed    

1996 General Total Votes Percent Expenditures
John Warner (R) 1,235,744 52% $5,819,157
Mark Warner (D) 1,115,982 47% $11,600,424

Hotline Coverage

Check out the Hotline's coverage of the Virginia senate race.


Race Rankings

The Hotline

Based on likelihood of seat switching party control. Updated: 10/31.

  1. Virginia (Open-R)
  2. New Mexico (Open-R)
  3. Colorado (Open-R)
  4. N.H. (Sununu-R)
  5. Alaska (Stevens-R)
  6. North Carolina (Dole-R)
  7. Oregon (Smith-R)
  8. Minnesota (Coleman-R)
  9. Georgia (Chambliss-R)
  10. Louisiana (Landrieu-D)
  11. Mississippi (Wicker-R)
  12. Kentucky (McConnell-R)
  13. Maine (Collins-R)
  14. Texas (Cornyn-R)
  15. New Jersey (Lautenberg-D)
Complete Rankings

Search
Advanced Search
Subscriber-only content Denotes subscriber-only content

Blogs

Advertisement