Election 2026
The 2026 midterms — the year also marking the 250th anniversary of the United States — include elections for every member of the U.S. House of Representatives, one-third of the U.S. Senate, many state supreme court seats, and numerous state and local officials. Voters will also evaluate ballot measures for new laws and state constitutional amendments related to abortion, the environment, voting, and other topics.
All year, State Court Report will cover the 2026 judicial elections and ballot measures that impact state constitutions, as well as election-related litigation, with explainers, analysis, data visualization, and other reporting. State courts and constitutions play an important role in elections at all levels, settling questions related to ballot access, voting processes, recount challenges, and more.
The 2026 state supreme court elections span 32 states, including races in Michigan, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin that could change the balance of power in those states or have other significant effects.
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State Supreme Court Elections to Watch in 2024
Key races in Michigan, Montana, Kentucky, and Ohio will shape state law on reproductive rights, criminal justice, and much more.
Three U.S. Supreme Court Cases that Transformed State Judicial Elections
Judicial elections have become major political battlegrounds — complete with dark money, special interests, and attack ads — thanks to several U.S. Supreme Court decisions.
Sign a Petition? Your Support May Not Count
Arizona’s ballot security process disenfranchises voters engaging in direct democracy.
State Courts Can and Should Do More to Protect Voters
State constitutional clauses collectively elevate the status of voters as a group, giving state courts a strong reason to use a separation of powers analogy against efforts to curtail voting rights.
Single-Subject Rules Can Prevent Perverse Outcomes but Give Judges Enormous Power
Single-subject requirements were used to strike down a Missouri law criminalizing homelessness and also helped undermine attempts to protect abortion access in other states.
Voting Rights Under State Constitutions, Explained
All but one state constitution affirmatively establishes a right to vote.