2022 United States Senate elections (The Next Future)

Alabama
The Incumbent Senator Richard Shelby decided not to run for Re-election in 2022, after serving six terms as a U.S. Senator.

The Republican Candidates for the seat included Representative Mo Brooks, from Alabama's 5th Congressional District, Former U.S. Ambassador to Slovenia Lynda Blanchard and the Former President and CEO of the Bussiness Council of Alabama Katie Britt. Mo Brooks won easily the Primary.

In the Democratic Side, the 2 major candidates were Alabama's Senate Minority Leader Anthony Daniels and the Chair of the Alabama Democratic Party Christopher England. Daniels won the primary narrowly.

At the end, Brooks won unsurprisingly the election, succeeding Richard Shelby as Senator.

Alaska
Incumbent Senator Lisa Murkowski had been appointed in 2002 by her father, Frank Murkowski, and been re-elected in 2004, 2010 and 2016, after several primary challenges throughout the years.

In 2021, Murkowski voted to impeach Donald Trump in the House, which made her popularity among republicans drop. She received a primary challenge from Former Alaska Commissioner of Administration Kelly Tshibaka, who was endorsed by Former President Donald Trump, among other high profile figures of the Republican Party. Murkowski was defeated by a large margin in the republican Primary and decided to run as an Independent.

There were 3 more candidates for the Senate: Al Gross (Democrat) who was the 2020 candidate for the Senate against Dan Sullivan, John Howe, the Alaskan Independence Party Candidate and Huhnkie Lee, an Independent Candidate who had run for the State Senate Elections.

This was the first election in which Ranked Choice Voting was applied in Alaska. At the end, Al Gross placed second, above Lisa Murkowski, and after the Ranked Choice Voting Kelly Tshibaka won, succeeding Senator Murkowski.

Arizona
Mark Kelly

Arkansas
John Boozman

California
Alex Padilla

Colorado
Michael Bennett

Connecticut
Richard Blumenthal

Florida
Marco Rubio

Georgia
David Perdue (Defeats Raphael Warnock)

Hawaii
Brian Schatz

Idaho
Mike Crapo

Illinois
Tammy Duckworth

Indiana
Todd Young

Iowa
Chuck Grassley

Kansas
Jerry Moran

Kentucky
Rand Paul

Louisiana
John Kennedy

Maryland
Chris Van Hollen

Missouri
Eric Greitens (Replaces retiring Roy Blunt)

Nevada
Catherine Cortez Masto

New Hampshire
Chris Sununu (Defeats Maggie Hassan)

New York
Chuck Schumer

North Carolina
Ted Budd (Replaces retiring Richard Burr)

North Dakota
John Hoeven

Ohio
Josh Mandel (Replaces retiring Rob Portman)

Oklahoma
James Lankford

Oregon
Ron Wyden

Pennsylvania
John Fetterman (Replaces retiring Pat Toomey)

South Carolina
Tim Scott

South Dakota
John Thune

Utah
Mike Lee

Vermont
Patrick Leahy

Washington
Patty Murray

Wisconsin
Mandela Barnes (Defeats Ron Johnson)