About one-third of the hundred senators are elected every two years for six year terms.
No Senators are elected two years. They have 6 year terms.
Two years
1/3 of the Senators' terms expire in every 2 years, but since there are 50 states with two Senators apiece and that does not divide by 3, in two election years 34 Senators are elected (or re-elected) and in the third year the remaining 32.
Two from each state, making 100 total in the U.S. Senate. They are elected to six year terms, 1/3 of the senate every two years.
a third ever two years
two
Members of the US Senate are elected for six years. Members of the US House of Representatives are elected for two years. The is no limit on how many times either can be reelected. The terms and limits on the number of terms of State Legislators vary by State
There are two senators for each US state.
United States Senators serve a term of six years in office. There is no limit on how many terms a Senator can be elected to serve. The terms are staggered so that 1/3 of the Senators come up for election every two years.
A Senator's term of office is six years and approximately one-third of the total membership of the Senate is elected every two years. Look up brief biographies of Senators from 1774 to the present in the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
There are 100 senators in the U.S. Senate.
Each state elects two senators. Senators are elected by the state as a whole, as opposed to Representatives who are elected to represent a specific portion of the state. Senators serve a six year term. The terms are staggered so that one-third are elected with each Congressional election, every two years.