2 per state, or 100.
100
100
100
50
100
100
The total number of U.S. Senators and representatives for a state is equal to its electoral votes in the Electoral College. Each state has two Senators and a number of Representatives that corresponds to its population, which together determine how many electoral votes it has in presidential elections. Therefore, the total number of electoral votes for a state is the sum of its Senators and Representatives.
There are 2 Senators from each State, so there are 100 Senators in total.
49 as of 2007.
Each state has 2 Senators, and some number of representatives based on population.
No. All states have the same number of senators: 2. 100 senators total (50*2=100)
There are 100 Senators in the Senate. The number of Senators per state remains at two and the total number only changes when a new state is admitted into the union.