In any one election year the portion of senators elected is about one third. Every two years about 33 or 34 states have senatorial elections.
approximately 1/3
senators are elected to 6 year terms
3 tiers of senators exist with 1/3 of the total being up for re election every two years.
1/3
Senators serve terms of 6 years. Terms are staggered, so that only about 1/3 of senators are up for election any given year. •This way, of the Senate's seats are never up for election at the same time. •This creates 3 layers of experience: newly elected -Freshman Senators, -Mid-term Senators, and -Veteran Senators.
Charles Schumer (D) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D) are the U.S. Senators representing New York. Schumer's next election will be in 2022. Gillibrand's next election will be in 2018.
About one-third of the Senators in Congress are elected every two years. This means the 33 are up for election at any one time.
Every two years, one U.S. Senate seat of each of two thirds of the states comes up for election.
Although a Senator serves a 6 year term of office, there are senatorial elections every 2 years, because Senators are not all elected at the same time; one third of the Senate is up for re-election in any given election. In any given state, there should be two senate elections every six years. They may occur more often if a senator dies or resigns while in office, depending on exactly how your particular state chooses replacement senators.
The Senate is elected every 6 years and the Senate is divided into classes so a third is up for election at any one time. Only the House has a 2 year term.
the election always takes place on the 1st Tuesday of November so for the 2008 election it was on November 4th.
the senate elections are held in a staggard fashion which means that only about a third of the senators are elected in each election. so all the seats in the senate are never completely empty. for example, if there were 60 senators for example, 30 senators are in the election this year, while the other 30 will be in the election a couple years from now. these two groups rotate.
The Senate is elected every 6 years and the Senate is divided into classes so a third is up for election at any one time. Only the House has a 2 year term.
The times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature, but the congress may at any time by law make or alter such regulations.
The U.S. Senate. Senators serve six-year terms, and every two years, one-third of the Senate seats are up for election. This staggered election system allows for continuity of legislative representation.
Senators face reelection every six years. However, not all senators are up for reelection in the same year. Only one-third of the Senate (or approximately one-third) faces reelection in any given midterm election.