1st Congressional District
Carol Miller secures Republican Nomination for the 1st Congressional District- Incumbent Congresswoman Carol Miller of Huntington has secured the Republican nomination for House District 1, beating out four challengers in a crowded primary for the newly drawn district. Miller has represented the 3rd Congressional District since being elected in 2018. The districts were redrawn after the 2020 census, in which West Virginia lost one congressional seat. Miller served in the House of Delegates for Cabell County from 2006 to 2018. Miller is a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, the Committee on Trade, and the Committee on Worker and Family Support. Miller will face Democrat Lacy Watson in the General Election. Watson was unopposed in the Democrat Primary. Watson previously ran for Congress and was edged out in the 2020 Democrat Primary by Hillary Turner.
Carol Miller- 69%
Scott Fuller- 8%
James Houser- 6%
Zane Lawhorn- 9%
Kent Stevens- 6%
Lacy Watson – 100%
2nd Congressional District
Mooney defeats McKinley for 2nd Congressional District GOP Nomination- Congressman Alex Mooney has defeated David McKinley for the Republican Nomination for the 2nd Congressional District. The newly formed district is composed largely of the remnants of both former Districts 2 and 3. McKinley was heavily outspent by Mooney, though McKinley has been a political mainstay in Northern West Virginia for decades. McKinley will complete his term as the representative of the former District 1 through the end of the year. Mooney, who will be completing his term in the 2nd, will face BARRY WENDELL in the November election.
Alex Mooney- 52%
David McKinley- 38%
Barry Wendell- 57%
Angela Dwyer- 43%
Susan Lochocki- 3%
Rhonda Hercules- 2%
Mike Seckman- 4%
HOUSE STORIES
District One: Republican Pat McGeehan and Democrat Jack Wood are running unopposed in the Primary election and will face each other in the General Election. The incumbent McGeehan has served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from 2009 to 2011, and then from 2015 to the present.
District Two: Democrat Ronnie Jones and Republican Mark Zatezalo are running unopposed in the Primary election and will face each other in the General Election. The incumbent, Zatezalo, has served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from 2015 to 2019, and then from 2021 to the present. Democrat challenger Ronnie Jones previously served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from 2011 to 2015 when he was defeated by Zatezalo.
District Three: Democrat Phillip Diserio and Republican Jimmy Willis are unopposed in the Primary election and will face each other in the General Election. Diserio is the incumbent, having served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from 2013 to 2015, and then 2017 to the present. Diserio serves as the Minority Chair of the House Government Organization Committee.
District Four: Republican Erikka Storch and Democrat Teresa Toriseva are running unopposed in the Primary election and will face each other in the General Election. The incumbent, Erikka Storch, has served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from 2011 to the present. She is a member of the House Finance Committee and the Chair of the House Pensions and Retirement Committee. The challenger, Teresa Toriseva, is an attorney in Wheeling seeking office for the first time.
District Five: Democrat Shawn Fluharty and Republican Brooke McArdle are both unopposed in the Primary election. The incumbent, Shawn Fluharty is an attorney in Wheeling and has served in the West Virginia House of Delegates continuously since 2015. Fluharty serves as the Minority Whip of the Democrat Caucus and is also a member of the Judiciary Committee where he formerly served as minority vice-chair. McArdle is a Wheeling resident and recent graduate from Elmira College where she was a stand-out on the Women’s Ice Hockey team.
District Six: Republican Charlie Reynolds and Democrat Steve Yost are unopposed in the Primary election. Reynolds, the incumbent, is completing his first term having been elected in 2020. Reynolds and Yost will face off in the General election in November.
District Seven: Republican Charles Sheedy and Democrat Lisa Zukoff are unopposed in the Primary election. Zukoff has served in the House of Delegates since 2019, but due to redistricting, is running in several new areas of the newly formed district. Zukoff will face Mountain Party Candidate Dylan Parsons and Republican candidate Charles Sheedy in the General Election. Sheedy previously ran for Governor in 2020, losing the Republican primary in a packed field of candidates.
District Eight: Republican David Kelly, the incumbent, defeated primary challenger David Shelton of Sistersville. Kelly, a former Sheriff and a Pastor, has served in the House of Delegates since first being elected in 2018. Kelly serves on the House Judiciary Committee and has been integral in developing legislation concerning policing and criminal justice. Kelly is unopposed in the General Election, as no Democrat filed for the race.
David Kelly- 74%
David Shelton- 26%
District Nine: Republican Trenton Barnhart is unopposed in the Primary and General elections, as no Democrat or Republican challengers filed. Barnhart was appointed to the legislature by Governor Jim Justice in 2019 when Republican Jason Harshbarger resigned office in order to pursue other career opportunities. Barnhart serves as the Vice Chair of the Workforce Development Committee of the House of Delegates.
District Ten: Republican Bill Anderson and Democrat Morgan Leach are unopposed in the Primary election and will face each other in the General Election. Anderson, the longest current serving member of the House, has continually held office since 1992. Anderson is the Chairman of the House Energy and Manufacturing Committee, and has served as Speaker Pro Tempore.
District 11:
Roger Conley- 50%
Bob Fehrenbacher- 50%
District 12: Republican Vernon Criss and Democrat Jonathan Defibaugh were unopposed in the Primary election and will face each other in November during the General election. Criss is the Vice Chairman of the House Finance Committee, and has served in the legislature since 2017, but had a previous term in the legislature dating back to the 90’s. Criss is a Wood County business owner and active member of the Republican party in the area.
District 13: Republican Scott Heckert is unopposed in the Primary and General elections. The newly created district will be served by Heckert, assuming no other party files a candidate prior to the August deadline.
District 14:
Shannon Kimes- 36%%
Dave Foggin- 37%
Kevin Siers- 27%
District 15:
Riley Keaton- 56%
Martin “Rick” Atkinson- 44%
District 16: Republican Steve Westfall is unopposed in the Primary and General elections. Westfall, a Jackson County insurance agent and business owner, has been a mainstay in Republican politics in Jackson County. Westfall is the Chairman of the House Banking and Insurance Committee, and is a member of the House Judiciary Committee.
District 17: Republican Jonathan Pinson has defeated challengers Robert Marchal and Morgan Hurlow for the District 17 Republican nomination. Pinson, a former law enforcement officer and Pastor, was first elected to the House in 2020. Pinson serves on the House Judiciary Committee, Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee, and the Committee on Seniors, Family, and Children.
Jonathan Pinson- 80%
Robert Marchal- 12%
Morgan Hurlow- 8%
District 18:
Johnnie Wamsley- 43%
Jim Butler- 57%
District 19: Republican Kathie Crouse defeated Jesse Lovejoy and Nick Withrow to secure the Republican Nomination for House District 17. Crouse, a molecular biologist and microbiologist, has served in the House since 2021 when she was appointed by Governor Jim Justice, II to the seat vacated by Joshua Higginbotham. Crouse will face Democrat Josh Martin in the General election in November.
Kathie Hess Crouse- 48%
Jesse Lovejoy- 28%
Nick Withrow- 27%
District 20:
Geoff Foster- 53%
Jacob Losh- 47%
District 21: Republican Jarred Cannon defeated Michael Kidd and Brenden Long to secure the Republican nomination for the newly created District 21. The newly created district has no incumbent. Cannon will face Libertarian Darrell Black and Democrat Tess Jackson in the General election in November.
Jarred Cannon- 48%
Michael Kidd- 33%
Brenden Long- 19%
District 22: Republican Daniel Linville held off Primary challenger Roy Ramey in the newly created District 22. Linville was part of the former three member delegation from the 16th which was comprised mainly of Cabell County. Linville is a business owner that resides in Milton, and has been a member of the House Finance Committee since first being elected in 2018. Linville also serves as the Chairman of the House Committee on Technology and Infrastructure. Linville is largely recognized as an expert on the State’s Broadband initiatives, and has been a champion of Broadband expansion since 2018. Linville is unopposed in the General election in November.
Daniel Linville- 81%
Roy Ramey- 19%
District 23:
Evan Worrell- 60%
Karen Nance- 69%
Jodi Biller- 40%
Paul Ross- 31%
District 24:
Tyler Haslam- 35%
Ally Layman- 63%
Patrick Lucas- 65%
Carl Eastham- 37%
District 25: Democrat Sean Hornbuckle got a free pass in the District 25 race. The veteran Democrat Delegate has represented the multi-member 16th since 2015. With the change to single-member districts, Hornbuckle drew no opponent, Republican or Democrat. Hornbuckle is a financial representative with Edward Jones in Huntington and volunteers as a youth basketball coach.
District 26: Republican Matthew Rohrbach, Chairman of the House Committee on Health, was uncontested in the GOP Primary in the newly minted 26th District. The veteran lawmaker has served in the House of Delegates since 2015. Rohrbach is a longtime resident of Huntington where he serves the community as a physician. Democrat Kate White defeated Democrat Sydnee McElroy for the Democrat nomination in the 26th. White is 18 years old and a recent graduate of Cabell Midland High School. White will face Chairman Rohrbach in the November General election.
H. Kate White- 24%
Sydnee McElroy- 76%
District 28:
Josh Booth- 50%
Mark Ross- 50%
District 29:
Henry Dillon- 52%
Matthew Deskings- 30%
Nate Randolph- 17%
District 30:
Cecil Silva- 33%
Roger May- 20%
David “Flimsy” Adkins- 67%
Deidra Roberts- 80%
District 31:
Jill Barker- 39%
Margitta Mazzochi- 48%
Haskel Boytek- 12%
District 32: Republican Josh Holstein and Democrat Rodney Miller were unopposed in their respective Boone County primary races. Holstein unseated the veteran politician Miller in the 2020 election. Holstein serves on the House Government Organization Committee, the Committee on the Prevention and Treatment of Substance Abuse, and the Committee on Small Business, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Development. The two will face each other again in the November General election.
District 33: Republican Jordan Bridges and Democrat George Howes are unopposed in their respective primaries. Bridges, the incumbent, is an underground coal miner by trade. Bridges serves on the House Energy and Manufacturing Committee, the House Education Committee, the Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources, and the Workforce Development Committee. Howes, of Sarah Ann, is a retired Board of Education employee and former member of the Logan County and State Democrat Executive Committees.
District 34:
Mark Dean- 52%
Big John White- 48%
District 35:
Bucky Blackwell- 40%
Dewey Houck- 60%
District 36:
Tom Acosta- 50%
Anita Hall- 50%
District 37: Republican Marty Gearheart and Democrat Skip Crane were both unopposed in their respective primaries. Veteran Delegate Marty Gearheart will face Democrat Skip Crane in the November General election.
District 38: Republican Joe Ellington Jr. and Democrat Tina Russell, were both unopposed in their respective primaries. Ellington is the Chairman of the House Education Committee and a physician in Princeton. Russell is seeking election to the House for the second time, having fallen short in 2020. Ellington will face Russell in the General Election in November.
District 39: Republican Doug Smith, a retired Army Colonel, is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 40: Republican Roy Cooper is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 41: Republican Jordan Maynor handily defeated challenger Greg Shamblin for the District 41 GOP Primary. Maynor, a business owner and developer, was appointed by Governor Justice to the House of Delegates to fill the vacancy created when Delegate Jeff Pack was appointed Commissioner for Social Services with the DHHR. Maynor is unopposed in the General Election.
Jordan Maynor- 66%
Greg Shamblin- 34%
District 42: Republican Brandon Steele is unopposed in the District 42 Primary and General Elections. Steele was first elected to the House of Delegates in 2018 when he defeated long-time Delegate Ricky Moye. Steele is the Chairman of the House Government Organization Committee and sits on the House Rules Committee, the House Small Business, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Development Committee, the Joint Committee on Flooding, the Legislative Rulemaking Review Committee, the Commission on Special Investigations, and the Post Audits Subcommittee. Steele is an attorney and business owner in Beckley, WV.
District 43:
Chris Toney- 51%
Case Poling- 49%
District 44: Republican Todd Kirby defeated Ann Worley and Tom Moseley for the Republican Primary in the Beckley House race. Kirby is a Beckley attorney and business owner. Rusty Wooton, another Beckley attorney, defeated a crowded Democrat field in the primary race for District 44. Wooton faced Tony Martin, Xavier Oglesby, and Mark Montgomery in the Primary. Wooton will face Kirby in the General Election in November.
Todd Kirby- 41%
Rusty Wooton- 32%
Ann Worley- 35%
Xavier Oglesby- %
Tom Moseley- 24%
Mark Montgomery- 10%
Tony O. Martin- 59%
District 45:
Eric Brooks- 52%
Joseph Golden- 35%
Ron Hedrick- 48%
Kevin Walker- 17%
Christian Martine- 48%
District 46: Republican Mike Honaker defeated challengers Karen McCoy and Mark Robinson to secure the GOP nomination in District 46. Honaker was appointed after the resignation of Delegate Barry Bruce late last year. Honaker is a retired law enforcement officer who served in the United States Marine Corps. Democrat Paul Detch, a Lewisburg attorney, defeated Joe Holt for the Democrat nomination. Detch will face Honaker in the November General election.
Mike Honaker- 52%
Paul Detch- 67%
Karen McCoy- 39%
Joe Holt- 33%
Mark Robinson- 9%
District 48: Republican Caleb Hanna and Democrat Eric Sebert are unopposed in the District 48 primary. The incumbent, Hanna, will face Sebert in the November General election.
District 49: Republican Heather Tully is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections. Tully is a nurse in Summersville and is a member of the House Health Committee, having been appointed to the seat vacated by Jordan Hill in 2020, and subsequently winning election to the seat.
District 50: Republican Austin Haynes and Democrat David Pritt are unopposed. Haynes, the incumbent, was first elected in 2020 and works in the insurance industry. Haynes sits on the Judiciary Committee and is active in the Fayette County Republican Executive Committee. Pritt is a former Mountain Party candidate for the same seat, but has switched his registration to Democrat. Pritt will face Haynes in the November General Election.
District 51: Republican Tom Fast has surprisingly lost to challenger Dan Hill. Hill is a business owner and developer in Fayette County and ran a vigorous campaign against the incumbent Fast, who is currently the Vice-Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. Democrat Gabe Peña defeated Robin Kincaid Welch for the Democrat Primary in the 51st. Hill will face Peña in the November General Election.
Dan Hill- 42%
Gabe Pena- 67%
Tom Fast- 58%
Robin Kincaid Welch- 33%
District 52: Democrat Larry Rowe and Republican Gary Hendricks are unopposed in the District 52 Primary contest. Rowe, a veteran delegate and Charleston attorney, will face Hendricks in the November General election.
District 53: Republican Chris Pritt and Democrat Jim Barach are unopposed in their respective primaries. Pritt and Barach are both incumbents but have been pitted against one another due to re-districting. The two will face each other in the November General election.
District 54:
Julien Aklei- 33%
John Luoni- 67%
District 55: Republican Moore Capito and Democrat Greg Childress are unopposed in their respective Primary Elections. Capito, who serves as the House Judiciary Chairman, also serves on the Commission on Special Investigations, the House Rules Committee, the House Banking and Insurance Committee, the House Interstate Cooperation Committee, and the Technology and Infrastructure Committee. Childress will face Capito in the upcoming November General Election.
District 56: Republican Larry Pack and Democrat Kayla Young are unopposed in their respective primary elections. Both being incumbents, they are both again an example of two incumbents in the same new district, though in this circumstance Young moved to this particular district once redistricting was finalized. Pack is a business owner and health care professional from Charleston that has served for a long time as the National Committeeman for West Virginia in the Republican Party. Larry Pack will face Young in the November General Election.
District 57: Republican Ernest Blevins defeated Bud Anderson to secure the GOP nomination in the 57th District. Democrat Doug Skaff Jr. is unopposed in his primary. Skaff is a Charleston business owner and President of HD Media, which operates the Charleston Gazette and Huntington Herald-Dispatch, as well as several other newspapers throughout the state. Skaff has served as House Minority Leader for the last two years. Blevins and Skaff will face one another in the November General Election.
District 58 – Edward Burgess, Walter Hall, Trevor Morris, and Samuel Parsons are vying to secure the District 58 GOP nomination, while Democrat and Saint Albans native Dakota James Buckley ran unopposed to secure the Democratic nomination.
District 59 – Incumbent Dianna Graves and Republican Andy Shamblin are going head to head for the District 59 GOP nomination. Democrat Rusty Williams ran unopposed.
District 60 – Democrat David Holmes and Republican incumbent Dana Ferrell each ran unopposed for the District 60 nominations for their respective parties.
District 61 – Republican incumbent Dean Jeffries is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 62 – Republican incumbent Roger Hanshaw is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 63 – Republicans Lori Cowger Dittman and Duane Williams each hope to secure the GOP District 63 nomination, while Democrat Kevin Carpenter ran unopposed.
District 64 – Republican incumbent Adam Burkhammer and Democrat John Clise each ran unopposed.
District 65 – Republican incumbent Carl Martin is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 66 – Republican incumbent William Nestor and Democrat Robert Sheets each ran unopposed.
District 67 – Republican Elias Coop-Gonzalez and Democrat incumbent Cody Thompson each ran unopposed.
District 68 – Republican incumbent Chris Phillips is unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 69 – Republican Keith Marple hopes to defeat Republican incumbent Danny Hamrick. Democrat Ron Watson ran unopposed.
District 70 – Tyler Hart, Paul Howe, Bryan Payne, and Mickey Petitto are competing in a crowded race for the District 70 GOP nomination. Democrat Ryan Deems will take on Ronald Fraggle for the Democratic nomination.
District 71 – Republican incumbent Laura Kimble hopes to gain the District 71 nomination against Ben Hanlan, while Democrats Robert Garcia and Justin Lung each hope to secure the Democratic nomination.
District 72 – Republican incumbent Clay Riley and Democrat Derek McIntyre each ran unopposed in the District 72 race.
District 73 – Republican incumbent Amy Summers and Democrat Michael Manypenny each ran unopposed in the District 72 race.
District 74 – Republican incumbent Guy Ward takes on Mike DeVault in a yet-to-be-decided race for the GOP District 74 nomination. Democrat John Palmer ran unopposed.
District 75 – Republican incumbent Phil Malow and Democrat Stephanie Spears both ran unopposed in the District 75 race.
District 76 – Democrat incumbent Joey Garcia ran unopposed in District 76, while Republicans Jon Dodds Toby Heaney vye for the Republican nomination.
District 77 – Republican incumbent Joe Statler and Democrat Ben Swanson both ran unopposed in the District 77 race.
District 78 – Democrat Jeffrey Budkey ran unopposed in District 78. Republicans Eugene Chiarelli, Toni DiChiaccho, and Scott NaleR each hope to secure the GOP nomination.
District 79 – Republican Zach LeMaire ran unopposed in District 79. Democrat incumbent Evan Hansen takes on Democrat Matthew Kolb for the Democratic nomination.
District 80 – Democratic incumbent John Williams and Republican Justin White each ran unopposed in District 80.
District 81 – Republican Steven Harris and Democrat incumbent Danielle Walker each ran unopposed in District 81.
District 82 – Republicans Cindy Frich, Drew Talbott, and Debbie Warner have been campaigning for the District 82 GOP nomination. Democrat Katie Fallon ran unopposed.
District 83 – Republican George Street and Democrat Junior Wolfe each ran unopposed in District 83.
District 84 – Republican incumbent D.R. Jennings faces off against Brian Harris for the District 84 Republican nomination. Democrat Lisa Hyre ran unopposed.
District 85 – John Paul Hott II will run unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 86 – Republican incumbent Brian Ward ran unopposed in District 86. Democrat Jameson Freeman currently holds a lead over Democrat Bradley Rinard.
District 87 – Republican incumbent Gary G Howell and Democrat David Boden each ran unopposed in District 87.
District 88 – Republicans Rick Hillenbrand, Keith L. Funkhouser , Stephen Smoot, and Austin Iman each hope to secure the GOP District 88 nomination. Hillenbrand currently leads with Funkhouser trailing close behind. Smoot and Iman each face significant deficits in the ongoing race.
District 89 – Republican incumbent Rowan goes up against Darren Thorne for the District 89 Republican nomination.
District 90 – Republicans George Miller and Ken Reed hope to lay claim to the Republican nomination for District 90, while Republican Marsha Stiner did not make the ballot.
District 91 – Republican incumbent Don Forsht will run unopposed in both the Primary and General elections.
District 92 – Republican incumbent Michael Hite will run unopposed in both the Primary and General elections.
District 93 – Republican Michael Hornby and Democrat Z. Lansdowne each ran unopposed for the District 93 nomination.
District 94 – Republicans Larry D. Kump, Ryan Hammond, and Janet McNulty are seeking the District 94 Republican nomination.
District 95 – Republican incumbent Charles Horst Sr. and Democrat Debi Carroll each ran unopposed for the District 95 nomination.
District 96 – Republican incumbent Eric Householder and Democrat Ronald Wenger each ran unopposed for the District 95 nomination.
District 97 – Democrat Phillip Wenner ran unopposed for the District 97 Democratic nomination. Republican incumbent John Hardy faces Alonzo Perry II for the District 97 nomination from the GOP.
District 98 – Republican incumbent Paul Espinosa will run unopposed in both the Primary and General Elections.
District 99 – Republican incumbent Wayne Clark and Democrat Debra Cornwell each ran unopposed in District 99.
District 100 – William Ridenour, Pasha Majdi, and Steve Harris seek the Republican nomination for District 100. Democrat Susan Benzinger ran unopposed for the District 100 Democratic nomination.
West Virginia State Senate Primary 2022
District 1:
D – Owens Brown (i) – 47%
D – Randy Swartzmiller- 53%
R – Judi Varner Meyer – 31%
R – Laura Wakim Chapman – 69%
District 2:
D – Eric Hayhurst – 100%
R – Charles Clements (i) – 100%
District 3:
D – Jody Murphy – 100%
R – Mike Azinger (i) – 52%
R – John Kelly – 48%
District 4:
R – Eric Tarr (i) – 100%
District 5:
D – Mike Woelfel (i) – 100%
R – Melissa Clark – 100%
District 6:
D – Tiffany Clemins – 100%
R – Mark R. Maynard (i) – 60%
R – Wesley Blankenship – 14%
R – Sabrina Grace – 27%
District 7:
D – Ron Stollings (i) – 100%
R – Chad McCormick – 48%
R – Mike Stuart – 52%
District 8:
D – Richard Lindsay (i) – 100%
R – Joshua Higginbotham – 34%
R – Mark Hunt – 46%
R – Mark Mitchem – 19%
District 9:
R – Rollan Roberts (i) – 52%
R- Mick Bates – 48%
District 10:
D – Stephen Baldwin (i) – 100%
R – Vince Deeds – 49%
R – Thomas Perkins – 9%
R – Mike Steadham – 42%
District 11:
R – William Hamilton (i) – 100%
District 12:
R – Ben Queen – 100%
District 13:
D – Barbara Fleischauer – 83%
D – Rich Jacobs – 18%
R – Carly Braun – 20%
R – Mike Oliverio – 80%
District 14:
D – Amanda Pitzer – 100%
R – Angela Iman – 18%
R – William Keplinger- 18%
R – James Lough- 15%
R – Stephen Smith – 13%
R – Jay Taylor – 36%
District 15:
R – Charles S. Trump IV (i) – 100%
District 16:
R – Jason Barrett – 55%
R – Renee Wibly – 45%
District 17:
D – Samuel Wood – 100%
R – Tom Takubo (i) – 71%
R – Terry Burns – 29%
FAYETTE COUNTY:
Circuit Clerk
R – Travis Prince – 100%
D – Debbie Hendrick – 68%
D – Mike Malay – 32%
County Commissioner
R – John Brenemen – 55%
R – Lois Amos – 45%
D – Beach Vickers – 100%
County Clerk
D – Michelle Holly – 100%
Magistrate
Matt Jeffries – 59%
Shawn Campbell – 41%
Board of Education
Gary Ray – 40%
Pat Gray – 33%
Joby Groom – 28%
GREENBRIER COUNTY:
Circuit Clerk
R – Jamie Baker – 100%
D – Louvonne Arbuckle – 100%
County Commissioner
R – Blaine Phillips – 100%
D – Deetta Hunter – 100%
County Clerk
R – Robin Loudermilk – 100%
D – Kayla McCoy – 100%
Board of Education Winners
Jeanie Wyatt – 22%
Paula Dunford – 14%
Hazel Reed – 13%
MERCER COUNTY:
Circuit Clerk
R – Steven Ellison – 25%
R – Julie Grubb Ball – 74%
County Clerk
R – Verlin Moye – 100%
County Commissioner
R – Bill Archer – 100%
D – Jeff Disibbio – 100%
Magistrate
Michael Crowder – 99%
Board of Education Only Three Winners:
Gregory Prudich
Jacinda Santon Smith
Holly Parish
MONROE COUNTY:
County Clerk
R- Jeremey Meadows – 43%
Circuit Clerk
Letta Comer – 57%
County Commissioner
Kevin Galford – 49%
Board of Education
Terry Utterback – 27%
Everette Fraley – 22%
RALEIGH COUNTY:
Circuit Clerk
R – Robert McComas – 100%
D – Paul Flanagan – 100%
County Commissioner
R- Dave Tolliver – 39%
County Clerk
R – Scott Van Meter – 100%
Board of Education Top 3
Charlotte Hutchens – 24%
Larry Ford – 22%
Marie Hamrick – 20%
SUMMERS COUNTY:
R – Ted Kula – 52%
D – Joseph Blankenship – 52%
Board of Education
Meghan Harvey – 24%
Greg Angel – 17%
Renee Farley – 12%
Kenny Brogan – 12%
WYOMING COUNTY:
County Commissioner
D – Samuel Muscari – 55%
County Clerk
D -Jewell Aguilar – 59%
Circuit Clerk
R – Tony Paynter – 76%
Wyoming County 27th Circuit Court Judge
R – Micahel Cochrane 54%
Wyoming County Board of Education
Doug Lester 24%
Doug Kennedy – 23%
Alan Stiltner 22%