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The 2026 midterm

On November 3, 2026, 469 seats in Congress face voters: all 436 House seats and the 33 Senate seats in Class II. Open America cannot tell you who is running, but it can show you exactly what the people who hold those seats right now have actually done.

How to vote in your state

Pick your state above, or look up your ZIP, to get official registration and ballot links. For everything voting-related, vote.gov routes you to your state.

See every seat on the 2026 ballot House vacancies Discharge petitions

What Open America shows

  • How your current representatives voted, with the roll call.
  • The bills they sponsored, and which became law, died, or are still moving.
  • Their committees and leadership roles.
  • The federal lobbying money connected to the issues they work on.

Every figure links to its primary source. This is a record of the seat's current holder, shown in seat language: "this seat is on the ballot," never a claim about who is running.

What it does not show

  • Who is running, who won a primary, or who is a challenger.
  • Campaign finance beyond federal lobbying.
  • Ballot measures, governor, and state and local races.
  • Where to vote, how to register, or your deadlines.

For those, go to your official sources: vote.gov, fec.gov, and Ballotpedia.

This is not voting advice and not an endorsement. Open America is non-partisan. We report the record and let you decide.

See something wrong? Report an error and we will fix verified mistakes quickly.

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