For the First Time in U.S. History, LGBTQ Candidates Ran for Office in Every State This Cycle

Mississippi and South Dakota had fewest LGBTQ candidates run in 2018

Washington, DC - October 18, 2018 – For the first time in U.S. history, openly LGBTQ candidates ran for elected office in all 50 states and the District of Columbia this election cycle, powering a Rainbow Wave of LGBTQ candidates running at every level of government. At least 618 LGBTQ candidates ran for office and at least 399 will appear on ballots in November. In three states, however –Delaware, Mississippi and New Mexico – there were no out LGBTQ candidates that advanced to the general election and none will appear on the November ballot. Findings and a breakdown by state is below.

Among the findings:

"LGBTQ candidates are running for office in unprecedented numbers and in every state in the nation – and it is already inspiring more LGBTQ people to run in the near future," said Mayor Annise Parker, President & CEO of LGBTQ Victory Fund. "This rainbow wave of candidates is certainly concentrated in blue states and districts, but LGBTQ leaders in conservative parts of the nation are standing up and determined to become public servants while remaining true to who they are. The struggles and experiences of LGBTQ candidates provide a unique perspective that makes them authentic, values-driven leaders, and it is increasingly resonating with voters."

The complete list of openly LGBTQ candidate numbers by state, in addition to the current number of serving LGBTQ elected officials in each state, is below. It is also available in an Excel document on the Victory Fund website at victoryfund.org/rainbowwavestates.

State

Number of LGBTQ Candidates Who Ran in 2018

Number of LGBTQ Candidates on Nov 2018 Ballot

Number of Current LGBTQ Elected Officials

Alabama

4

2

1

Alaska

5

1

4

Arizona

18

12

10

Arkansas

6

4

2

California

81

57

105

Colorado

15

12

13

Connecticut

13

11

5

Delaware

3

0

3

District of Columbia

7

5

6

Florida

28

17

28

Georgia

13

9

12

Guam

3

3

1

Hawaii

5

1

0

Idaho

2

1

2

Illinois

22

14

26

Indiana

4

1

4

Iowa

7

3

7

Kansas

5

3

6

Kentucky

7

4

7

Louisiana

3

3

0

Maine

6

4

11

Maryland

25

10

16

Massachusetts

20

8

17

Michigan

19

11

17

Minnesota

8

6

11

Mississippi

1

0

0

Missouri

9

7

5

Montana

7

6

6

Nebraska

4

4

4

Nevada

8

3

4

New Hampshire

10

9

8

New Jersey

20

16

16

New Mexico

2

0

8

New York

26

14

27

North Carolina

21

17

13

North Dakota

3

3

3

Ohio

16

10

19

Oklahoma

6

2

2

Oregon

13

12

12

Pennsylvania

15

10

30

Puerto Rico

0

0

1

Rhode Island

10

7

5

South Carolina

3

1

1

South Dakota

1

1

0

Tennessee

5

2

5

Texas

61

37

16

Utah

3

2

8

Vermont

7

6

4

Virgin Islands

0

0

1

Virginia

5

2

11

Washington

13

13

33

West Virginia

3

2

1

Wisconsin

15

9

18

Wyoming

2

2

2

Total

618

399

577

Also available are previous reports on the number of openly LGBTQ candidates running for Congress and governor, and the number of openly LGBTQ candidates who ran by position level.

A note on the candidate numbers above: Louisiana, Mississippi, New Jersey, and Virginia do not hold state legislative elections this year, affecting the number of candidates running in their states this cycle.

Victory Fund endorsed 272 openly LGBTQ candidates in 2018 – the most in its 27-year history – and 226 of those endorsees will be on the ballot in November. Seventeen openly LGBTQ candidates have already been elected this year. View all Victory Fund endorsed candidates at victoryfund.org/ourcandidates.

**DISCLAIMER: The information and data provided above is accurate to the best of Victory Fund's knowledge. It is possible other candidates or elected officials are not accounted for because of a lack of media reports or other visibility.**


LGBTQ Victory Fund

LGBTQ Victory Fund works to change the face and voice of America's politics and achieve equality for LGBTQ Americans by increasing the number of openly LGBTQ elected officials at all levels of government.

victoryfund.org

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