2018 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont

The 2018 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont will be held on November 6, 2018, to elect the U.S. Representative from the state of Vermont from Vermont's at-large congressional district. The election coincided with other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate and various state and local elections. The primary elections were held on August 14.

2018 U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont

November 6, 2018
 
Nominee Peter Welch Anya Tynio
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 188,547 70,705
Percentage 69.2% 26.0%

County results
Welch:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

Representative
At-large before election

Peter Welch
Democratic

Elected Representative
At-large

Peter Welch
Democratic

Peter Welch, a Democrat won reelection to a seventh term, defeating Republican Anya Tynio.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Declared

  • Daniel Freilich, candidate for U.S. Senate in 2010, Navy medical doctor, physician at the VA Medical Center
  • Peter Welch, incumbent U.S. Representative

Withdrawn

Debates & forums

Results

Results by county:
  Welch—80–90%
  Welch—70–80%
Democratic primary results[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Peter Welch (incumbent) 55,939 80.35%
Democratic Daniel Freilich 7,881 11.32%
Democratic Benjamin Mitchell (withdrawn) 2,676 3.84%
Democratic Write-in 142 0.20%
Democratic Spoiled votes 52 0.08%
Democratic Blank votes 2,927 4.20%
Total votes 69,618 100.0

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared

  • H. Brooke Paige, former CEO of Remmington News Service
  • Anya Tynio, sales representative for the Newport Daily Express[3]

Debates & forums

Results

Results by county:
  Paige—60–70%
  Paige—50–60%
  Paige—40–50%
  Tynio—40–50%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican H. Brooke Paige 14,721 40.68%
Republican Anya Tynio 8,485 23.45%
Republican Peter Welch (write-in) 923 2.57%
Republican Other Write-in 450 1.25%
Republican Spoiled votes 97 0.27%
Republican Blank votes 11,499 31.78%
Total votes 35,880 100.0

Post-primary

H. Brooke Paige, who also won the Republican nominations for U.S. Senate, state Attorney General, state Secretary of State, state Treasurer and state Auditor, withdrew from all but the Secretary of State race on August 24 in order to allow the Vermont Republican Party to name replacement candidates.[4] The Vermont Republican Party chose Anya Tynio, who came in 2nd place in the primary, to be the Republican nominee.[5]

Progressive primary

Candidates

Write-in

  • Daniel Freilich, candidate for U.S. Senate in 2010, Navy medical doctor, physician at the VA Medical Center (also running in Democratic primary)

Debates & forums

Results

Progressive primary results[6]
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Peter Welch (write-in) 237 36.9
Progressive Daniel Freilich (write-in) 73 11.4
Progressive Other write-in 72 11.2
Progressive Spoiled votes 1 0.2
Progressive Blank votes 260 40.4
Total votes 643 100.0

Liberty Union/Socialist nomination

The Liberty Union Party serves as the Vermont affiliate of the Socialist Party for federal-level elections.

Candidates

Declared

  • Laura S. Potter[7]

Withdrawn

United States Marijuana nomination

Candidates

Declared

  • Cris Ericson, perennial candidate[9]

America First nomination

Candidates

Declared

  • Paul Young[10] (failed to appear on ballot)

General election

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Peter
Welch (D)
Anya
Tynio (R)
Other Undecided
Gravis Marketing October 30 – November 1, 2018 885 ± 3.3% 66% 28% 6%
Braun Research October 5–14, 2018 497 ± 4.4% 55% 18% 7%[11] 20%

Results

Vermont's at-large congressional district, 2018[12]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Democratic Peter Welch (incumbent) 188,547 69.20% -13.31%
Republican Anya Tynio 70,705 25.95% N/A
Marijuana Cris Ericson 9,110 3.34% N/A
Liberty Union Laura Potter 3,924 1.44% -7.74%
Write-in Write-ins 165 0.07% -0.39%
Total votes '272,451' '100.0%' N/A
Democratic hold

References

Official campaign websites
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