2014 Minnesota House of Representatives election


The 2014 Minnesota House of Representatives election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on November 4, 2014, to elect members to the House of Representatives of the 89th Minnesota Legislature. A primary election was held in several districts on August 12, 2014.
The Republican Party of Minnesota won a majority of seats, defeating the majority of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party. This was the first election for the DFL since it won a majority of seats in the [Minnesota Minnesota House of Representatives|House of Representatives election, 2012|2012 election], after losing a majority to the Republicans in the 2010 election. The new Legislature convened on January 6, 2015.

Retiring members

DFL

Republican

Predictions

Competitive districts

According to an analysis by the Star Tribune, based on past election results, fundraising, and other factors, 16 seats were vulnerable to switching parties. 14 were held by the DFL and two by the Republicans. According to MinnPost, 15 seats had the best chance of switching parties, based on the district's political lean, previous election results, and the strength of the respective candidates. 13 were held by the DFL and two by the Republicans.
DistrictIncumbentPartyStar Tribune
MinnPost
Result
1BDeb KielRepublicanHold
2ARoger EricksonDFLRepublican gain
2BSteve GreenRepublicanHold
4ABen LienDFLHold
10BJoe RadinovichDFLRepublican gain
11BTim FaustDFLRepublican gain
12AJay McNamarDFLRepublican gain
14BZach DorholtDFLRepublican gain
17AAndrew FalkDFLRepublican gain
17BMary SawatzkyDFLRepublican gain
27AShannon SavickDFLRepublican gain
36AMark UglemRepublicanHold
48AYvonne SelcerDFLHold
49ARon ErhardtDFLHold
49BPaul RosenthalDFLHold
51ASandra MasinDFLHold
51BLaurie HalversonDFLHold
56BWill MorganDFLRepublican gain

General election

Results

[file:MN House 2014 seats won.svg|thumb|Districts won]

District results

DistrictCandidatesParty
7ADFL
7ARepublican
7ADFL
7ADFL
8BRepublican
11ARepublican
14BRepublican
17ARepublican
19BDFL
20ADFL
20ARepublican
24ADFL
24BLibertarian
27ARepublican
31ARepublican
34BRepublican
35ARepublican
35ARepublican
37ARepublican
42BRepublican
46BDFL
47ADFL
49ARepublican
64BDFL
64BDFL
64BDFL
64BDFL
64BDFL
64BDFL

Seats changing parties

[file:MN House 2014 gains.svg|thumb|Seat gains and holds by party]
PartyIncumbentDistrictFirst electedDefeated byParty
DFL14B2012Republican
DFL2A2012Republican
DFL17A2008Republican
DFL11B2006, 2012*Republican
DFL24B2004Republican
DFL12A2012Republican
DFL56B2006, 2012*Republican
DFL10B2012Republican
DFL27A2012Republican
DFL17B2012Republican
DFL10A2006Republican

Analysis

The Republicans made most of their gains in rural districts, continuing a trend of rural districts leaning more towards the Republicans and suburban districts leaning more towards the DFL. Of the 11 districts they gained from the DFL, 10 are outside of the Twin Cities metropolitan area.
Seven rural DFL incumbents who voted for legalizing same-sex marriage lost their seats, despite their districts having supported a proposed constitutional amendment in 2012 to ban it. Yet two rural DFL incumbents who voted against legalizing same-sex marriage also lost their seats.
Split-ticket voters determined the outcome of several key races. Nearly 450,000 voters chose one party's candidate for a House seat, but then switched to pick a different party's candidate for the United States Senate or governor. Eight of the 11 districts the DFL lost featured at least some ticket splitting between DFL candidate for governor Mark Dayton and/or U.S. Senate candidate Al Franken and the Republican House candidate. Nearly all of the DFL candidates who lost came from districts in which many voters supported Republicans in previous elections, including candidates for governor Republican Tom Emmer over Democrat Mark Dayton in 2010 and presidential candidates Republican Mitt Romney over Democratic president Barack Obama in 2012.
Outside and party spending reached large levels in several House districts compared to what has been spent in the past as Republican groups focused their attention on the House rather than statewide races. In some races, spending reached $500,000.
Turnout was the lowest in more than 20 years, with slightly over 50 percent of eligible voters having voted. Turnout across the state was lower compared to 2010. It was slightly lower in the Twin Cities and surrounding suburbs, helping suburban DFL candidates win in those areas. In rural Minnesota, turnout was down by about 10 percentage points since 2010. Much of the drop-off was among DFL voters, while those who did vote in those districts were likely over the age of 45.