Elections →
PoliVion archive

Who is being elected

A live record of elected officials as races are decided across the country. Built to show what the government is actually composed of — across the House, Senate, governors, courts, and major executive roles — in one place.

Live national view Updated as races are decided See who makes up government
Scope note: this is a rolling cycle archive, not a single election-night page. It includes major wins already decided in late 2025 that shape the 2026 political map, while Senate and most 2026-specific results are still waiting to be filled in.
View
Filter the archive by branch or office type
U.S. House
Special and general-election winners will stack here over time
Georgia · 14th District Special Runoff
Clay Fuller portrait
Clay Fuller
Republican House winner

Clay Fuller is a Georgia district attorney who served in the Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit, where he focused on prosecuting violent crime and working with local law enforcement across multiple counties. His background is rooted in public safety, criminal prosecution, and the legal system.

Open slot
More House winners will appear here
Keep this section dense and simple. As special elections and then November results come in, each new winner should drop into the grid as a compact card.
Open slot
Designed for many entries
This should eventually hold a lot of cards, so the layout is intentionally more archive-like than spotlight-driven.
Open slot
Future addition
Use these slots for general-election House winners later in 2026, or replace them with a templated loop once the JSON system is ready.
U.S. Senate
No winners yet as of April 11, 2026
Coming later
33 regular Senate seats are up in 2026
This section should stay present all year so the archive feels complete, but it should remain empty until actual Senate winners exist.
Placeholder
Add winners only when called
Once Senate races are decided, each winner can use the same compact card pattern with a photo, party, short bio line, and a link to the PoliVion candidate page.
Governors
Major statewide executive wins already on the board in this cycle
New Jersey Governor · 2025 General
Mikie Sherrill portrait
Mikie Sherrill
Democrat Governor winner

Mikie Sherrill is a former U.S. Navy helicopter pilot and former federal prosecutor who later represented New Jersey in Congress. Her background combines military service, legal experience, and work on national security, government accountability, and economic issues.

Virginia Governor · 2025 General
Abigail Spanberger portrait
Abigail Spanberger
Democrat Governor winner

Abigail Spanberger is a former CIA officer and former member of Congress from Virginia whose career has centered on intelligence, public service, and federal policymaking. Her background emphasizes national security, constituent-focused governance, and pragmatic leadership.

Future additions
More governor winners can stack here later
Keep the cards compact. Once 2026 gubernatorial races are decided, they can drop right into this same archive grid without changing the structure.
Major executive wins
Big-city executive races that matter to the cycle, without mixing them into governor categories
New York City Mayor · 2025 General
Zohran Mamdani portrait
Zohran Mamdani
Democrat Mayor winner

Zohran Mamdani is a New York politician who served in the New York State Assembly before rising to citywide office. His public profile has been shaped by his focus on housing, affordability, transit, and progressive urban policy.

Expandable
Other major executive races can live here
This section gives you room for high-signal executive wins like mayors or other top offices without muddying the House, Senate, governor, or court categories.
State supreme courts
Judicial winners can be logged even when Senate and governor sections are still empty
Wisconsin Supreme Court
Chris Taylor portrait
Chris Taylor
Court election State supreme court winner

Chris Taylor is a Wisconsin judge and former state legislator whose career has included work in both the judicial and legislative branches. Her background reflects experience with state law, public policy, and the administration of justice.

Open slot
More court winners can stack here
Other state supreme court races can be added as they are decided across the 2026 cycle.