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State executive official elections, 2025
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State executive offices up for election in 2025 include two gubernatorial seats, two lieutenant gubernatorial seats, and one attorney general seat. Including down-ballot races, there are eight state executive seats up for election across four states in 2025.[1]
The two gubernatorial races on the ballot in 2025 are in New Jersey and Virginia.
Of the eight state executive positions up for election in 2025, Republicans hold five, Democrats hold two, and officeholders unafilliated with either party hold one. Nationally, following the 2024 general elections, there are:
- 23 Democratic governors and 27 Republican governors
- 20 Democratic lieutenant governors and 24 Republican lieutenant governors
- 21 Democratic attorneys general and 28 Republican attorneys general
- 21 Democratic secretaries of state and 26 Republican secretaries of state
Click here to see political party breakdowns for downballot offices.
State executives act in many capacities according to the powers granted to them by their state's constitution. They are also charged with implementing and enforcing laws made by state legislatures. There are 748 executive seats spread across 13 distinct types of offices in the United States.[2] Of the 13 executive offices, only seven exist in all 50 states: governor, attorney general, superintendent of schools, insurance commissioner, agriculture commissioner, labor commissioner, and public service commissioner.
Other common offices include lieutenant governor, secretary of state, treasurer, controller, auditor, and natural resources commissioner.
State executive offices up for election in 2024 included 11 gubernatorial seats, nine lieutenant gubernatorial seats, 10 attorney general seats, and seven secretary of state seats. Including down-ballot races, there were 167 state executive seats up for election across 30 states in 2024.[3]
In 2022, 307 state executive offices were up for election across 44 states. Twenty offices changed party control, including two previously held Republican lieutenant governorships that changed parties because the governor and lieutenant governor ran on a joint ticket. Of the 18 offices which changed partisan control due to direct election, 10 switched from Democrat to Republican, seven switched from Republican to Democrat, and one nonpartisan official was succeeded by a Republican. A total of 26 incumbents seeking re-election to state executive offices were defeated, with 10 of those losing in the general election and 16 losing in their party's primary or nominating convention.
Ballotpedia identified seven state executive elections as battleground races. Click here to see a breakdown by office.
While this page includes links to pages on state executive elections in the U.S. Territories, it does not include the territories in its statistics.
- On the ballotA list of elections and candidates on the ballot
- Trifectas and triplexesInformation on trifectas and triplexes
- Historical election dataA compilation of data related to state executive official elections
- Pre-election analysisAnalysis leading up to the 2025 state executive elections
- Important dates and deadlinesA list of important dates and deadlines for the 2025 election cycle
On the ballot
Click the tabs below to view information about the elections this year. In this section, you will find:
- A list of seats up for election
- A list of candidates running
- Ballotpedia's Sample Ballot Lookup Tool
There are two gubernatorial seats on the ballot in 2025.
Out of all the state executive offices, only the governor is elected in all 50 states. As the chief executive officer, the governor is among the most powerful figures in state government. Other executive offices ordinarily report to him or her.
The table below contains a list of all candidates for governor in 2025. The table is fully searchable by candidate, party and candidacy status. Depending on the size of your screen, you'll either see a menu to the left of the table or an arrow at the top right corner, which you can use to select a state.
Pre-election analysis
Ballotpedia identified seven state executive elections as battleground races. The breakdown of battleground races by office includes:
- Two elections for governor,
- One elections for attorney general,
- Two election for lieutenant governor
- One election for Public Service Commissioner (two seats)
- One election for Superintendent of Public Instruction
Trifectas and triplexes
Trifectas and triplexes are terms used to describe party control of state political offices. Click the tabs below to view the current status of trifectas and triplexes across the country.
- See also: State government trifectas
State government trifecta is a term to describe single-party government, when one political party holds the governorship and majorities in both chambers of the state legislature.
As of September 10, 2025, there are 23 Republican trifectas, 15 Democratic trifectas, and 12 divided governments where neither party holds trifecta control.
Important dates and deadlines
The following table details 2025 statewide filing deadlines and primary dates.
State | Election date | Filing deadline | Source |
---|---|---|---|
New Jersey | June 10, 2025 | March 24, 2025 - New Jersey statewide primary candidate filing deadline | Source |
Pennsylvania | May 20, 2025 | March 11, 2025 - Pennsylvania statewide primary candidate filing deadline | Source |
Virginia | June 17, 2025 | April 3, 2025 - Virginia statewide primary candidate filing deadline | Source |
Wisconsin | Feb. 18, 2025 | Jan. 7, 2025 - Wisconsin statewide spring primary candidate filing deadline | Source |
Historical election data
Ballotpedia covers America's 748 state executive seats across all 50 states. The following sections look at incumbency and partisanship in state executive elections from 2011 to 2024.
Incumbency
From 2011 to 2024, 58.4% of incumbents sought re-election. Of the incumbents who sought re-election during that period, 86% were successful. The first chart below shows the number of incumbents who sought election each year compared to the number of seats up for election. The second chart shows the number of incumbents who were re-elected compared to the number of incumbents who ran for re-election.
See also
Footnotes
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