18 of the 33 seats in the Tennessee State Senate 17 seats needed for a majority
Results by gains and holds
Results by winning party vote share Results: Republican gain Republican hold Democratic hold No Election Vote Share: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% >90% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% >90%
The 2014 Tennessee State Senate election was held on November 4, 2014, to elect 18 of the 33 seats for the Tennessee's State Senate . The elections coincided with the Governor , U.S. Senate , U.S. House , and State House elections. The primary elections were held on August 7, 2014.[ 1]
Republicans gained 2 seats, expanding their Senate Supermajority .[ 2]
Three incumbents (3 Democrats ) did not run for re-election in 2014. Those incumbents are:
District 15 : Charlotte Burks retired.
District 21 : Douglas Henry retired.
District 27 : Lowe Finney retired.
Incumbents defeated [ edit ]
In the primary election [ edit ]
District 29 : Ophelia Ford lost renomination to Lee Harris .
District 7 : Stacey Campfield lost renomination to Richard Briggs .
District 25 : Jim Summerville lost renomination to Kerry Roberts
Party
Candidates
Votes
Seats
No.
%
Before
Up
Won
After
+/–
Republican
17
463,829
71.20%
26
11
13
28
Increase 2
Democratic
9
170,534
26.18%
7
6
4
5
Decrease 2
Green
1
9,366
1.44%
0
0
0
0
Steady
Constitution
1
1,139
0.17%
0
0
0
0
Steady
Independent
4
6,558
1.01%
0
0
0
0
Steady
Write-in
1
38
0.01%
0
0
0
0
Steady
Total
651,464
100.00%
33
33
Steady
Source: [1]
Popular vote
Republican
71.20%
Democratic
26.18%
Other
2.62%
Senate seats
Republican
84.85%
Democratic
15.15%
Many of the senators running in this election ran unopposed or had an uncompetitive election. This race was the closest in the Senate election:
Detailed results by State Senate District [ edit ]
Source:[ 3]
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican Primary
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Rusty Crowe (incumbent)
23,205
100
Total votes
23,205
100
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Mike Bell (incumbent)
20,368
100
Total votes
20,368
100
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Bo Watson (incumbent)
21,336
100
Total votes
21,336
100
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Bill Ketron (incumbent)
12,495
100
Total votes
12,495
100
2014 Tennessee Senate election, District 21[ 14]
Primary election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Jeff Yarbro
6,830
56.7
Democratic
Mary Mancini
5,217
43.3
Total votes
12,047
100
Republican
Diana Cuellar
2,960
61.3
Republican
Quincy McKnight
1,523
31.5
Republican
Mwafaq Aljabbary
346
7.2
Total votes
4,829
100
General election
Democratic
Jeff Yarbro
25,402
66.6
Republican
Diana Cuellar
12,714
33.4
Total votes
38,116
100
Democratic hold
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Jack Johnson (incumbent)
18,985
100
Total votes
18,985
100
2014 Tennessee Senate election, District 29[ 18]
Primary election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Lee Harris
10,517
42.5
Democratic
Ricky Dixon
6,882
27.8
Democratic
Ophelia Ford (incumbent)
6,756
27.3
Democratic
Herman Sawyer
611
2.5
Total votes
24,766
100
Republican
Jim Finney
3,111
82.0
Republican
Anthony Herron, Jr.
682
18.0
Total votes
3,793
100
General election
Democratic
Lee Harris
27,707
81.9
Republican
Jim Finney
6,123
18.1
Total votes
33,830
100
Democratic hold
District 30 (special) [ edit ]
A special election was called for November 4, 2014, following the resignation of Jim Kyle , who was elected as a Shelby County Chancery Court judge. Sara Kyle defeated George Flinn Jr. in the election. Kyle was elected to serve the remaining two years of Kyle's four-year term
General special election [ edit ]
Republican primary [ edit ]
Republican primary
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Brian Kelsey (incumbent)
23,703
100
Total votes
23,703
100
Democratic primary [ edit ]
^ "Tennessee State Senate elections, 2014" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved February 15, 2024 .
^ Garrison, Joey. "Republicans expand supermajorities in TN House, Senate" . The Tennessean . Retrieved February 15, 2024 .
^ "2014 Tennessee Elections" (PDF) .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 1" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 3" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 5" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 7" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 9" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 11" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 13" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 15" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 17" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 19" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 21" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 23" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 25" . Ballotpedia. Retrieved July 22, 2020 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 27" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 29" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 30" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 31" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .
^ "Tennessee State Senate District 33" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 9, 2024 .