Election Name: | 2018 United States Shadow Senator election in the District of Columbia |
Country: | Washington, D.C. |
Type: | Presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2012 United States Shadow Senator election in the District of Columbia |
Previous Year: | 2012 |
Election Date: | November 6, 2018 |
Next Election: | 2024 United States Shadow Senator election in the District of Columbia |
Next Year: | 2024 |
Image1: | File:Michael Donald Brown.jpg |
Nominee1: | Michael D. Brown |
Party1: | Democratic Party (United States) |
Popular Vote1: | 178,573 |
Percentage1: | 82.89% |
Nominee2: | Eleanor Ory |
Party2: | D.C. Statehood Green Party |
Popular Vote2: | 33,016 |
Percentage2: | 15.32% |
Map Size: | 220px |
Shadow Senator | |
Before Election: | Michael D. Brown |
Before Party: | Independent (politician) |
After Election: | Michael D. Brown |
After Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
The 2018 United States Shadow Senator election in the District of Columbia took place on November 6, 2018, to elect a shadow member to the United States Senate to represent the District of Columbia. The member was only recognized by the District of Columbia and not officially sworn or seated by the United States Senate. Incumbent Mike Brown was re-elected to a third term.
The Democratic primary took place on Tuesday, June 19, 2018. About 76% of registered voters in the District of Columbia were registered with the Democratic Party, compared with only 6% of registered Republicans.[1] The winner of the Democratic primary almost always wins the general election.[2]
Thomas' campaign raised $44,000 and spent $34,800. Brown's campaign raised and spent only $12,000 and $1,200, respectively.
Thomas' campaign accused Brown of coasting on the name recognition of another D.C. politician, Michael A. Brown, a black former-councilman who remained popular in spite of a federal bribery conviction. Michael D. Brown dismissed the claim in an article for The Washington Post saying, "the implication that I win because African Americans are too uninformed to realize there are two people with a common name is insulting to the hundreds of thousands of D.C. voters who have supported my campaigns."[5]