Pennsylvania held various elections on November 2, 2010. These include elections for a Senate seat, a gubernatorial race, and many state legislature races.
See main article: United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, 2010. Former Republican, now Democratic, Senator Arlen Specter was defeated in a primary election to Joe Sestak, who then faced Republican Pat Toomey. In a narrow race, Pat Toomey was victorious over Sestak.
See main article: Pennsylvania's 12th congressional district special election, 2010. A special election was held on May 18, 2010 to fill the seat left vacant by the death of Democratic U.S. Representative John Murtha.[1] On March 8, 2010, the Pennsylvania Democratic Party's Executive Committee nominated Mark Critz, Murtha's former district director.[2] On March 11, a convention of Republicans from the 12th district nominated businessman Tim Burns.[3] The Democrats held the seat in the special election, with Critz defeating Burns.[4] Both would face each other again in November's general election, with Critz winning again.[5]
See main article: United States House of Representatives elections in Pennsylvania, 2010. All 19 seats will face an election. Pennsylvania is expected to lose one congressional seat after the 2010 census.
See main article: Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, 2010. A new governor was elected(incumbent Governor Ed Rendell (D) is term limited), Tom Corbett, the Republican, won the general election with 55% of the vote against the Democrat, Dan Onorato, who carried 45% of the final vote.
See main article: Pennsylvania Senate elections, 2010.
See main article: Pennsylvania House of Representatives elections, 2010.
Pennsylvania holds judicial elections in odd-numbered years.
At least one statewide ballot question has been proposed for the November 2 ballot:
1. Call for a Constitutional Convention