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‹ 1998 2002 › | ||||
United States House of Representatives elections, 2000 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
All 435 seats to the United States House of Representatives | ||||
November 7, 2000 | ||||
Majority party | Minority party | |||
Leader | Dennis Hastert | Dick Gephardt | ||
Party | Republican | Democratic | ||
Leader's seat | Illinois-14th | Missouri-3rd | ||
Last election | 223 seats | 211 seats | ||
Seats won | 221 | 212 | ||
Seat change | -2 | +1 | ||
Popular vote | 46,750,175 | 46,411,559 | ||
Percentage | 47.3% | 47.0% | ||
Swing | -0.7% | -0.1% | ||
Previous Speaker Speaker-elect |
The elections for the United States House of Representatives in 2000 coincided with the disputed election of George W. Bush as President. The Republican Party narrowly lost seats to the Democratic Party, reducing their majority slightly to a bare nine seats.
This marked the third time in a row that Democrats gained on the majority Republicans.
This was the last congressional election that chose members from districts drawn based on the 1990 census.
Overall results[]