1958 United States House of Representatives elections#Delaware

{{short description|House elections for the 86th U.S. Congress}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1958 United States House of Representatives elections

| country = United States

| flag_year = 1912

| type = legislative

| ongoing = no

| previous_election = 1956 United States House of Representatives elections

| previous_year = 1956

| next_election = 1960 United States House of Representatives elections

| next_year = 1960

| seats_for_election = All 436 seats in the United States House of Representatives

| majority_seats = 219

| election_date = November 4, 1958{{efn|September 8, 1958 in Maine}}

| image_size = 160x180px

| image1 = Sam Rayburn.jpg

| leader1 = Sam Rayburn

| leader_since1 = September 16, 1940

| party1 = Democratic Party (US)

| leaders_seat1 = {{ushr|TX|4|T}}

| last_election1 = 234 seats

| seats1 = 283

| seat_change1 = {{increase}} 49

| popular_vote1 = 25,604,679

| percentage1 = 56.0%

| swing1 = {{increase}} 4.8{{percentage points}}

| image2 = Forward to forty cry Republicans(cropped).jpg

| leader2 = Joseph Martin

| leader_since2 = January 3, 1939

| party2 = Republican Party (US)

| leaders_seat2 = {{ushr|MA|14|T}}

| last_election2 = 201 seats

| seats2 = 153

| seat_change2 = {{decrease}} 48

| popular_vote2 = 19,931,409

| percentage2 = 43.6%

| swing2 = {{decrease}} 5.1{{percentage points}}

| map_image = File:1958 United States House elections.svg

| map_size = 320px

| map_caption = Results:
{{legend0|#92C5DE|Democratic hold}} {{legend0|#0671B0|Democratic gain}}
{{legend0|#F48882|Republican hold}} {{legend0|#CA0120|Republican gain}}

| title = Speaker

| before_election = Sam Rayburn

| before_party = Democratic Party (US)

| after_election = Sam Rayburn

| after_party = Democratic Party (US)

}}

The 1958 United States House of Representatives elections was an election for the United States House of Representatives to elect members to serve in the 86th United States Congress. They were held for the most part on November 4, 1958, in the middle of Dwight Eisenhower's second presidential term, while Maine held theirs on September 8. There were 436 seats during these elections: 435 from the reapportionment in accordance with the 1950 census, and one seat for Alaska, the new state that would officially join the union on January 3, 1959.

The economy was suffering the Recession of 1958, which Democrats blamed on Eisenhower. The President's Republican Party lost 48 seats in this midterm election, increasing the Democratic Party's majority to a commanding level that Republicans would not be able to overcome for another 36 years.{{Cite news |last=James Reston |date=November 6, 1958 |title=Democratic Gain 13 Senate Seats |work=The New York Times |url=https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0B13FF3F59107B93C4A9178AD95F4C8585F9 |access-date=April 8, 2014}} Another factor which may have contributed to the Democratic gains include public consternation over the launch of Sputnik and Cold War politics.

Disappointment with the results led House Republicans to replace Minority Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr. with his deputy, Charles Halleck.

Overall results

394 incumbent members sought reelection, but 3 were defeated in primaries and 37 defeated in the general election for a total of 354 incumbents winning.{{sfn|Abramson|Aldrich|Rohde|1995|p=259}}

style="width:70%; text-align:center"

|+ ↓

style="color:white"

| style="background:{{party color|Democratic Party (US)}}; width:64.91%" | 283

| style="background:{{party color|Republican Party (US)}}; width:35.09%" | 153

Democratic

| Republican

class=wikitable style="text-align:center"

! colspan=2 | Party

! Total seats

! Change

! Seat percentage

! Vote percentage

! Popular Vote

{{Party color cell|Democratic Party (US)}}

| Democratic

| 283

| {{Gain}} 49

| 64.9%

| 56.0%

| 25,604,679

{{Party color cell|Republican Party (US)}}

| Republican

| 153

| {{Loss}} 48

| 35.1%

| 43.6%

| 19,931,409

{{Party color cell|Liberal Party (New York)}}

| Liberal

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| 0.2%

| 72,215

{{Party color cell|Independent}}

| Independent

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| 0.1%

| 30,503

{{Party color cell|Prohibition Party}}

| Prohibition

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 8,816

{{Party color cell|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}

| Socialist Labor

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 8,097

{{Party color cell|Conservative Party (New York)}}

| Conservative

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 3,444

{{Party color cell|Constitution Party (US)}}

| Constitution

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 2,953

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Decency and Vigilance

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 2,478

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Taxation With Representation

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 1,718

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Unity for Justice

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 1,221

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Keep People Working

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 782

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| The People's Friend

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 580

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Freedom Through Victory

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 550

{{Party color cell|Socialist Party (US)}}

| Socialist

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 538

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Independents for Economy

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 409

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Light a Candle

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 336

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Taxpayer's Only Friend

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 277

{{Party color cell|Social Democratic Party (US)}}

| Social Democratic

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 268

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Progress-Integrity-Economy

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| <0.1%

| 103

{{Party color cell|None}}

| Others

| 0

| {{steady}}

| 0.0%

| 0.1%

| 47,618

colspan=2 | Totals

! 436{{efn|Increase is due to the admission of Alaska, whose seat was temporarily added to the usual 435, until reapportionment following 1960.}}

! {{Gain}} 1

! 100.0%

! 100.0%

! 45,718,994

Source: [http://history.house.gov/Institution/Election-Statistics/Election-Statistics/ Election Statistics - Office of the Clerk]

{{bar box

|title=Popular vote

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=900px

|barwidth=710px

|bars=

{{bar percent|Democratic|{{party color|Democratic Party (US)}}|56.00}}

{{bar percent|Republican|{{party color|Republican Party (US)}}|43.60}}

{{bar percent|Others|{{party color|Others}}|0.40}}

}}

{{bar box

|title=House seats

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=900px

|barwidth=710px

|bars=

{{bar percent|Democratic|{{party color|Democratic Party (US)}}|64.91}}

{{bar percent|Republican|{{party color|Republican Party (US)}}|35.09}}

}}

File:1958 House Elections by vote share.svg

[[File:86 us house membership.png|thumb|450px|

{|

! colspan=2 | House seats by party holding plurality in state

{{Legend|#00f|80+% Democratic}}

| {{Legend|#f00|80+% Republican}}

{{Legend|#09f|60+ to 80% Democratic}}

| {{Legend|#f66|60+ to 80% Republican}}

{{Legend|#0ff|Up to 60% Democratic}}

| {{Legend|#f99|Up to 60% Republican}}

]]

| [[File:86 us house changes.png|thumb|450px|

{{Legend|#00f|6+ Democratic gain}}

| {{Legend|#f00|6+ Republican gain}}

{{Legend|#09f|3-5 Democratic gain}}

| {{Legend|#f66|3-5 Republican gain}}

{{Legend|#0ff|1-2 Democratic gain}}

| {{Legend|#f99|1-2 Republican gain}}

{{Legend|#ccc|no net change}}
]]

|}

Special elections

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Georgia|7|X}}

| Henderson L. Lanham

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent died November 10, 1957.
New member elected January 8, 1958.
Democratic hold.
Successor was subsequently re-elected in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harlan E. Mitchell (Democratic) 95.46%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Howard I. Purdy (Republican) 2.66%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}H. M. King (Republican) 1.06%{{Cite web |title=Our Campaigns - GA District 7 - Special Election Race - Jan 08, 1958 |url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=500616 |access-date= June 10, 2020 |website=www.ourcampaigns.com}}

}}

{{ushr|NY|37|X}}

| W. Sterling Cole

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned December 1, 1957 to become the first Director of the IAEA.
New member elected January 14, 1958.
Republican hold.
Winner was subsequently re-elected in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Howard W. Robison (Republican) 59.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Francis P. Hogan (Democratic) 40.2%

}}

{{ushr|PA|21|X}}

| Augustine B. Kelley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent died November 20, 1957.
New member elected January 21, 1958.
Democratic hold.
Successor was subsequently re-elected in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John H. Dent (Democratic) 56.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Herbert Morrison (Republican) 43.3%

}}

{{ushr|TN|8|X}}

| Jere Cooper

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1928

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent died December 18, 1957.
New member elected February 1, 1958.
Democratic hold.
Successor was subsequently re-elected in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Fats Everett (Democratic) 50.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}E. T. Palmer (Democratic) 31.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Z. D. Atkins (Democratic) 18%

}}

{{ushr|MN|1|X}}

| August H. Andresen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1924
1932 {{Small|(lost)}}
1934

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent died January 14, 1958.
New member elected February 18, 1958.
Republican hold.
Successor was subsequently re-elected in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Al Quie (Republican) 50.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Eugene P. Foley (Democratic) 49.7%{{Cite web |title=Our Campaigns - MN District 1 - Special Election Race - Feb 18, 1958 |url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=84659 |access-date= June 10, 2020 |website=www.ourcampaigns.com}}

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|X}}

| Earl Chudoff

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned January 5, 1958, after being elected judge of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas No. 1.
New member elected May 20, 1958.
Democratic hold.
Successor was subsequently re-elected in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert N. C. Nix Sr. (Democratic) 64.89%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Cecil B. Moore (Republican) 35.11%{{Cite web |title=Our Campaigns - PA - District 04 - Special Election Race - May 20, 1958 |url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=348400 |access-date=June 10, 2020 |website=www.ourcampaigns.com}}

}}

Alabama

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Alabama}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Alabama|1|X}}

| Frank W. Boykin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1935 Alabama's 1st congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank W. Boykin (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|2|X}}

| George M. Grant

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George M. Grant (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|3|X}}

| George W. Andrews

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George W. Andrews (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|4|X}}

| Kenneth A. Roberts

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kenneth A. Roberts (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|5|X}}

| Albert Rains

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert Rains (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|6|X}}

| Armistead I. Selden Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|7|X}}

| Carl Elliott

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Elliott (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|8|X}}

| Robert E. Jones Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947 Alabama's 8th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|9|X}}

| George Huddleston Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Huddleston Jr. (Democratic) 86.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank L. Mason (Republican) 13.7%

}}

Alaska

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Alaska|1958 United States Senate elections in Alaska}}

File:1958 United States House of Representatives in Alaska results map by borough and census area.svg

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Alaska|AL|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ralph Julian Rivers (Democratic) 57.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Henry A. Benson (Republican) 42.5%

}}

Arizona

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Arizona|1958 United States Senate election in Arizona}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Arizona|1|X}}

| John J. Rhodes

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. Rhodes (Republican) 59.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joe Haldiman Jr. (Democratic) 40.8%

}}

{{ushr|Arizona|2|X}}

| Stewart Udall

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Stewart Udall (Democratic) 60.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jack Speiden (Republican) 39.1%

}}

Arkansas

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Arkansas}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Arkansas|1|X}}

| Ezekiel C. Gathings

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|2|X}}

| Wilbur Mills

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|3|X}}

| James William Trimble

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|4|X}}

| Oren Harris

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Oren Harris (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|5|X}}

| Brooks Hays

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Independent Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dale Alford (Dem./Write-in) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Brooks Hays (Democratic) 49.0%

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|6|X}}

| William F. Norrell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William F. Norrell (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

California

{{Main|1958 United States House of Representatives elections in California}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from California|1958 United States Senate election in California}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|California|1|X}}

| Hubert B. Scudder

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clem Miller (Democratic) 54.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frederick G. Dupuis (Republican) 45.1%

}}

{{ushr|California|2|X}}

| Clair Engle

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1943 California's 2nd congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold T. Johnson (Democratic) 61.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Curtis W. Tarr (Republican) 39.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|3|X}}

| John E. Moss

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John E. Moss (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|4|X}}

| William S. Mailliard

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William S. Mailliard (Republican) 60.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}George D. Collins Jr. (Democratic) 40.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|5|X}}

| John F. Shelley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1949 California's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John F. Shelley (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|6|X}}

| John F. Baldwin Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John F. Baldwin Jr. (Republican) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Howard H. Jewel (Democratic) 49.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|7|X}}

| John J. Allen Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|California|8|X}}

| George P. Miller

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George P. Miller (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|9|X}}

| J. Arthur Younger

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Arthur Younger (Republican) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Elma D. Oddstad (Democratic) 41.2%

}}

{{ushr|California|10|X}}

| Charles Gubser

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles Gubser (Republican) 54.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Russell B. Bryan (Democratic) 45.4%

}}

{{ushr|California|11|X}}

| John J. McFall

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. McFall (Democratic) 69.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frederick S. Van Dyke (Republican) 30.7%

}}

{{ushr|California|12|X}}

| B. F. Sisk

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} B. F. Sisk (Democratic) 81.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Daniel K. Halpin (Republican) 18.9%

}}

{{ushr|California|13|X}}

| Charles M. Teague

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles M. Teague (Republican) 57.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William Kirk Stewart (Democratic) 43.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|14|X}}

| Harlan Hagen

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harlan Hagen (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|15|X}}

| Gordon L. McDonough

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gordon L. McDonough (Republican) 52.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Emery S. Petty (Democratic) 48.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|16|X}}

| Donald L. Jackson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Donald L. Jackson (Republican) 57.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Melvin Lennard (Democratic) 42.2%

}}

{{ushr|California|17|X}}

| Cecil R. King

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Cecil R. King (Democratic) 75.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Leonard Di Miceli (Republican) 24.7%

}}

{{ushr|California|18|X}}

| Craig Hosmer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Craig Hosmer (Republican) 60.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harry S. May (Democratic) 40.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|19|X}}

| Chet Holifield

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Chet Holifield (Democratic) 83.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Harry Vincent Leppek (Republican) 16.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|20|X}}

| H. Allen Smith

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} H. Allen Smith (Republican) 66.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Raymond Robert Farrell (Democratic) 34.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|21|X}}

| Edgar W. Hiestand

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edgar W. Hiestand (Republican) 51.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Rudd Brown (Democratic) 48.1%

}}

{{ushr|California|22|X}}

| Joseph F. Holt

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph F. Holt (Republican) 55.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Irving Glasband (Democratic) 44.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|23|X}}

| Clyde Doyle

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clyde Doyle (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|24|X}}

| Glenard P. Lipscomb

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1953 California's 24th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Glenard P. Lipscomb (Republican) 56.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William H. Ware Jr. (Democratic) 43.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|25|X}}

| Patrick J. Hillings

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired to run for Attorney General of California.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George A. Kasem (Democratic) 50.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Prescott O. Lieberg (Republican) 49.9%

}}

{{ushr|California|26|X}}

| James Roosevelt

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Roosevelt (Democratic) 72.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Crispus Wright (Republican) 27.8%

}}

{{ushr|California|27|X}}

| Harry R. Sheppard

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harry R. Sheppard (Democratic) 72.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert M. Castle (Republican) 27.7%

}}

{{ushr|California|28|X}}

| James B. Utt

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James B. Utt (Republican) 58.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}T. R. Boyett (Democratic) 41.8%

}}

{{ushr|California|29|X}}

| Dalip Singh Saund

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dalip Singh Saund (Democratic) 62.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John Babbage (Republican) 37.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|30|X}}

| Bob Wilson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bob Wilson (Republican) 55.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Lionel Van Deerlin (Democratic) 44.7%

}}

Colorado

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Colorado}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Colorado|1|X}}

| Byron G. Rogers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Byron G. Rogers (Democratic) 66.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John J. Harpel (Republican) 33.3%

}}

{{ushr|Colorado|2|X}}

| William S. Hill

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Byron L. Johnson (Democratic) 54.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John G. Mackie (Republican) 45.8%

}}

{{ushr|Colorado|3|X}}

| John Chenoweth

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Chenoweth (Republican) 50.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Fred M. Betz (Democratic) 49.8%

}}

{{ushr|Colorado|4|X}}

| Wayne N. Aspinall

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wayne N. Aspinall (Democratic) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}J. R. Wells (Republican) 36.4%

}}

Connecticut

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Connecticut|1958 United States Senate election in Connecticut}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Connecticut|1|X}}

| Edwin H. May Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|2|X}}

| Horace Seely-Brown Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|3|X}}

| Albert W. Cretella

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Giaimo (Democratic) 56.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Albert W. Cretella (Republican) 43.8%

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|4|X}}

| Albert P. Morano

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Donald J. Irwin (Democratic) 50.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Albert P. Morano (Republican) 49.1%

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|5|X}}

| James T. Patterson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John S. Monagan (Democratic) 50.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}James T. Patterson (Republican) 46.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Union Party (US)}}Colin D. Hennessey (Independent) 3.2%

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|AL|X}}

| Antoni Sadlak

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Kowalski (Democratic) 56.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Antoni Sadlak (Republican) 44.0%

}}

Delaware

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Delaware|1958 United States Senate election in Delaware}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Delaware|AL|X}}

| Hal Haskell

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harris McDowell (Democratic) 50.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Hal Haskell (Republican) 49.8%

}}

Florida

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Florida|1958 United States Senate election in Florida}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Florida|1|X}}

| William C. Cramer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William C. Cramer (Republican) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Winton H. King (Democratic) 41.2%

}}

{{ushr|Florida|2|X}}

| Charles E. Bennett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles E. Bennett (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|3|X}}

| Bob Sikes

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940
1944 {{Small|(resigned)}}
1974

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bob Sikes (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|4|X}}

| Dante Fascell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dante Fascell (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|5|X}}

| Syd Herlong

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Syd Herlong (Democratic) 67.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William C. Coleman Jr. (Republican) 33.0%

}}

{{ushr|Florida|6|X}}

| Paul Rogers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul Rogers (Democratic) 71.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Charles P. Ware (Republican) 28.5%

}}

{{ushr|Florida|7|X}}

| James A. Haley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James A. Haley (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|8|X}}

| Donald Ray Matthews

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

Georgia

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Georgia}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Georgia|1|X}}

| Prince Hulon Preston Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|2|X}}

| J. L. Pilcher

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1953 Georgia's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. L. Pilcher (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|3|X}}

| Tic Forrester

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tic Forrester (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|4|X}}

| John Flynt

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Flynt (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|5|X}}

| James C. Davis

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James C. Davis (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|6|X}}

| Carl Vinson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1914

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Vinson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|7|X}}

| Harlan Mitchell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1958

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harlan Mitchell (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|8|X}}

| Iris Faircloth Blitch

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|9|X}}

| Phillip M. Landrum

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Phillip M. Landrum (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|10|X}}

| Paul Brown

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1933 Georgia's 10th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul Brown (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Idaho

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Idaho}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Idaho|1|X}}

| Gracie Pfost

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gracie Pfost (Democratic) 62.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}A. B. Curtis (Republican) 37.6%

}}

{{ushr|Idaho|2|X}}

| Hamer H. Budge

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hamer H. Budge (Republican) 55.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Tim Brennan (Democratic) 45.0%

}}

Illinois

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Illinois}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Illinois|1|X}}

| William L. Dawson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|2|X}}

| Barratt O'Hara

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948
1950 {{Small|(lost)}}
1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Barratt O'Hara (Democratic) 68.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Harold E. Marks (Republican) 31.1%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|3|X}}

| Emmet F. Byrne

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William T. Murphy (Democratic) 59.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Emmet Byrne (Republican) 41.0%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|4|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | William E. McVey (R) died August 10, 1958.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ed Derwinski (Republican) 52.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Leland H. Rayson (Democratic) 48.0%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|5|X}}

| John C. Kluczynski

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John C. Kluczynski (Democratic) 76.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Theodore Wozniak (Republican) 23.9%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|6|X}}

| Thomas J. O'Brien

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas J. O'Brien (Democratic) 73.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank S. Estes (Republican) 26.9%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|7|X}}

| Roland V. Libonati

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1957 Illinois's 7th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Roland V. Libonati (Democratic) 83.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Anthony C. Catena (Republican) 17.0%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|8|X}}

| Thomas S. Gordon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dan Rostenkowski (Democratic) 74.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William F. H. Schmidt (Republican) 25.4%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|9|X}}

| Sidney R. Yates

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sidney R. Yates (Democratic) 67.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Homer P. Hargrave Jr. (Republican) 33.0%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|10|X}}

| Harold R. Collier

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold R. Collier (Republican) 54.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William J. McGah Jr. (Democratic) 45.7%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|11|X}}

| Timothy P. Sheehan

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|12|X}}

| Charles A. Boyle

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles A. Boyle (Democratic) 60.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Allen A. Freeman (Republican) 39.2%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|13|X}}

| Marguerite S. Church

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Marguerite S. Church (Republican) 67.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Laurence A. Kusek (Democratic) 32.9%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|14|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Russell W. Keeney (R) died January 11, 1958.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Elmer J. Hoffman (Republican) 64.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Peter J. Fiefer (Democratic) 35.7%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|15|X}}

| Noah M. Mason

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Noah M. Mason (Republican) 52.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Dorothy G. O'Brien (Democratic) 47.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|16|X}}

| Leo E. Allen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leo E. Allen (Republican) 61.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Milton A. Lundstrom (Democratic) 38.6%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|17|X}}

| Leslie C. Arends

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leslie C. Arends (Republican) 61.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William T. Larkin (Democratic) 39.0%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|18|X}}

| Robert H. Michel

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert H. Michel (Republican) 59.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James W. McGee (Democratic) 40.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|19|X}}

| Robert B. Chiperfield

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert B. Chiperfield (Republican) 50.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John C. Watson (Democratic) 49.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|20|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Sid Simpson (R) died October 26, 1958.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edna O. Simpson (Republican) 55.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Henry W. Pollock (Democratic) 44.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|21|X}}

| Peter F. Mack Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter F. Mack Jr. (Democratic) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Norma Eaton (Republican) 41.2%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|22|X}}

| William L. Springer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William L. Springer (Republican) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Carlton H. Myers (Democratic) 39.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|23|X}}

| Charles W. Vursell

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|24|X}}

| Melvin Price

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Melvin Price (Democratic) 76.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Alex Chouinard (Republican) 23.9%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|25|X}}

| Kenneth J. Gray

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kenneth J. Gray (Democratic) 58.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Carl D. Sneed (Republican) 41.8%

}}

Indiana

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Indiana|1958 United States Senate election in Indiana}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Indiana|1|X}}

| Ray Madden

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ray Madden (Democratic) 66.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edward P. Keck (Republican) 33.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Harry C. Beamer (Prohibition) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|2|X}}

| Charles A. Halleck

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1935 Indiana's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles A. Halleck (Republican) 52.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}George H. Bowers (Democratic) 47.8%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|3|X}}

| F. Jay Nimtz

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Brademas (Democratic) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}F. Jay Nimtz (Republican) 43.1%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|4|X}}

| E. Ross Adair

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} E. Ross Adair (Republican) 50.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}W. Robert Fleming (Democratic) 49.9%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|5|X}}

| John V. Beamer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Edward Roush (Democratic) 53.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John V. Beamer (Republican) 46.3%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|6|X}}

| Cecil M. Harden

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Fred Wampler (Democratic) 51.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Cecil M. Harden (Republican) 48.5%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|7|X}}

| William G. Bray

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William G. Bray (Republican) 53.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas L. Lemon (Democratic) 46.2%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|8|X}}

| Winfield K. Denton

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Winfield K. Denton (Democratic) 61.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Franklin E. Katterjohn (Republican) 38.5%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|9|X}}

| Earl Wilson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Earl Hogan (Democratic) 50.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Earl Wilson (Republican) 49.6%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|10|X}}

| Ralph Harvey

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947 Indiana's 10th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Randall S. Harmon (Democratic) 50.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ralph Harvey (Republican) 49.3%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|11|X}}

| Charles B. Brownson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

Iowa

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Iowa}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Iowa|1|X}}

| Fred Schwengel

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Fred Schwengel (Republican) 53.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas J. Gailey (Democratic) 46.6%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|2|X}}

| Henry O. Talle

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leonard G. Wolf (Democratic) 51.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Henry O. Talle (Republican) 48.9%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|3|X}}

| H. R. Gross

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} H. R. Gross (Republican) 53.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Michael Micich (Democratic) 46.3%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|4|X}}

| Karl M. LeCompte

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Steven V. Carter (Democratic) 52.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John Kyl (Republican) 48.0%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|5|X}}

| Paul Cunningham

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Neal Smith (Democratic) 52.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Paul Cunningham (Republican) 47.7%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|6|X}}

| Merwin Coad

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Merwin Coad (Democratic) 58.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert E. Waggoner (Republican) 41.7%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|7|X}}

| Ben F. Jensen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ben F. Jensen (Republican) 51.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ellsworth O. Hayes (Democratic) 48.5%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|8|X}}

| Charles B. Hoeven

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

Kansas

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Kansas}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Kansas|1|X}}

| William H. Avery

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William H. Avery (Republican) 51.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert W. Domme (Democratic) 47.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Marie I. Hadin (Prohibition) 1.3%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|2|X}}

| Errett P. Scrivner

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1943 Kansas's 2nd congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|3|X}}

| Myron V. George

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Denver D. Hargis (Democratic) 51.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Myron V. George (Republican) 48.3%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|4|X}}

| Edward Herbert Rees

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Herbert Rees (Republican) 50.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Warner Moore (Democratic) 49.3%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|5|X}}

| J. Floyd Breeding

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Floyd Breeding (Democratic) 53.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Clifford R. Hope Jr. (Republican) 46.9%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|6|X}}

| Wint Smith

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wint Smith (Republican) 49.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Elmo J. Mahoney (Democratic) 49.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}John C. Jones (Prohibition) 1.8%

}}

Kentucky

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Kentucky}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Kentucky|1|X}}

| Noble Jones Gregory

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Stubblefield (Democratic) 85.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}James G. Bandy (Republican) 15.0%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|2|X}}

| William Natcher

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1953 Kentucky's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Natcher (Democratic) 76.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Wayland Render (Republican) 23.9%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|3|X}}

| John M. Robsion Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|4|X}}

| Frank Chelf

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Chelf (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|5|X}}

| Brent Spence

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1930

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Brent Spence (Democratic) 71.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jule Appel (Republican) 28.1%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|6|X}}

| John C. Watts

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John C. Watts (Democratic) 94.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in Party (US)}}Wallace Jones (Write-in) 5.3%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|7|X}}

| Carl D. Perkins

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl D. Perkins (Democratic) 65.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}E. L. Raybourn (Republican) 34.2%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|8|X}}

| Eugene Siler

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Eugene Siler (Republican) 68.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}W. D. Scalf (Democratic) 32.0%

}}

Louisiana

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Louisiana}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Louisiana|1|X}}

| F. Edward Hébert

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} F. Edward Hébert (Democratic) 100.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Maurice Eugen Clark (Independent) 0.002%

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|2|X}}

| Hale Boggs

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940
1942 {{Small|(lost)}}
1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hale Boggs (Democratic) 91.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John Patrick Conway (Republican) 8.2%

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|3|X}}

| Edwin E. Willis

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edwin E. Willis (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|4|X}}

| Overton Brooks

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Overton Brooks (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|5|X}}

| Otto Passman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Otto Passman (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|6|X}}

| James H. Morrison

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James H. Morrison (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|7|X}}

| T. Ashton Thompson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} T. Ashton Thompson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|8|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | George S. Long (D) died March 22, 1958.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold B. McSween (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Maine

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Maine|1958 United States Senate election in Maine}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Maine|1|X}}

| Robert Hale

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James C. Oliver (Democratic) 52.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert Hale (Republican) 47.9%

}}

{{ushr|Maine|2|X}}

| Frank M. Coffin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank M. Coffin (Democratic) 61.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Neil Bishop (Republican) 38.8%

}}

{{ushr|Maine|3|X}}

| Clifford McIntire

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951 Maine's 3rd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clifford McIntire (Republican) 55.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Gerald J. Grady (Democratic) 44.1%

}}

Maryland

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Maryland|1958 United States Senate election in Maryland}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Maryland|1|X}}

| Edward T. Miller

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|2|X}}

| James Devereux

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Maryland.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel Brewster (Democratic) 61.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Fife Symington (Republican) 39.0%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|3|X}}

| Edward Garmatz

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947 Maryland's 3rd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Garmatz (Democratic) 84.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Harry Kemper (Republican) 16.0%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|4|X}}

| George Fallon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Fallon (Democratic) 71.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Louis W. Collier (Republican) 28.4%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|5|X}}

| Richard Lankford

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard Lankford (Democratic) 75.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert E. Ennis (Republican) 24.9%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|6|X}}

| DeWitt Hyde

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John R. Foley (Democratic) 51.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}DeWitt Hyde (Republican) 48.6%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|7|X}}

| Samuel Friedel

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel Friedel (Democratic) 73.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Elizabeth P. Brown (Republican) 26.5%

}}

Massachusetts

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Massachusetts|1958 United States Senate election in Massachusetts}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Massachusetts|1|X}}

| John W. Heselton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Silvio O. Conte (Republican) 55.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James M. Burns (Democratic) 44.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Louise Stone Wilson (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|2|X}}

| Edward Boland

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Boland (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|3|X}}

| Philip J. Philbin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Philip J. Philbin (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|4|X}}

| Harold Donohue

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold Donohue (Democratic) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Charles D. Briggs Jr. (Republican) 36.2%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|5|X}}

| Edith Nourse Rogers

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1925 Massachusetts's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edith Nourse Rogers (Republican) 66.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William H. Sullivan (Democratic) 34.0%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|6|X}}

| William H. Bates

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William H. Bates (Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|7|X}}

| Thomas J. Lane

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1941 Massachusetts's 7th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas J. Lane (Democratic) 75.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert T. Breed (Republican) 24.4%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|8|X}}

| Torbert Macdonald

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Torbert Macdonald (Democratic) 66.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Gordon F. Hughes (Republican) 33.6%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|9|X}}

| Donald W. Nicholson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947 Massachusetts's 9th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hastings Keith (Republican) 54.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John Almeida Jr. (Democratic) 45.3%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|10|X}}

| Laurence Curtis

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|11|X}}

| Tip O'Neill

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tip O'Neill (Democratic) 80.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Elliott H. Stone (Republican) 19.6%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|12|X}}

| John W. McCormack

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1928

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John W. McCormack (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|13|X}}

| Richard B. Wigglesworth

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1928

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James A. Burke (Democratic) 53.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William W. Jenness (Republican) 46.5%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|14|X}}

| Joseph W. Martin Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1924

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph W. Martin Jr. (Republican) 61.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edward F. Doolan (Democratic) 39.0%

}}

Michigan

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Michigan|1958 United States Senate election in Michigan}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Michigan|1|X}}

| Thaddeus M. Machrowicz

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (Democratic) 90.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Walter Czarnecki (Republican) 9.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}William Sablich (Socialist Labor) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|2|X}}

| George Meader

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Meader (Republican) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert G. Hall (Democratic) 40.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Archie Woodhurst (Prohibition) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Edmund T. Taylor (Socialist Labor) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|3|X}}

| August E. Johansen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} August E. Johansen (Republican) 60.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John R. O'Meara (Democratic) 39.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Floyd R. Latta (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|4|X}}

| Clare Hoffman

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clare Hoffman (Republican) 59.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Gordon A. Elferdink (Democratic) 39.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Junius B. Johnson (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|5|X}}

| Gerald Ford

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gerald Ford (Republican) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Richard F. Vander Veen (Democratic) 36.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Bernard Elve (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|6|X}}

| Charles E. Chamberlain

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles E. Chamberlain (Republican) 52.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Donald Hayworth (Democratic) 47.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Ernest H. Gorton (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|7|X}}

| Robert J. McIntosh

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James G. O'Hara (Democratic) 50.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert J. McIntosh (Republican) 49.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Clarence E. Smith (Prohibition) 0.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Theos A. Grove (Socialist Labor) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|8|X}}

| Alvin Morell Bentley

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alvin Morell Bentley (Republican) 62.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James O. Pino (Democratic) 37.8%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|9|X}}

| Robert P. Griffin

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert P. Griffin (Republican) 56.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jan B. Vanderploeg (Democratic) 43.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Glenn A. Root (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|10|X}}

| Al Cederberg

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Al Cederberg (Republican) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Daniel E. Reed (Democratic) 38.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Mildred Montgomery (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|11|X}}

| Victor A. Knox

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Victor A. Knox (Republican) 52.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Prentiss M. Brown Jr. (Democratic) 47.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Carl E. Ruble (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|12|X}}

| John B. Bennett

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John B. Bennett (Republican) 57.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph S. Mack (Democratic) 42.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Harold Lindahl (Prohibition) 0.08%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|13|X}}

| Charles Diggs

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles Diggs (Democratic) 72.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Charles P. White (Republican) 27.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Peter Goonis (Socialist Labor) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|14|X}}

| Louis C. Rabaut

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Louis C. Rabaut (Democratic) 64.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Lois V. Nair (Republican) 35.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Ruth V. Harrett (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|15|X}}

| John Dingell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1955 Michigan's 15th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Dingell (Democratic) 78.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Austin W. Curtis Jr. (Republican) 21.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Charles Aranoff (Socialist Labor) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Estelle Tripp (Prohibition) 0.10%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|16|X}}

| John Lesinski Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Lesinski Jr. (Democratic) 71.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ralph B. Guy (Republican) 27.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Genevieve Connolly (Socialist Labor) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Earl A. Johnson (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|17|X}}

| Martha Griffiths

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Martha Griffiths (Democratic) 60.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Lucas S. Miel (Republican) 39.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Theodore Gramaticoff (Socialist Labor) 0.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Harold D. Rhodes (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|18|X}}

| William Broomfield

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Broomfield (Republican) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Leslie H. Hudson (Democratic) 47.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}W. Clifford Bentley (Socialist Labor) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Phillip Kile (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

Minnesota

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Minnesota|1958 Minnesota's 1st congressional district special election|1958 United States Senate election in Minnesota}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Minnesota|1|X}}

| Al Quie

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1958

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Al Quie (Republican) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}Eugene P. Foley (DFL) 43.1%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|2|X}}

| Joseph P. O'Hara

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ancher Nelsen (Republican) 57.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}Conrad H. Hammar (DFL) 42.9%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|3|X}}

| Roy Wier

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{Aye}} Roy Wier (DFL) 51.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Leonard E. Lindquist (Republican) 48.4%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|4|X}}

| Eugene McCarthy

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1948

| {{Party shading/DFL/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{Aye}} Joseph Karth (DFL) 56.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank S. Farrell (Republican) 43.6%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|5|X}}

| Walter Judd

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter Judd (Republican) 57.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}Joe Robbie (DFL) 42.7%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|6|X}}

| Fred Marshall

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{Aye}} Fred Marshall (DFL) 64.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Hugo Holmstrom (Republican) 35.7%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|7|X}}

| H. Carl Andersen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} H. Carl Andersen (Republican) 53.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}A. I. Johnson (DFL) 46.7%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|8|X}}

| John Blatnik

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{Aye}} John Blatnik (DFL) 75.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Roy W. Ranum (Republican) 24.4%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|9|X}}

| Coya Knutson

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1954

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Odin Langen (Republican) 50.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}Coya Knutson (DFL) 49.3%

}}

Mississippi

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Mississippi|1958 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi|1958 United States Senate election in Mississippi}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Mississippi|1|X}}

| Thomas Abernethy

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Abernethy (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|2|X}}

| Jamie Whitten

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1941 Mississippi's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jamie Whitten (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|3|X}}

| Frank E. Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank E. Smith (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|4|X}}

| John Bell Williams

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Bell Williams (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|5|X}}

| W. Arthur Winstead

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} W. Arthur Winstead (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|6|X}}

| William M. Colmer

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William M. Colmer (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Missouri

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Missouri|1958 United States Senate election in Missouri}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Missouri|1|X}}

| Frank M. Karsten

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank M. Karsten (Democratic) 75.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Paul E. Corning Jr. (Republican) 24.2%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|2|X}}

| Thomas B. Curtis

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas B. Curtis (Republican) 51.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James L. Sullivan (Democratic) 48.1%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|3|X}}

| Leonor Sullivan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leonor Sullivan (Democratic) 79.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Josiah C. Thomas (Republican) 20.8%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|4|X}}

| George H. Christopher

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George H. Christopher (Democratic) 64.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}James A. Rahm (Republican) 36.0%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|5|X}}

| Richard W. Bolling

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard W. Bolling (Democratic) 70.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Richard W. Byrne (Republican) 30.0%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|6|X}}

| William R. Hull Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William R. Hull Jr. (Democratic) 64.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Clyde M. Kirk (Republican) 35.1%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|7|X}}

| Charles Harrison Brown

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles Harrison Brown (Democratic) 53.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Noel Cox (Republican) 46.3%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|8|X}}

| A. S. J. Carnahan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} A. S. J. Carnahan (Democratic) 64.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Francis Howard (Republican) 35.7%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|9|X}}

| Clarence Cannon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clarence Cannon (Democratic) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Anthony C. Schroeder (Republican) 35.2%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|10|X}}

| Paul C. Jones

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul C. Jones (Democratic) 70.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Gilbert Degenhardt (Republican) 29.3%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|11|X}}

| Morgan M. Moulder

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Morgan M. Moulder (Democratic) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Don W. Owensby (Republican) 43.1%

}}

Montana

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Montana|1958 United States Senate election in Montana}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Montana|1|X}}

| Lee Metcalf

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lee Metcalf (Democratic) 69.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jean Walterskirchen (Republican) 30.5%

}}

{{ushr|Montana|2|X}}

| LeRoy H. Anderson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} LeRoy H. Anderson (Democratic) 61.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ashton Jones (Republican) 39.0%

}}

Nebraska

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Nebraska|1958 United States Senate election in Nebraska}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Nebraska|1|X}}

| Phil Weaver

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Phil Weaver (Republican) 53.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Clair A. Callan (Democratic) 46.6%

}}

{{ushr|Nebraska|2|X}}

| Glenn Cunningham

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Glenn Cunningham (Republican) 64.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Francis M. Casey (Democratic) 35.3%

}}

{{ushr|Nebraska|3|X}}

| R. D. Harrison

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951 Nebraska's 3rd congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lawrence Brock (Democratic) 55.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}R. D. Harrison (Republican) 44.9%

}}

{{ushr|Nebraska|4|X}}

| Arthur L. Miller

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Donald McGinley (Democratic) 52.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Arthur L. Miller (Republican) 47.7%

}}

Nevada

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Nevada|1958 United States Senate election in Nevada}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Nevada|AL|X}}

| Walter S. Baring Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948
1952 {{Small|(lost)}}
1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter S. Baring Jr. (Democratic) 66.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Richard W. Horton (Republican) 33.1%

}}

New Hampshire

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Hampshire}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|New Hampshire|1|X}}

| Chester E. Merrow

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Chester E. Merrow (Republican) 58.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Alphonse Roy (Democratic) 41.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Harold Sperr (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|New Hampshire|2|X}}

| Perkins Bass

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Perkins Bass (Republican) 58.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Stuart V. Nims (Democratic) 41.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Harvey M. Bailey (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

New Jersey

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Jersey|1958 United States Senate election in New Jersey}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|New Jersey|1|X}}

| Charles A. Wolverton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1926

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William T. Cahill (Republican) 50.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Alexander Feinberg (Democratic) 49.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Stanley E. Sluzalis (Independent) 0.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Jules Levin (Socialist Labor) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|2|X}}

| Milton W. Glenn

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1957 New Jersey's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Milton W. Glenn (Republican) 53.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph G. Hancock (Democratic) 46.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Morris Karp (Socialist Labor) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|3|X}}

| James C. Auchincloss

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James C. Auchincloss (Republican) 56.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas F. Guthrie Jr. (Democratic) 43.9%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|4|X}}

| Frank Thompson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Thompson (Democratic) 63.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}A. Jerome Moore (Republican) 37.0%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|5|X}}

| Peter Frelinghuysen Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter Frelinghuysen Jr. (Republican) 55.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}David S. North (Democratic) 44.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Harry Press (Socialist Labor) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|6|X}}

| Florence P. Dwyer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Florence P. Dwyer (Republican) 51.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jack B. Dunn (Democratic) 46.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Alexander Kudlik (Socialist Labor) 1.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Conservative Party (US)}}Frank Chodorov (Conservative) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|7|X}}

| William B. Widnall

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William B. Widnall (Republican) 59.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}J. Emmet Cassidy (Democratic) 40.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Conservative Party (US)}}Robert A. Kretzer (Conservative) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|8|X}}

| Gordon Canfield

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gordon Canfield (Republican) 58.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph R. Brumale (Democratic) 41.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Harry Santhouse (Socialist Labor) 0.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Conservative Party (US)}}Ronald G. Timm (Conservative) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|9|X}}

| Frank C. Osmers Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951 New Jersey's 9th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank C. Osmers Jr. (Republican) 57.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Daniel W. Allen (Democratic) 42.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Herman H. Rhael (Socialist Labor) 0.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Conservative Party (US)}}Arthur A. Wacker (Conservative) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|10|X}}

| Peter W. Rodino

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter W. Rodino (Democratic) 63.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}G. George Addonzio (Republican) 34.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Conservative Party (US)}}Frank J. DeGeorge (Conservative) 1.3%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|11|X}}

| Hugh J. Addonizio

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hugh J. Addonizio (Democratic) 59.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John P. Langan (Republican) 40.7%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|12|X}}

| Robert Kean

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George M. Wallhauser (Republican) 52.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas J. Holleran (Democratic) 45.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Mathew U. Litman (Independent) 1.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Tony Marsella (Socialist Labor) 0.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Conservative Party (US)}}Harold Poeschel (Conservative) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|13|X}}

| Alfred Sieminski

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Neil Gallagher (Democratic) 66.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Samuel F. Kanis (Republican) 24.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Anthony D'Elia Jr. (Independent) 3.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}John Donald Ertle (Independent) 1.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Dominick Gemma (Independent) 1.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}George B. Saxenmeyer (Independent) 0.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Samuel Cooper (Independent) 0.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Edward T. Devlin (Independent) 0.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}William F. Burns Jr. (Independent) 0.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}James A. Carney (Independent) 0.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Edgar G. Brode (Independent) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|14|X}}

| Vincent J. Dellay

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dominick V. Daniels (Democratic) 62.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank A. Musto (Republican) 33.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Eugene J. Tarrant (Independent) 2.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Ferdinand C. Rogers (Independent) 0.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}John E. Walton (Independent) 0.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Robert F. Urguhart (Independent) 0.2%

}}

New Mexico

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Mexico|1958 United States Senate election in New Mexico}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|New Mexico|AL|X}}
{{Small|2 seats on a general ticket}}

| Joseph Montoya

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1957 New Mexico's at-large congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Montoya (Democratic) 32.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas G. Morris (Democratic) 30.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William A. Thompson (Republican) 19.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}George W. McKim (Republican) 18.4%

}}

colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | John J. Dempsey (D) died March 11, 1958.
Democratic hold.

New York

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New York|1958 New York's 37th congressional district special election|1958 United States Senate election in New York}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|New York|1|X}}

| Stuyvesant Wainwright

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|New York|2|X}}

| Steven Derounian

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Steven Derounian (Republican) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Walter A. Lynch Jr. (Democratic) 39.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|3|X}}

| Frank J. Becker

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank J. Becker (Republican) 54.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}A. William Larson (Democratic) 45.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|4|X}}

| Henry J. Latham

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to serve on New York Supreme Court.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Seymour Halpern (Republican) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph J. Perrini (Democratic) 47.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|5|X}}

| Albert H. Bosch

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert H. Bosch (Republican) 52.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William Kerwick (Democratic) 43.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Howard Rudner (Liberal) 4.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|6|X}}

| Lester Holtzman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lester Holtzman (Democratic) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}George T. Reilly (Republican) 36.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|7|X}}

| James J. Delaney

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944
1946 {{Small|(lost)}}
1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James J. Delaney (Democratic) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edward V. Lisoski (Republican) 38.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|8|X}}

| Victor Anfuso

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Victor Anfuso (Democratic) 71.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Leon F. Nadrowski (Republican) 28.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|9|X}}

| Eugene Keogh

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Eugene Keogh (Democratic) 72.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Anton Eyring (Republican) 27.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|10|X}}

| Edna F. Kelly

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1949 New York's 10th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edna F. Kelly (Democratic) 76.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jerome P. Schneider (Republican) 23.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|11|X}}

| Emanuel Celler

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Emanuel Celler (Democratic) 81.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jesse M. Browner (Republican) 18.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|12|X}}

| Francis E. Dorn

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Francis E. Dorn (Republican) 52.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas J. Cuite (Democratic) 39.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Leroy Bowman (Liberal) 7.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|13|X}}

| Abraham J. Multer

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947 New York's 14th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Abraham J. Multer (Democratic) 76.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Hyman D. Siegel (Republican) 23.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|14|X}}

| John J. Rooney

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. Rooney (Democratic) 70.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Anthony D'Allessandro (Republican) 29.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|15|X}}

| John H. Ray

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John H. Ray (Republican) 52.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Vincent R. Fitzpatrick (Democratic) 47.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|16|X}}

| Adam Clayton Powell Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (Democratic) 90.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Earl Brown (Liberal) 9.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|17|X}}

| Frederic Coudert Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Lindsay (Republican) 53.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Anthony B. Akers (Democratic) 46.1%

}}

{{ushr|New York|18|X}}

| Alfred E. Santangelo

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alfred E. Santangelo (Democratic) 59.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}George A. Eyer Jr. (Republican) 33.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Manuel Velazquez (Liberal) 6.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|19|X}}

| Leonard Farbstein

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leonard Farbstein (Democratic) 73.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Gonzales Suarez (Republican) 26.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|20|X}}

| Ludwig Teller

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ludwig Teller (Democratic) 67.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Milton H. Adler (Republican) 33.0%

}}

{{ushr|New York|21|X}}

| Herbert Zelenko

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Herbert Zelenko (Democratic) 72.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Carl Medonick (Democratic) 27.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|22|X}}

| James C. Healey

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James C. Healey (Democratic) 65.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Alex J. Soled (Republican) 20.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}David I. Wells (Liberal) 14.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|23|X}}

| Isidore Dollinger

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Isidore Dollinger (Democratic) 71.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Simon M. Koenig (Republican) 17.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Hector Matthew (Liberal) 10.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|24|X}}

| Charles A. Buckley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles A. Buckley (Democratic) 56.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Charles V. Scanlan (Republican) 28.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Murray Koenig (Liberal) 15.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|25|X}}

| Paul A. Fino

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul A. Fino (Republican) 57.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Neal P. Bottiglieri (Democratic) 42.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|26|X}}

| Edwin B. Dooley

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edwin B. Dooley (Republican) 63.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Phil E. Gilbert Jr. (Democratic) 36.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|27|X}}

| Ralph W. Gwinn

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert R. Barry (Republican) 58.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Richard W. McSpedon (Democratic) 41.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|28|X}}

| Katharine St. George

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Katharine St. George (Republican) 59.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}David Sive (Democratic) 38.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Irving Astrow (Liberal) 2.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|29|X}}

| J. Ernest Wharton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Ernest Wharton (Republican) 63.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Christopher D. Morris (Democratic) 36.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|30|X}}

| Leo W. O'Brien

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leo W. O'Brien (Democratic) 64.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}George H. Witbeck Jr. (Republican) 35.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|31|X}}

| Dean P. Taylor

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dean P. Taylor (Republican) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John R. Cummins (Democratic) 36.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|32|X}}

| Bernard W. Kearney

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel S. Stratton (Democratic) 54.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Walter C. Shaw (Republican) 46.0%

}}

{{ushr|New York|33|X}}

| Clarence E. Kilburn

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clarence E. Kilburn (Republican) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert P. McDonald (Democratic) 35.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|34|X}}

| William R. Williams

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alexander Pirnie (Republican) 50.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edwin L. Slusarczyk (Democratic) 49.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|35|X}}

| R. Walter Riehlman

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} R. Walter Riehlman (Republican) 53.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Caryl M. Kline (Democratic) 46.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|36|X}}

| John Taber

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Taber (Republican) 64.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Frank B. Lent (Democratic) 35.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|37|X}}

| Howard W. Robison

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1958

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Howard W. Robison (Republican) 65.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Francis P. Hogan (Democratic) 34.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|38|X}}

| Kenneth B. Keating

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. Senator.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jessica M. Weis (Republican) 58.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Alphonse L. Cassetti (Democratic) 41.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|39|X}}

| Harold C. Ostertag

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold C. Ostertag (Republican) 65.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harold L. Rakov (Democratic) 34.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|40|X}}

| William E. Miller

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William E. Miller (Republican) 60.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Mariano A. Lucca (Democratic) 36.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Hel J. Di Pota (Liberal) 2.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|41|X}}

| Edmund P. Radwan

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thaddeus J. Dulski (Democratic) 50.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}James O. Moore Jr. (Republican) 49.7%

}}

{{ushr|New York|42|X}}

| John R. Pillion

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John R. Pillion (Republican) 58.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph R. Stiglmeier (Democratic) 41.1%

}}

{{ushr|New York|43|X}}

| Daniel A. Reed

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1918

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel A. Reed (Republican) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}T. Joseph Lynch (Democratic) 34.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Leo M. Brushingham (Liberal) 2.2%

}}

North Carolina

{{See also|List of United States representatives from North Carolina|1958 United States Senate special election in North Carolina}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|North Carolina|1|X}}

| Herbert C. Bonner

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Herbert C. Bonner (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|2|X}}

| Lawrence H. Fountain

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|3|X}}

| Graham A. Barden

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Graham A. Barden (Democratic) 79.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Joe A. Dunn (Republican) 20.9%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|4|X}}

| Harold D. Cooley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold D. Cooley (Democratic) 75.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}L. T. Dark Jr. (Republican) 24.4%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|5|X}}

| Ralph James Scott

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ralph James Scott (Democratic) 71.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William E. Morrow (Republican) 28.4%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|6|X}}

| Carl T. Durham

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl T. Durham (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|7|X}}

| Alton Lennon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alton Lennon (Democratic) 89.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}C. Dana Malpass (Republican) 11.0%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|8|X}}

| Alvin Paul Kitchin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alvin Paul Kitchin (Democratic) 63.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}F. D. B. Harding (Republican) 36.6%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|9|X}}

| Hugh Quincy Alexander

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hugh Quincy Alexander (Democratic) 66.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William White (Republican) 33.5%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|10|X}}

| Charles R. Jonas

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles R. Jonas (Republican) 51.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}David Clark (Democratic) 48.1%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|11|X}}

| Basil Lee Whitener

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Basil Lee Whitener (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|12|X}}

| George A. Shuford

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David McKee Hall (Democratic) 62.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}W. Harold Sams (Republican) 37.5%

}}

North Dakota

{{See also|List of United States representatives from North Dakota|1958 United States Senate election in North Dakota}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|North Dakota|AL|X}}

| Usher L. Burdick

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (North Dakota)}}{{Aye}} Quentin Burdick (Democratic-NPL) 27.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Don L. Short (Republican) 26.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Orris G. Nordhougen (Republican) 25.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (North Dakota)}}S. B. Hocking (Democratic-NPL) 21.4%

}}

{{ushr|North Dakota|AL|X}}

| Otto Krueger

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| {{Party shading/North Dakota Democratic-NPL}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic-NPL gain.

Ohio

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Ohio|1958 United States Senate election in Ohio}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Ohio|1|X}}

| Gordon H. Scherer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gordon H. Scherer (Republican) 56.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}W. Ted Osborne (Democratic) 43.4%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|2|X}}

| William E. Hess

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William E. Hess (Republican) 54.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James O. Bradley (Democratic) 45.3%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|3|X}}

| Paul F. Schenck

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951 Ohio's 3rd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul F. Schenck (Republican) 52.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas B. Talbot (Democratic) 47.6%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|4|X}}

| William McCulloch

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947 Ohio's 4th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William McCulloch (Republican) 61.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Marjorie Conrad Struna (Democratic) 39.0%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|5|X}}

| Cliff Clevenger

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Del Latta (Republican) 53.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}George E. Rafferty (Democratic) 46.1%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|6|X}}

| James G. Polk

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James G. Polk (Democratic) 62.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Elmer S. Barrett (Republican) 38.0%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|7|X}}

| Clarence J. Brown

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clarence J. Brown (Republican) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph A. Sullivan (Democratic) 39.5%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|8|X}}

| Jackson Edward Betts

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jackson Edward Betts (Republican) 61.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Virgil M. Gase (Democratic) 38.7%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|9|X}}

| Thomas L. Ashley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas L. Ashley (Democratic) 61.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William K. Gernheuser (Republican) 38.4%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|10|X}}

| Thomas A. Jenkins

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1924

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter H. Moeller (Democratic) 52.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Homer E. Abele (Republican) 47.1%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|11|X}}

| David S. Dennison Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|12|X}}

| John M. Vorys

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Samuel L. Devine (Republican) 54.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Walter J. Shapter Jr. (Democratic) 45.6%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|13|X}}

| A. David Baumhart Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} A. David Baumhart Jr. (Republican) 58.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}J. William McCray (Democratic) 41.1%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|14|X}}

| William H. Ayres

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William H. Ayres (Republican) 60.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jack B. Arnold (Democratic) 39.9%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|15|X}}

| John E. Henderson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John E. Henderson (Republican) 57.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Herbert U. Smith (Democratic) 42.7%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|16|X}}

| Frank T. Bow

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank T. Bow (Republican) 57.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John G. Freedom (Democratic) 42.6%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|17|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | J. Harry McGregor (R) died October 7, 1958.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert W. Levering (Democratic) 51.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Laurence Burns (Republican) 48.3%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|18|X}}

| Wayne Hays

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wayne Hays (Democratic) 71.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Francis Wallace (Republican) 28.5%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|19|X}}

| Michael J. Kirwan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Michael J. Kirwan (Democratic) 75.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Loren E. Van Brocklin (Republican) 25.0%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|20|X}}

| Michael A. Feighan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Michael A. Feighan (Democratic) 79.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Malvern B. Schultz (Republican) 20.6%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|21|X}}

| Charles Vanik

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles Vanik (Democratic) 80.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Elmer L. Watson (Republican) 19.6%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|22|X}}

| Frances P. Bolton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frances P. Bolton (Republican) 55.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Chat Paterson (Democratic) 44.7%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|23|X}}

| William E. Minshall Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William E. Minshall Jr. (Republican) 66.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Daniel Winston (Democratic) 33.5%

}}

Oklahoma

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Oklahoma}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Oklahoma|1|X}}

| Page Belcher

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Page Belcher (Republican) 50.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Herbert William Wright Jr. (Democratic) 48.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}George H. Brasier (Independent) 0.9%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|2|X}}

| Ed Edmondson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ed Edmondson (Democratic) 79.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Milo Ritter (Republican) 20.9%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|3|X}}

| Carl Albert

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Albert (Democratic) 90.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Chapin Wallace (Republican) 9.1%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|4|X}}

| Tom Steed

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tom Steed (Democratic) 74.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Rolla C. Calkin (Republican) 25.9%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|5|X}}

| John Jarman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Jarman (Democratic) 82.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Hobart H. Hobbs (Republican) 17.7%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|6|X}}

| Toby Morris

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Toby Morris (Democratic) 66.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Fred L. Coogan (Republican) 33.3%

}}

Oregon

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Oregon}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Oregon|1|X}}

| A. Walter Norblad

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Oregon|2|X}}

| Al Ullman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Al Ullman (Democratic) 61.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Marion T. Weatherford (Republican) 38.4%

}}

{{ushr|Oregon|3|X}}

| Edith Green

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edith Green (Democratic) 65.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John Johnston (Republican) 34.2%

}}

{{ushr|Oregon|4|X}}

| Charles O. Porter

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles O. Porter (Democratic) 56.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Paul Geddes (Republican) 43.7%

}}

Pennsylvania

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania|1958 Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district special election|1958 Pennsylvania's 21st congressional district special election|1958 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|X}}

| William A. Barrett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944
1946 {{Small|(lost)}}
1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William A. Barrett (Democratic) 64.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Gerald Ianelli (Republican) 35.3%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|X}}

| Kathryn E. Granahan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kathryn E. Granahan (Democratic) 66.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Maurice M. Green (Republican) 33.7%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|X}}

| James A. Byrne

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|X}}

| Earl Chudoff

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for judge of Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|X}}

| William J. Green Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William J. Green Jr. (Democratic) 55.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}D. Donald Jamieson (Republican) 44.7%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|X}}

| Hugh Scott

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Herman Toll (Democratic) 55.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Fred C. Gartner (Republican) 44.6%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|X}}

| Benjamin F. James

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William H. Milliken Jr. (Republican) 59.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Hubert P. Earle (Democratic) 40.8%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|X}}

| Willard S. Curtin

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Willard S. Curtin (Republican) 54.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harold Lefcourt (Democratic) 45.7%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|X}}

| Paul B. Dague

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul B. Dague (Republican) 61.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James C. N. Paul (Democratic) 38.1%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|X}}

| Joseph L. Carrigg

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951 Pennsylvania's 14th congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|X}}

| Daniel Flood

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944
1946 {{Small|(lost)}}
1948
1952 {{Small|(lost)}}
1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel Flood (Democratic) 61.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Herman Kersteen (Republican) 38.3%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|X}}

| Ivor D. Fenton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ivor D. Fenton (Republican) 54.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Charles E. Lotz (Democratic) 45.1%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|X}}

| John A. Lafore Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1957 Pennsylvania's 13th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John A. Lafore Jr. (Republican) 62.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John T. Synnestvedt (Democratic) 37.1%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|X}}

| George M. Rhodes

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George M. Rhodes (Democratic) 58.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Thomas C. Anthony Jr. (Republican) 41.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Party of America}}Darlington Hoopes (Socialist) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|X}}

| Francis E. Walter

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Francis E. Walter (Democratic) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Luther H. Ackerman (Republican) 38.9%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|X}}

| Walter M. Mumma

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter M. Mumma (Republican) 56.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John H. Bream (Democratic) 43.4%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|X}}

| Alvin Bush

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alvin Bush (Republican) 56.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}C. Max Hess (Democratic) 44.0%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|X}}

| Richard M. Simpson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1937 Pennsylvania's 18th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard M. Simpson (Republican) 56.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ross E. Hershberger (Democratic) 43.7%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|X}}

| S. Walter Stauffer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|X}}

| James E. Van Zandt

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James E. Van Zandt (Republican) 64.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Julia L. Maietta (Democratic) 35.1%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|X}}

| John H. Dent

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1958

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John H. Dent (Democratic) 59.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edward S. Stiteler (Republican) 40.9%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|X}}

| John P. Saylor

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1949 Pennsylvania's 22nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John P. Saylor (Republican) 57.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert S. Glass (Democratic) 43.0%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|X}}

| Leon H. Gavin

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leon H. Gavin (Republican) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas P. Kennedy (Democratic) 38.9%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|X}}

| Carroll D. Kearns

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carroll D. Kearns (Republican) 53.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James P. O'Brien (Democratic) 46.2%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|X}}

| Frank M. Clark

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank M. Clark (Democratic) 58.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Thomas W. King Jr. (Republican) 41.1%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|X}}

| Thomas E. Morgan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas E. Morgan (Democratic) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Harry T. Zimmer Jr. (Republican) 35.2%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|X}}

| James G. Fulton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James G. Fulton (Republican) 64.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Emery F. Bacon (Democratic) 35.9%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Herman P. Eberharter (D) died September 9, 1958.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William S. Moorhead (Democratic) 67.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Harry L. Verbofsky (Republican) 32.7%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|X}}

| Robert J. Corbett

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938
1940 {{Small|(lost)}}
1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert J. Corbett (Republican) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Lee T. Sellars (Democratic) 36.4%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|X}}

| Elmer J. Holland

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942 Pennsylvania's 33rd congressional district special election
1942 {{Small|(retired)}}
1956 Pennsylvania's 30th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Elmer J. Holland (Democratic) 66.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Harold E. Morgan (Republican) 33.3%

}}

Rhode Island

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Rhode Island|1958 United States Senate election in Rhode Island}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Rhode Island|1|X}}

| Aime Forand

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Aime Forand (Democratic) 62.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Francis E. Martineau (Republican) 37.1%

}}

{{ushr|Rhode Island|2|X}}

| John E. Fogarty

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John E. Fogarty (Democratic) 63.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert L. Gammell (Republican) 36.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party (US)}}Barbara P. Snyder (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

South Carolina

{{Main|1958 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from South Carolina}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|South Carolina|1|X}}

| L. Mendel Rivers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} L. Mendel Rivers (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|2|X}}

| John J. Riley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. Riley (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|3|X}}

| William J. B. Dorn

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946
1948 {{Small|(retired)}}
1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William J. B. Dorn (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|4|X}}

| Robert T. Ashmore

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1953 South Carolina's 4th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert T. Ashmore (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|5|X}}

| Robert W. Hemphill

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert W. Hemphill (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|6|X}}

| John L. McMillan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John L. McMillan (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

South Dakota

{{See also|List of United States representatives from South Dakota}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|South Dakota|1|X}}

| George McGovern

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George McGovern (Democratic) 53.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Joe Foss (Republican) 46.6%

}}

{{ushr|South Dakota|2|X}}

| E. Y. Berry

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} E. Y. Berry (Republican) 55.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}J. T. McCullen (Democratic) 44.4%

}}

Tennessee

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Tennessee|1958 Tennessee's 8th congressional district special election|1958 United States Senate election in Tennessee}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Tennessee|1|X}}

| B. Carroll Reece

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} B. Carroll Reece (Republican) 58.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Mayne W. Miller (Democratic) 41.3%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|2|X}}

| Howard Baker Sr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Howard Baker Sr. (Republican) 67.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John Grady O'Hara (Democratic) 32.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in}}E. B. Bowles (Write-in) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|3|X}}

| James B. Frazier Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|4|X}}

| Joe L. Evins

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joe L. Evins (Democratic) 100.0%
  • {{Party stripe|W/I Party (US)}}Joe Sir (W/I) 0.003%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|5|X}}

| J. Carlton Loser

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Carlton Loser (Democratic) 94.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Porter Freeman (Republican) 5.6%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|6|X}}

| Ross Bass

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ross Bass (Democratic) 97.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Joe Sims (Republican) 2.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in}}M. A. Peebles (Write-in) 0.003%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|7|X}}

| Tom J. Murray

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tom J. Murray (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|8|X}}

| Fats Everett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1958

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Fats Everett (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|9|X}}

| Clifford Davis

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clifford Davis (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Texas

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Texas|1958 United States Senate election in Texas}}

Texas eliminated its at-large district and added a new 22nd district formed from part of the Houston area 8th district.{{Cite book |last=Martis |first=Kenneth C. |title=The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress, 1789-1989 |publisher=Prentice Hall College Div |year=1989 |isbn=0-02-920170-5}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Texas|1|X}}

| Wright Patman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1928

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wright Patman (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|2|X}}

| Jack Brooks

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jack Brooks (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|3|X}}

| Lindley Beckworth

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lindley Beckworth (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|4|X}}

| Sam Rayburn

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1912

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sam Rayburn (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|5|X}}

| Bruce Alger

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bruce Alger (Republican) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Barefoot Sanders (Democratic) 47.4%

}}

{{ushr|Texas|6|X}}

| Olin E. Teague

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Olin E. Teague (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|7|X}}

| John Dowdy

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Dowdy (Democratic) 96.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Joseph E. A. Ross (Republican) 3.3%

}}

{{ushr|Texas|8|X}}

| Albert Thomas

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert Thomas (Democratic) 88.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert E. Nesmith (Republican) 11.8%

}}

{{ushr|Texas|9|X}}

| Clark W. Thompson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947 Texas's 9th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clark W. Thompson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|10|X}}

| Homer Thornberry

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Homer Thornberry (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|11|X}}

| William R. Poage

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William R. Poage (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|12|X}}

| Jim Wright

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jim Wright (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|13|X}}

| Frank N. Ikard

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951 Texas's 13th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank N. Ikard (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|14|X}}

| John Andrew Young

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Andrew Young (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|15|X}}

| Joe M. Kilgore

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joe M. Kilgore (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|16|X}}

| J. T. Rutherford

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. T. Rutherford (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|17|X}}

| Omar Burleson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Omar Burleson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|18|X}}

| Walter E. Rogers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter E. Rogers (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|19|X}}

| George H. Mahon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George H. Mahon (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|20|X}}

| Paul J. Kilday

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul J. Kilday (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|21|X}}

| O. C. Fisher

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} O. C. Fisher (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|22|X}}

| Martin Dies Jr.
Redistricted from the at-large district

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert R. Casey (Democratic) 61.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}T. Everton Kennerly (Republican) 32.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in Party (US)}}Jack Gardner (Write-in) 5.4%

}}

Utah

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Utah|1958 United States Senate election in Utah}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Utah|1|X}}

| Henry Aldous Dixon

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Utah|2|X}}

| William A. Dawson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} David S. King (Democratic) 51.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William A. Dawson (Republican) 48.9%

}}

Vermont

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Vermont|1958 United States Senate election in Vermont}}

[[File:Vermont House of Representives Election 1958.svg|alt=Final results by county|thumb|Results by county:{{collapsible list

| title = Meyer|{{legend|#7996E2|50–60%}}|{{legend|#6674DE|60–70%}}

}}{{collapsible list

| title = Arthur||{{legend|#E27F7F|50–60%}}|{{legend|#D75D5D|60–70%}}

}}]]

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Vermont|AL|X}}

| Winston L. Prouty

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{Clear}}

Virginia

{{Main|1958 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Virginia|1958 United States Senate election in Virginia}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Virginia|1|X}}

| Edward J. Robeson Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas N. Downing (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|2|X}}

| Porter Hardy Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Porter Hardy Jr. (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|3|X}}

| J. Vaughan Gary

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1945 Virginia's 3rd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Vaughan Gary (Democratic) 76.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Richard R. Ryder (Republican) 23.9%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|4|X}}

| Watkins Abbitt

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Watkins Abbitt (Democratic) 87.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank M. McCann (Republican) 12.9%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|5|X}}

| William M. Tuck

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1953 Virginia's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William M. Tuck (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|6|X}}

| Richard H. Poff

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard H. Poff (Republican) 56.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Richard F. Pence (Democratic) 42.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Social Democratic Party (US)}}J. B. Brayman (Social Democratic) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|7|X}}

| Burr Harrison

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Burr Harrison (Democratic) 76.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Henry A. Oder Jr. (Independent) 23.4%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|8|X}}

| Howard W. Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1930

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Howard W. Smith (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|9|X}}

| W. Pat Jennings

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} W. Pat Jennings (Democratic) 76.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}T. L. Maness (Independent) 23.4%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|10|X}}

| Joel Broyhill

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joel Broyhill (Republican) 52.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph H. Freehill (Democratic) 46.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Party (US)}}Julius Brenner (Independent) 1.2%

}}

Washington

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Washington|1958 United States Senate election in Washington}}

Washington redistricted its at-large seat into a 7th district formed in the Seattle suburbs designed to include the at-large incumbent Don Magnuson's residence.

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Washington|1|X}}

| Thomas Pelly

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Pelly (Republican) 70.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert Odman (Democratic) 29.9%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|2|X}}

| Jack Westland

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jack Westland (Republican) 53.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Hugh B. Mitchell (Democratic) 46.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Constitution Party (US)}}Margaret M. Barber (Constitution) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|3|X}}

| Russell V. Mack

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947 Washington's 3rd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Russell V. Mack (Republican) 60.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Victor A. Meyers (Democratic) 38.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Constitution Party (US)}}Arthur A. Kaul (Constitution) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|4|X}}

| Hal Holmes

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Catherine Dean May (Republican) 54.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Frank LeRoux (Democratic) 45.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Constitution Party (US)}}Fred T. Odell (Constitution) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|5|X}}

| Walt Horan

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walt Horan (Republican) 53.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Tom Delaney (Democratic) 46.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Constitution Party (US)}}Frank Robert Anderson (Constitution) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|6|X}}

| Thor C. Tollefson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thor C. Tollefson (Republican) 53.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John M. Coffee (Democratic) 45.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Constitution Party (US)}}W. Frank Horne (Constitution) 0.7%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|7|X}}

| Don Magnuson
Redistricted from the at-large district

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Don Magnuson (Democratic) 70.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Bob Jones (Republican) 29.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Constitution Party (US)}}Gerald Poesnecker (Constitution) 0.4%

}}

West Virginia

{{See also|List of United States representatives from West Virginia|1958 United States Senate election in West Virginia|1958 United States Senate special election in West Virginia}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|West Virginia|1|X}}

| Arch A. Moore Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Arch A. Moore Jr. (Republican) 54.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Bob Mollohan (Democratic) 45.4%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|2|X}}

| Harley O. Staggers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harley O. Staggers (Democratic) 62.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ward Keesecker (Republican) 37.4%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|3|X}}

| Cleveland M. Bailey

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|4|X}}

| Will E. Neal

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ken Hechler (Democratic) 51.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Will E. Neal (Republican) 48.5%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|5|X}}

| Elizabeth Kee

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951 West Virginia's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Elizabeth Kee (Democratic) 99.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in}}George A. Daughtery (Write-in) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|6|X}}

| Robert Byrd

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John M. Slack Jr. (Democratic) 66.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Freeman O'Dair Duff (Republican) 33.9%

}}

Wisconsin

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Wisconsin|1958 United States Senate election in Wisconsin}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Wisconsin|1|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Lawrence H. Smith (R) died January 22, 1958.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gerald T. Flynn (Democratic) 50.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Eleanor J. Smith (Republican) 49.4%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|2|X}}

| Donald Edgar Tewes

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1956

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|3|X}}

| Gardner R. Withrow

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|4|X}}

| Clement Zablocki

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clement Zablocki (Democratic) 74.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}James J. Arnold (Republican) 25.9%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|5|X}}

| Henry S. Reuss

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Henry S. Reuss (Democratic) 69.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Otto R. Werkmeister (Republican) 30.5%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|6|X}}

| William Van Pelt

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Van Pelt (Republican) 52.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James Megellas (Democratic) 47.2%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|7|X}}

| Melvin Laird

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1952

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Melvin Laird (Republican) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Kenneth Traeger (Democratic) 39.5%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|8|X}}

| John W. Byrnes

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John W. Byrnes (Republican) 57.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Milo Singler (Democratic) 42.7%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|9|X}}

| Lester Johnson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1953 Wisconsin's 9th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lester Johnson (Democratic) 63.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Charles A. Hornback (Republican) 36.9%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|10|X}}

| Alvin O'Konski

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alvin O'Konski (Republican) 67.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Basil G. Kennedy (Democratic) 32.9%

}}

Wyoming

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Wyoming|1958 United States Senate election in Wyoming}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Member

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Wyoming|AL|X}}

| Keith Thomson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1954

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Keith Thomson (Republican) 53.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ray Whitaker (Democratic) 46.4%

}}

Non-voting delegates

= Hawaii Territory =

{{see also|List of United States Representatives from Hawaii}}{{USCongressElectionTableHead|Candidates Ref=}}

|-

! {{ushr|Hawaii Territory|AL|X}}

| John A. Burns

| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1956

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist|* {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{aye}} John A. Burns (Democratic) 54.32%

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Farrant L. Turner (Republican) 44.84%
  • Edgar A. Brenner (Commonwealth) 0.84%{{cite web |title=HI Delegate At-Large |date=9 June 2004 |access-date=13 February 2025 |url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=95564}}}}

|}

See also

Notes

{{Notelist}}

References

{{reflist}}

Works cited

  • {{cite book|last1=Abramson |first1=Paul |last2=Aldrich |first2=John |last3=Rohde |first3=David |title=Change and Continuity in the 1992 Elections |publisher=CQ Press |date=1995 |isbn=0871878399}}

{{United States House of Representatives elections}}

{{1958 United States elections}}

{{Gerald Ford}}

Category:Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower

Category:Cold War history of the United States

Category:John Dingell

Category:Gerald Ford

Category:Carl Vinson