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・ United States Senate election in Kansas, 2004
・ United States Senate election in Kansas, 2008
・ United States Senate election in Kansas, 2010
・ United States Senate election in Kansas, 2014
・ United States Senate election in Kansas, 2016
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 1984
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 1990
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 1992
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 1996
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 1998
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2002
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2004
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2008
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2010
・ United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2014
United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2016
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 1990
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 1992
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 1996
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 1998
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2002
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2004
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2008
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2010
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2014
・ United States Senate election in Louisiana, 2016
・ United States Senate election in Maine, 1972
・ United States Senate election in Maine, 1976
・ United States Senate election in Maine, 1978
・ United States Senate election in Maine, 1984


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United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2016 : ウィキペディア英語版
United States Senate election in Kentucky, 2016

The 2016 United States Senate election in Kentucky will take place on November 8, 2016, to elect a member of the United States Senate to represent the State of Kentucky, concurrently with the 2016 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the United States Senate in other states and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.
Incumbent Republican Senator Rand Paul filed for re-election in April 2011, and is also running for President of the United States in 2016.
==Background==
If Paul does become the Republican presidential (or vice-presidential) nominee, state law prohibits him from simultaneously running for re-election.〔("Rand Paul, Marco Rubio face 2016 bind" )〕 In March 2014, the Republican-controlled Kentucky Senate passed a bill that would allow Paul to run for both offices, but the Democratic-controlled Kentucky House of Representatives declined to take it up. Paul spent his own campaign money in the 2014 legislative elections, helping Republican candidates for the State House in the hopes of flipping the chamber, thus allowing the legislature to pass the bill (Democratic Governor Steve Beshear's veto can be overridden with a simple majority). However, the Democrats retained their 54-46 majority in the State House.
Paul is running for both president and re-election, and may consider several options to get around the law preventing him from appearing twice on the ballot, perhaps dropping his presidential bid to focus on re-election if it becomes clear by the May 2016 Kentucky primary that he will not win the nomination. His supporters have also claimed that the law does not apply to federal offices and have suggested that changing the May Kentucky presidential primaries to March caucuses would allow Paul to run for re-election and continue to seek the presidential nomination. However, this option would only work until the presidential primaries were over, as he would still have to appear on the ballot twice in November if he won the Republican presidential nomination. Other options open to him include running for both offices and "daring" Democratic Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes to remove him from the ballot; attempting to replace Grimes in the 2015 elections with a Republican Secretary of State who would not enforce the law; filing a lawsuit against the law; and, assuming he wins the presidential nomination, running for president in every state except for Kentucky, where he runs for re-election and hope that he could win the presidency without Kentucky's electoral college votes.
In a letter to Kentucky Republicans in February 2015, Paul asked them to allow him the same option afforded to Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan, who ran for re-election at the same time as Vice President on Mitt Romney's ticket. David M. Drucker of ''The Washington Examiner'' reported in the same month that Kentucky Republican leaders were concerned that Paul's actions could mean that if he wins the Republican presidential nomination and is renominated for the Senate, he could either be disqualified from the Senate ballot and the state party blocked from replacing him, which would hand the seat to the Democrats, or he could be disqualified from the presidential ballot, which would see the Democratic presidential nominee pick up Kentucky's 8 electoral college votes.
In August 2015, the central committee of the Kentucky Republican Party voted to hold a caucus in 2016, allowing Paul to simultaneously run for re-nomination for his seat and the 2016 Republican presidential nomination. State law would still bar Paul from appearing twice on the ballot in the general election.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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