"The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each State, chosen by the Legislature thereof, for six years, and each Senator shall have one vote."
- Article 1, Section 3, Paragraph 1 of the Constitution (later changed by the Seventeenth Amendment from "chosen by the Legislature thereof" to "elected by the people thereof")
The Constitutional Convention, 1787
The elections for the
president of the United States of America have always gotten more attention than any other in this country. This is not surprising, given that the presidency and vice presidency are the only offices that the entire country can vote on. As
Alexander Hamilton once said, any individual serving as the president, "from the entire circumstance of his being alone, [is] more narrowly watched and more readily suspected" (Source:
Federalist No. 70, with an alternative version saying "from the
very circumstance of his being alone"). Your typical member of
Congress can put the blame for their own actions on someone else, in other words - usually their fellow members of Congress - more easily than the president can, because they are not watched as closely as a single powerful individual (like the president) is. It is thus natural that the elections for the
presidency (held every four years) would be watched more closely than any other elections.
Alexander Hamilton
Two-year term for the House of Representatives
Nonetheless, the elections for the
United States Congress are still of importance to this country - as is testified by the part of the
Constitution about the powers of the Congress (
Article 1, Section 8, to be specific). Thus, these elections are held more frequently than the elections for the presidency are. The Constitution actually specifies a shorter term of
two years for the members of the
House of Representatives at the national level (Source:
Article 1, Section 2, Paragraph 1 of the Constitution). This means that for this house of Congress, in practical terms, the whole lot of them are up for re-election every two years; and not just every four years (as it is for the presidency). I should note that half of these elections for Congress are held simultaneously with the presidential elections, with the ballot being the same one used to vote for the
president. The other half of them are held at the midway point between the two presidential elections (hence the popular name that they have of the
"midterm elections," since they're in the middle of the four-year term of the president).
The next Congressional elections are during the presidential elections of 2024; so if you do want a say in who your Congressman or Congresswoman is, that time will be your next chance to get it.
Constitution of the United States of America