News

State House races set

State House races set

Photo: Saga Communications


Jonesboro, AR – (JonesboroRightNow.com) – The filing period for the 2026 election cycle in Arkansas closed Wednesday. The filings reported by Arkansas Secretary of State Cole Jester have set several races that will affect voters in Craighead County.

State House of Representatives

Craighead County is served by five State House districts: Districts 30, 32, 33, 36 and 38.

Fran Cavenaugh is the current District 30 state representative. Cavenaugh was first elected in 2016, serving her first session in 2017. Cavenaugh announced earlier this year she would not seek re-election. Two candidates have filed for the district 30 seat: Josh Longmire (Republican) and Coty Powers (Republican).

The district 32 state representative is Jack Ladyman, who served his first session in 2015. Ladyman is a republican. Two candidates filed for the district 32 position: Joshua Alfano and Erika Askeland, both democrats.

Jon Milligan serves District 33 and will be unopposed in 2026. Milligan was elected in 2020 and served his first session in 2021.

District 36 is currently served by republican Johnny Rye, first elected in 2016 and served his first session in the House in 2017. Democrat Shamal Carter has filed for the district 36 seat.

Dwight Tosh, a republican, has served District 38 since being in 2014. He served his first session in 2015. Tosh will be unopposed for re-election in 2026.

State Senate

Craighead County is served by two State Senate districts, 19 and 20.

Dave Wallace of Leachville is the current district 19 State Senator while Dan Sullivan of Jonesboro serves district 20.

Wallace was elected to the Arkansas Senate in 2016 and served his first session in 2017. Sullivan was elected in 2020 and served his first session in 2021.

Neither Wallace nor Sullivan are up for election – each is in the middle of a four-year term.

Terms

Arkansas legislators are subject to term limits set by the state constitution. Members of the Arkansas House of Representatives may serve up to six years total, typically three two-year terms. State Senators may serve up to eight years total, usually one or two four-year terms depending on district rotation.

However, under Amendment 94 and Issue 2 (2020)—now part of the constitution—lawmakers may serve a combined maximum of 16 years in the General Assembly in any mix of House and Senate service.

These limits reset only if a legislator leaves office for the full amount of time required by law before becoming eligible again.

Election Dates

The Arkansas statewide party primary elections will be Tuesday, March 3, 2026, with any necessary runoffs on Tuesday, March 31. The 2026 general election is Tuesday, November 3, 2026.

This Week in Jonesboro

Recent Headlines

3 days ago in Entertainment, Music

Bad Bunny wins album of the year at the 2025 Latin Grammys, capping an electric night

It should come as a shock to no one: The 2026 Latin Grammy Awards were all about Bad Bunny. The Puerto Rican superstar won album of the year for his landmark release "Debí Tirar Más Fotos."

3 days ago in Sports, Trending

Ohtani is unanimous MVP for 4th time in winning NL honor as Judge edges Raleigh for 3rd AL accolade

Shohei Ohtani likes winning Most Valuable Player awards. He loves winning the World Series even more. The two-way Japanese star did both for a second season in a row for the Los Angeles Dodgers, earning his fourth career MVP on Thursday night while unanimously earning the National League honor.

4 days ago in Features, Trending

Doritos and Cheetos dial back the bright orange in new versions without artificial ingredients

PepsiCo said Thursday it's launching toned-down versions of its bright orange snacks that won't have any artificial colors or flavors. Doritos and Cheetos Simply NKD will hit store shelves on Dec. 1.