Race Overview: Missouri House District 114

Missouri House District 114 covers a portion of the state's legislative map. The 2026 cycle features a contested race with three candidates: two Republicans and one Democrat (OppIntell candidate roster, public records). This district is one of 824 tracked races in Missouri across four race categories. The state-level research universe includes 334 Republican candidates, 459 Democratic candidates, and 31 candidates from other parties (OppIntell state aggregate). Missouri's average source claims per candidate stands at 52.46, indicating a well-documented field overall (OppIntell state research context). For District 114, the candidate pool is small but partisan-balanced, offering a clear head-to-head Republican-versus-Democratic framing. Researchers would examine how the two Republicans may compete in a primary before the general election against the Democratic nominee.

Candidate Profiles: Republican Candidates

Two Republican candidates are on record for Missouri 114. Their public profiles vary in depth. One candidate has a source-backed profile with multiple claims spanning biography, campaign finance, and issue positions (OppIntell source-backed profile signals). The other Republican candidate shows fewer public claims, indicating a thinner public-record posture (OppIntell candidate roster). Researchers would examine each candidate's FEC filings, state-level campaign finance reports, and any prior elected experience. Missouri's Republican primary may draw contrasts on tax policy, education funding, and Second Amendment rights. The better-sourced candidate stands to have more material for opposition researchers to analyze. Both candidates would be compared on their public statements, donor networks, and voting records if they have held office previously.

Candidate Profiles: Democratic Candidate

The sole Democratic candidate in Missouri 114 has a source-backed profile with a moderate number of claims (OppIntell candidate roster). This candidate's public-record posture includes campaign finance filings and issue stances. Researchers would examine the candidate's base of support, any prior campaign experience, and alignment with state party platforms. The Democratic candidate may emphasize healthcare access, public education funding, and labor rights. In a district with two Republican contenders, the Democratic candidate could benefit from a fractured primary opposition. However, the general election may require broad appeal beyond the party base. OppIntell's research framework would flag any gaps in the candidate's public record that opponents could exploit.

Competitive Research Framing: Republican vs Democratic Head-to-Head

The 2026 race for Missouri 114 presents a classic Republican-versus-Democratic contest. With two Republicans vying for the nomination, the primary could produce a nominee who is either more moderate or more conservative, depending on the district's electorate. The Democratic candidate, as the sole party representative, may have a unified message from the start. Opposition researchers for each campaign would examine the other side's donor lists, past votes (if any), and public statements on divisive issues. Missouri's political landscape, with 334 Republican and 459 Democratic tracked candidates statewide (OppIntell state aggregate), suggests a competitive environment. The average source claims per candidate in Missouri (52.46) provides a benchmark: candidates with fewer than that number may be less prepared for scrutiny (OppIntell state research context).

Source Posture and Research Readiness

Source posture refers to the volume and reliability of public records available for a candidate. In Missouri 114, the two Republican candidates have different source-posture levels: one with robust claims, one with thinner coverage (OppIntell candidate roster). The Democratic candidate falls in between. Researchers would check each candidate's FEC registration status (59 FEC-registered across Missouri, 22 cross-platform-verified statewide) (OppIntell state aggregate). A candidate with no FEC filings and few state-level records may be harder to research, but also may have less ammunition for opponents. OppIntell's methodology tracks source-backed claims per candidate; for District 114, the range is narrow. Campaigns would use this data to anticipate attack lines and prepare rebuttals.

District and State Context

Missouri's 2026 cycle includes 21,804 tracked candidates across 54 states (OppIntell cycle-level research universe). Of these, 5,688 are FEC-registered, 16,116 are state-SoS-only, and 1,526 are cross-platform-verified (FEC + Wikidata + Ballotpedia) (OppIntell cycle context). Missouri's 824 candidates represent about 3.8% of the national tracked universe. The state's top three most-researched candidates are Emanuel Ii Cleaver, Samuel B. Jr. Graves, and Jason T Smith (OppIntell state aggregate). District 114 does not include any of these high-profile figures, but the race may still attract attention from state party committees and independent expenditure groups. The district's demographic and partisan lean would be a key factor in general election strategy.

Methodology and Comparative Research Approach

OppIntell's research methodology for Missouri 114 involves aggregating public records from FEC filings, state Secretary of State databases, Ballotpedia, and Wikidata. Each candidate's profile is built from source-backed claims, which are verified and timestamped. The platform tracks 3,713 well-sourced candidates (≥5 claims) and 237 thinly-sourced (0 claims) nationally (OppIntell cycle context). For District 114, all three candidates have at least some source-backed claims, placing them above the thinly-sourced threshold. Researchers would compare the candidates across issue areas, donor networks, and past statements. The head-to-head Republican vs Democratic framing allows for direct comparison of policy positions and electoral history. OppIntell's platform enables campaigns to see what opponents could use in paid media, earned media, or debate prep.

FAQ: Missouri 114 2026 Election

This FAQ section addresses common questions about the Missouri 114 race and the research process.

How many candidates are running in Missouri 114 for 2026? Three candidates: two Republicans and one Democrat (OppIntell candidate roster).

What is the party breakdown in Missouri for tracked candidates? 334 Republican, 459 Democratic, 31 other (OppIntell state aggregate).

How does OppIntell gather candidate data? From public records: FEC filings, state SoS databases, Ballotpedia, and Wikidata (OppIntell methodology).

What does 'source-backed' mean? A claim is linked to a verifiable public record (OppIntell source posture framework).

How can campaigns use this research? To anticipate opponent attack lines, prepare rebuttals, and identify research gaps (OppIntell value proposition).

Questions Campaigns Ask

How many candidates are running in Missouri 114 for 2026?

Three candidates: two Republicans and one Democrat (OppIntell candidate roster).

What is the party breakdown in Missouri for tracked candidates?

334 Republican, 459 Democratic, 31 other (OppIntell state aggregate).

How does OppIntell gather candidate data?

From public records: FEC filings, state SoS databases, Ballotpedia, and Wikidata (OppIntell methodology).

What does 'source-backed' mean?

A claim is linked to a verifiable public record (OppIntell source posture framework).

How can campaigns use this research?

To anticipate opponent attack lines, prepare rebuttals, and identify research gaps (OppIntell value proposition).