Race Index

Race candidate research hubs

Compare the public candidate universe by race type, then move into the strongest live state hub for each office category.

House

9,183 profiles tracked nationally.

R 3,847D 4,535Other 801

Top live hub: Florida

Local

3,133 profiles tracked nationally.

R 1,336D 1,099Other 698

Top live hub: New Jersey

Other

2,236 profiles tracked nationally.

R 394D 800Other 1,042

Top live hub: Indiana

Executive

1,461 profiles tracked nationally.

R 384D 232Other 845

Top live hub: South Carolina

State Legislature

1,298 profiles tracked nationally.

R 611D 584Other 103

Top live hub: Pennsylvania

Judicial

1,287 profiles tracked nationally.

R 411D 227Other 649

Top live hub: Florida

Senate

633 profiles tracked nationally.

R 261D 240Other 132

Top live hub: Florida

Governor

313 profiles tracked nationally.

R 132D 85Other 96

Top live hub: Florida

Statewide Executive

262 profiles tracked nationally.

R 125D 106Other 31

Top live hub: Alabama

Mayor

117 profiles tracked nationally.

R 29D 34Other 54

Top live hub: New Mexico

Race Coverage Quality

Race hubs without single-state shortcuts

The race index gives users a national race-category doorway and routes each card to a real state/race hub backed by the strongest available candidate count.

10race categories
19,923tracked profiles
7,530Republican profiles
7,942Democratic profiles

Data-backed race routing

Each race card points to a live state/race page selected from current candidate counts rather than a hardcoded placeholder route.

All-party comparison

The current race universe includes 7,530 Republican, 7,942 Democratic, and 4,451 third-party, independent, nonpartisan, or other profiles.

Competitive research framing

Campaign teams can start with a race category to see how public records and profile signals may become source-backed competitive narratives.

Programmatic SEO depth

This index strengthens internal linking from the homepage into state/race pages and gives crawlers a clearer path into the strongest public hubs.

Why does a race card open a state page?

The current URL model is state-first for race hubs, so the index chooses the highest-coverage state/race route for each category.

Does this replace state race pages?

No. It is an index that helps users find the right race family before drilling into state-specific pages.

How does this help page quality?

It removes misleading default routing and adds contextual copy, party counts, and internal links around the race taxonomy.