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An Open Seat in a Swing District—No Incumbent

For the first time in years, IA-02 has no incumbent on the ballot. The November field is now set: a Republican, a Democrat, and an independent, in a district known for splitting tickets and changing its mind. If you're one of the 202,000 IA-02 voters registered with no party, this race is wide open—and it's yours. Here's who's running and what's at stake.

Voter education from Independent Center Voice. We don't endorse candidates. We help independent voters see their options.

Why This Race. Why Now.

Iowa's 2nd District covers the northeast corner of the state—Cedar Rapids, Waterloo, Dubuque, Mason City, and the farm country around them. It leans Republican, but it has a long habit of swinging: it has crossed party lines, split its tickets, and changed hands. In 2026 it's an open seat for the first time in years, after the incumbent left to run for the U.S. Senate. That combination—a volatile district with no incumbent and a plurality of voters tied to no party—is exactly the kind of race where an informed independent voter matters most. This page lays out the full field so you can decide for yourself.

~536K

Registered voters in IA-02

37.7%

Registered with No Party—the single largest bloc, bigger than either party

R+4

Cook Partisan Voter Index—lean Republican, but rated competitive

0

Incumbents on the November ballot
The seat is open

Iowa's 2nd District is volatile, competitive, and open. In a district where no party holds a majority, the voters registered with none of them hold the margin.

Who's on Your 2026 Ballot

We track every candidate in IA-02's 2026 general election—the Republican nominee, the Democratic nominee, and the independent. We provide this information so independent voters can make an informed choice. Independent Center Voice does not endorse candidates. Information below is sourced from each candidate's public statements and campaign materials, and is provided in the same structure for everyone on the ballot.

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Democratic

Lindsay James

Iowa state representative from Dubuque

First-time candidate for federal office, 2026

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None / Independent

Dave Bushaw

Labor organizer, farmer, and folk musician from West Union; first-generation farmland owner from a working-class family

First-time candidate, 2026

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Republican

Joe Mitchell

Real estate developer and former Iowa state lawmaker; won the 2026 Republican primary with the backing of President Trump

Previously served in Iowa state legislature

What's Actually at Stake in IA-02

Based on voter file data and our 2026 Tuned In polling, here are the issues independent voters in IA-02 say will shape their vote. We don't tell you what to think about them. We do tell you they matter.

Representation & Accountability

With one party controlling state government and Washington often gridlocked, the question of who actually answers to IA-02 voters is on the ballot.

Taxes & Spending

The federal tax code, the budget, and how Washington's choices land on Iowa households and small businesses.

Immigration & the Border

Among the most-flagged issues in the IA-02 voter file. Federal immigration policy and border enforcement are on the docket for the next Congress.

Farms, Land & the Rural Economy

The backbone of IA-02: farm policy, land ownership and consolidation, and the future of rural communities across northeast Iowa.

Healthcare & Coverage

What happens to coverage, costs, and access—a perennial top-tier concern in Iowa, and a defining divide in this race.

Cost of Living & Working Families

Wages, prices, and whether federal policy eases or adds to the squeeze on working households in IA-02.

The Largest Bloc in This District Belongs to No Party at All

202,063 voters in IA-02 are registered with no party—more than the 179,346 registered Republicans and more than the 154,419 registered Democrats.

Iowa registers voters by party, and in IA-02 the numbers are striking: 202,063 voters are registered with no party—more than the 179,346 registered Republicans and more than the 154,419 registered Democrats. No Party isn't a footnote here; it's the largest single bloc in the district. In a swing seat with no incumbent, that makes unaffiliated voters the most important group on the board. You are not locked into a team, and you don't have to pick one to be decisive. You can look at all three candidates on the merits and decide for yourself—which is exactly what this page is built to help you do. Independent Center Voice exists for voters like you. We poll independent voters so their views get counted. We help independent voters understand their options. And we push for the reforms—open primaries, fair ballot access, government accountability—that keep unaffiliated voters at the center of the process.

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Last Updated:
June 10, 2026