Arkansas elected seven constitutional officers, 17 of 35 state senate seats, all 100 house seats and 28 district prosecuting attorneys, and voted on one constitutional amendment and one referred question.
Halter came in first in the Democratic primary: [1] Halter also won the run-off:[2] Holt won the primary:[3] McDaniel came in first:[4] McDaniel also won the run-off, with exactly 87,000 votes:[5] Rebekah Kennedy - civil rights attorney and Public Relations chair for the Green Party of Arkansas Shoffner lead solidly, but not enough to avoid a run-off:[6] Shoffner won the run-off:[7] Judicial elections are nonpartisan.
Four Supreme Court associate justices were up for reelection to eight-year terms.
All candidates stood unopposed and were reelected by acclamation: Elections were also held on primary election day for eight district court judges, for six-year terms.
Amendment 1 would amend the Arkansas Constitution to lift prohibitions against gambling from bingos and lotteries conducted by authorized nonprofit organizations, such as churches or volunteer fire organizations.