



Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleState Representative
PartyDemocratic
Political ideologyProgressive Democrat
GenderFemale
LocationKentucky
BackgroundAttorney
EducationIndiana University Bloomington — BA (Finance)
Notable personal detailsPamela Stevenson is a Democratic member of the Kentucky House of Representatives representing District 43 (Jefferson County) and has served as the chamber’s Minority Floor Leader. She is a retired U.S. Air Force colonel who served as a Judge Advocate General, and she is an attorney who founded the Stevenson Law Center. She earned a BA in Finance from Indiana University and a JD from Indiana University Maurer School of Law, and she is an ordained Baptist minister.
Supports tax and budget changes that reduce burdens on low- and middle-income families (rent credits, eliminating sales tax on essentials) while asking higher earners to pay more; backs targeted state spending increases for affordability and social programs. Advocates revising the tax code to make it more progressive and refundable credits for renters and education savings.
Advocates expanding and protecting Medicaid, increasing access to affordable care, limiting medical debt, and supporting investments to stabilize rural hospitals. Supports policy measures aimed at lowering healthcare costs and removing administrative barriers to coverage. Has prioritized healthcare access as a legislative and campaign issue.
Pamela Stevenson supports abortion rights and reproductive healthcare access and has said she will defend patients and providers from prosecution under Kentucky’s abortion laws. She has pledged to use prosecutorial discretion and the attorney general’s office to protect reproductive choices and has been endorsed by reproductive-rights organizations. Stevenson has spoken out against legislative restrictions on abortion and argued that medical decisions should be left to patients and doctors.
Pamela Stevenson serves on the Kentucky House Natural Resources and Energy committee and has voted on energy-related bills, but she has not published a clear, comprehensive climate or energy platform specifying aggressive emissions targets, fossil-fuel phase-out, or specific clean-energy policy goals. Available public records show some votes and legislative activity on energy and emissions-related measures but do not establish a consistent progressive or conservative policy position on climate and energy.
The candidate frames gun violence as a serious public-safety problem and emphasizes balancing public safety with compassion and justice. She has criticized powerful pro-gun lobbying and supported reforms to laws and policing practices tied to violent incidents, indicating support for gun-safety reforms while respecting broader public-safety concerns.
Pamela Stevenson is in the news as part of Kentucky’s 2026 Senate race, which is moving into the primary phase and could shape the contest for Mitch McConnell’s seat. Recent coverage focuses on the Republican side, where Andy Barr won Donald Trump’s endorsement and Nate Morris said he would leave the race and later back Barr. Broader reporting says the Senate battlefield remains competitive, but there are no major new developments reported specifically about Stevenson in these summaries.



Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
2026
LatestCycle 2026
Source: FEC
New updates coming soon
We're monitoring and will update when new data impacts the race.