2012 Redistricted to District 36 with fellow District 30 incumbent Representatives Nancy Guthrie and Danny Wells, Hunt placed second in the seven-way May 8, 2012, Democratic primary with 2,834 votes (20.4%),[2] and placed first in the six-way three-position November 6, 2012, general election with 9,325 votes (19.7%) ahead of Representatives Wells (D) and Guthrie (D) and Republican nominees Robin Holstein, Stevie Thaxton, and Steve Sweeney.[3]
1994 Hunt was initially elected in the District 31 Democratic primary and the November 8, 1994, general election, and re-elected in the November 5, 1996, general election.
1998 Hunt was challenged in the three-way 1998 Democratic primary, but won, and won the November 3, 1998, general election against Libertarian candidate John Sturgeon.
2000 To challenge Senate District 8 incumbent Republican Senator Vic Sprouse, Hunt ran in the 2000 Democratic primary and won, but lost the November 7, 2000, general election to Senator Sprouse, who held the seat from 1997 until 2009.
2004 April 30 his third son Jackie Lee Hunt was born. When District 30 Representative Foster ran for West Virginia Senate and left a district seat open, Hunt placed in the fourteen-way 2004 Democratic primary and was elected in the fourteen-way seven-position November 2, 2004, general election which re-elected incumbents Jon Amores (D), Bonnie Brown (D), and Bobbie Hatfield (D), and nominees Corey Palumbo (D), Sharon Spencer (D), Danny Wells (D), and unseated Representative Calvert (R).
2006 To challenge West Virginia's 2nd Congressional District incumbent Republican United States Representative Shelley Moore Capito, Hunt ran in the 2006 Democratic primary but lost to Mike Callaghan; Congresswoman Capito was re-elected in the November 7, 2006, general election.
2008 When Representative Palumbo ran for West Virginia Senate and Representative Amores retired, leaving two district seats open, Hunt placed fifth in the seventeen-way May 13, 2008, Democratic primary with 10,512 votes (8.5%),[4] and placed fifth in the fifteen-way seven-position November 4, 2008, general election with 21,635 votes (8.0%) behind Democratic nominee Doug Skaff and incumbent Representatives Wells, Brown (D), and Hatfield (D), and ahead of incumbents Spencer (D) and Guthrie (D), all seven Republican nominees and Mountain Party candidate John Welbourn.[5]
2010 Hunt placed sixth in the thirteen-way May 11, 2010, Democratic primary with 5,158 votes (10.0%),[6] and placed sixth in the fourteen-way seven-position November 2, 2010, general election with 17,197 votes (7.8%) behind incumbent Representative Skaff (D), Republican nominee Eric Nelson, incumbents Wells (S), Hatfield (D), and Brown (D), and ahead of and incumbent Guthrie(D), unseated Representative Spencer (D) and the remaining Republican nominees.[7]
Involvement with Clonaid
In 2001, the FDA discovered that the equipment in Raelian-founded Clonaid's human cloning lab in Nitro, West Virginia[8] had been bought by Hunt, who wanted to clone his deceased 10-month-old son, Andrew. Hunt had spent $500,000 on efforts to clone his son. He enlisted Brigitte Boisselier, a French chemist and Raëlian religious leader, to run a secret cloning research lab in Nitro.[9][10] Following an investigation, Hunt made an agreement with the FDA-OCI to not clone his son within the United States. In 2009 Hunt took his efforts to Canada where he has made 3 attempts at cloning his son via surrogacy, all of which ended in miscarriages[citation needed]. He plans to try again in 2026 under the guidance of Dr. Charles Newman[citation needed].