Election to State House Democratic primary On February 19, 2008, Webber announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination to replace Representative
Jeff Harris as the member for the 23rd District in the Missouri House of Representatives. Webber defeated opponent Cande Iveson in the August 5, 2008 Democratic primary election, with 3,391 votes to her 1,735, or 66.2 percent to 33.8 percent of the vote. During the primary campaign, the
Columbia Daily Tribune reported that Webber had received a number of "high-powered endorsements" from "education groups, labor unions and a bevy of Columbia political figures" including former Missouri governor
Roger B. Wilson winning 100% of the vote and making him the youngest representative in the state.
In office Upon election, Webber and fellow incoming representatives
Mary Still and
Chris Kelly announced a number of legislative initiatives, vowing to increase funding for the University of Missouri, add "robo-calls" to Missouri's No Call List, increase state restrictions on short-term or "payday" loans, and change Missouri election law to allow early voting. During his first term as representative, Webber sat on the Rules Committee, a Special Standing Committee on Workforce Development and Workplace Safety, and the Homeland Security Committee.
State Senate elections In April 2015 State Rep. Stephen Webber announced his intention to seek the 19th District State Senate seat. In his announcement Webber described the importance of the Mid-Missouri community, "When I was sitting in Fallujah, the place I wanted to come back to was Boone County, it wasn't anywhere else in the world," Webber said. "The community has invested a lot in me and I want to make sure we invest in the next generation of Missourians." The incumbent State Senator, Kurt Schaefer, was term limited. Webber was unopposed in the August 2016 Democratic primary election, and in November he faced Republican state Representative
Caleb Rowden. District 19 was made up of two counties:
Boone and
Cooper, with 91% of the votes cast in Boone and only 9% cast in Cooper. Webber narrowly won Boone by a margin of 1,063 votes, but Rowden won Cooper by a landslide of 3,219 votes, giving Rowden the win district-wide. In February 2024, Webber filed to run for District 19 again, which is currently made up of only Boone County, and is unopposed again in the Democratic primary. ==Electoral history==