List of majority minority United States congressional districts
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This article needs additional citations for verification. (November 2010) |
A majority-minority district is a United States congressional district in which the majority of the constituents in the district are racial or ethnic minorities (as opposed to white non-Hispanics). Whether a district is majority-minority is usually decided by United States Census data.
Majority-minority districts are often the result of racial gerrymandering. The value of gerrymandering to create majority-minority districts is a matter of dispute both within and outside of minority communities. Some view majority-minority districts as a way to dilute the voting power of minorities and analogous to racial segregation; others favor majority-minority districts as ways to effectively ensure the election of a minority member of Congress to the House of Representatives. Majority-minority districts are often the subject of legal cases examining the constitutionality of such districts, such as Shaw v. Reno (1993), Miller v. Johnson (1995), and Bush v. Vera (1996)
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African-American majority [edit]
Population Data is from 2010 Census Data.[1] Congress will redistrict prior to the 2012 elections, so the percentages will not be correct after redistricting.
There is only one African majority congressional district that is represented by a Congressman self identified as White Jewish, Rep. Steve Cohen (TN). All members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) except one are Democratic. Although the bylaws do not specify that membership is open only to black members of congress, prominent members of the CBC have publicly stated that they will not welcome non-black members. One Republican African American member of congress, Tim Scott has elected not to join the CBC. Steve Cohen has made his desire to join publicly known, but has not pursued membership over objections of the one of the founding members of the group. Keith Ellison is the first Muslim to be elected as a member of Congress.
| Rank | Perc. | State | District | 112th Congressional Black Caucus | Total 2010 | Afric. Amer. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 69.3% | Illinois | 2 | Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. | 602,758 | 418,008 |
| 2 | 66.5% | Mississippi | 2 | Bennie Thompson | 668,263 | 444,269 |
| 3 | 63.5% | Tennessee | 9 | (Jewish) Steve Cohen [2] | 610,823 | 387,815 |
| 4 | 62.8% | Alabama | 7 | Terri Sewell | 603,352 | 379,083 |
| 5 | 62.6% | Illinois | 1 | Bobby Rush | 587,596 | 368,056 |
| 6 | 62.1% | New York | 10 | Edolphus Towns | 677,721 | 420,649 |
| 7 | 59.8% | Ohio | 11 | Marcia Fudge | 540,432 | 323,174 |
| 8 | 59.2% | Michigan | 14 | John Conyers, Jr. – Dean | 550,465 | 325,975 |
| 9 | 59.0% | Michigan | 13 | Hansen Clarke | 519,570 | 306,339 |
| 10 | 58.8% | Louisiana | 2 | Cedric Richmond | 493,352 | 290,121 |
| 11 | 58.5% | Florida | 17 | Frederica Wilson | 655,160 | 383,415 |
| 12 | 57.5% | New Jersey | 10 | Vacant | 634,343 | 364,491 |
| 13 | 57.3% | Pennsylvania | 2 | Chaka Fattah | 630,277 | 361,160 |
| 14 | 56.8% | Georgia | 13 | David Scott | 784,445 | 445,720 |
| 15 | 56.6% | Maryland | 4 | Donna Edwards | 714,316 | 403,991 |
| 16 | 56.2% | Maryland | 7 | Elijah Cummings | 659,776 | 370,480 |
| 17 | 56.1% | New York | 11 | Yvette Clarke – Secretary | 632,408 | 354,799 |
| 18 | 56.1% | Georgia | 4 | Hank Johnson | 665,541 | 373,326 |
| 19 | 55.9% | Florida | 23 | Alcee Hastings | 684,107 | 382,691 |
| 20 | 55.6% | Missouri | 1 | William Lacy Clay, Jr. | 587,069 | 326,158 |
| 21 | 55.3% | Virginia | 3 | Bobby Scott | 663,390 | 367,043 |
| 22 | 54.2% | South Carolina | 6 | Jim Clyburn | 682,410 | 369,967 |
| 23 | 52.2% | Florida | 3 | Corrine Brown | 659,055 | 344,319 |
| 24 | 51.8% | New York | 6 | Gregory Meeks | 651,764 | 337,446 |
| 25 | 51.1% | Illinois | 7 | Danny K. Davis | 638,105 | 326,105 |
| 26 | 50.7% | District of Columbia | At Large | Eleanor Holmes Norton | 601,723 | 305,125 |
| 27 | 50.3% | Georgia | 5 | John Lewis | 630,462 | 317,168 |
| 28 | 49.6% | North Carolina | 1 | G. K. Butterfield – 2nd Vice Chair | 635,936 | 315,742 |
| 29 | 48.4% | Georgia | 2 | Sanford Bishop | 631,973 | 305,953 |
| 31 | 43.9% | North Carolina | 12 | Mel Watt | 736,346 | 323,240 |
| 33 | 41.5% | Texas | 30 | Eddie Bernice Johnson | 706,469 | 293,203 |
| 35 | 36.8% | Texas | 18 | Sheila Jackson Lee | 720,991 | 265,109 |
| 36 | 35.9% | Wisconsin | 4 | Gwen Moore | 669,015 | 240,394 |
| 38 | 35.8% | Texas | 9 | Al Green | 733,796 | 262,525 |
| 47 | 32.6% | Indiana | 7 | André Carson – Whip | 676,351 | 220,806 |
| 48 | 31.8% | New York | 15 | Charles B. Rangel | 639,873 | 203,765 |
| 54 | 29.2% | California | 35 | Maxine Waters | 662,413 | 193,648 |
| 64 | 25.3% | California | 33 | Karen Bass | 637,122 | 161,233 |
| 66 | 25.3% | Missouri | 5 | Emanuel Cleaver – Chair | 633,887 | 160,180 |
| 77 | 22.0% | California | 37 | Laura Richardson | 648,847 | 142,623 |
| 84 | 20.9% | California | 9 | Barbara Lee | 648,766 | 135,331 |
| 89 | 19.9% | South Carolina | 1 | Tim Scott (Republican & not a member of CBC) | 856,956 | 169,918 |
| 112 | 15.4% | Minnesota | 5 | Keith Ellison (first Muslim) | 616,482 | 94,990 |
| 213 | 7.4% | Florida | 22 | Allen West (Republican) | 694,259 | 51,706 |
Asian majority [edit]
Only Hawaii's 1st congressional district has an Asian majority. Although there are several people of Asian ancestry in the House there has not been a caucus organized similar to the ones organized for African Americans and Hispanics.
The following table was lists the top 20 districts ranked by percent Asian. The number of districts was chosen arbitrarily. Only three states are represented.
| Rank | Perc. | State | District | Total 2010 | Asian |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 52.3% | Hawaii | 1 | 658,672 | 344,397 |
| 2 | 36.7% | California | 15 | 677,605 | 248,707 |
| 3 | 36.3% | California | 13 | 665,318 | 241,798 |
| 4 | 33.8% | California | 12 | 651,322 | 220,118 |
| 5 | 32.7% | New York | 5 | 670,130 | 219,312 |
| 6 | 31.4% | California | 8 | 666,827 | 209,335 |
| 7 | 28.6% | California | 16 | 676,880 | 193,894 |
| 8 | 28.0% | California | 29 | 642,138 | 179,651 |
| 9 | 25.8% | Hawaii | 2 | 701,629 | 180,681 |
| 10 | 22.4% | California | 32 | 642,236 | 143,772 |
| 11 | 21.7% | California | 14 | 653,935 | 141,839 |
| 12 | 20.7% | California | 40 | 665,653 | 137,837 |
| 13 | 20.5% | California | 42 | 667,638 | 136,602 |
| 14 | 19.2% | California | 26 | 691,452 | 132,929 |
| 15 | 19.0% | California | 48 | 727,833 | 138,204 |
| 16 | 19.0% | California | 46 | 648,663 | 123,017 |
| 17 | 18.7% | New York | 9 | 660,306 | 123,454 |
| 18 | 18.3% | New York | 12 | 672,358 | 123,098 |
| 19 | 18.2% | California | 9 | 648,766 | 117,981 |
| 20 | 17.1% | California | 47 | 631,422 | 108,238 |
Hispanic majority [edit]
Congress has two groups for Hispanic congressmen. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus for Democrats, and Congressional Hispanic Conference for Republicans. Both groups permit delegates from territories and Senators as well as Congressmen. The Republican Conference also permits Associate members, for Representatives who are not Hispanic themselves, but have significant numbers of Hispanics in their districts. The Democratic Caucus does not permit similar associate members.
Congresswoman Loretta Sánchez has withdrawn from the Democratic caucus. Her sister Linda T. Sánchez, also a representative, withdrew temporarily, but has since rejoined.
The population data is for the 2010 census, but the congress will redistrict prior to the 2012 election. The percentages will no longer be accurate and new Hispanic Majority districts may be created.
When a non-Hispanic congressmen represents a Hispanic majority district, their name and when they began their term of service in congress is indicated. In some cases like Judy May Chu and Maxine Waters they are members of a significant non-Hispanic minority group inside the district. In other cases like Jaime Herrera Beutler or Gene Green the representative is simply a different ethnicity than many of their constituents.
| Rank | Perc. | State | District | Congressional Hispanic C… | Total 2010 | Hispanic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 82.5% | Texas | 15 | Caucus (Democrat) | 787,124 | 649,297 |
| 2 | 81.5% | Texas | 16 | Caucus (Democrat) | 757,427 | 617,465 |
| 3 | 78.9% | Texas | 28 | Caucus (Democrat) | 851,824 | 672,129 |
| 4 | 78.7% | California | 34 | Caucus (Democrat) | 654,303 | 515,167 |
| 5 | 76.0% | Texas | 29 | Gene Green (Jan 3, 1993) | 677,032 | 514,861 |
| 6 | 75.6% | Florida | 21 | Conference (Republican) | 693,501 | 524,005 |
| 7 | 75.4% | California | 38 | Caucus (Democrat) | 641,410 | 483,490 |
| 8 | 73.5% | Illinois | 4 | Caucus (Democrat) | 601,156 | 442,018 |
| 9 | 73.2% | Texas | 27 | Conference (Republican) | 741,993 | 543,306 |
| 10 | 71.6% | Florida | 25 | Conference (Republican) | 807,176 | 577,998 |
| 11 | 71.5% | Texas | 20 | Caucus (Democrat) | 711,705 | 509,208 |
| 12 | 70.4% | California | 20 | Caucus (Democrat) | 744,350 | 523,705 |
| 13 | 69.4% | California | 43 | Caucus (Democrat) | 735,581 | 510,693 |
| 14 | 68.2% | California | 31 | Caucus (Democrat) | 611,336 | 417,183 |
| 15 | 67.6% | California | 47 | Caucus (Democrat) - withdrawn | 631,422 | 426,869 |
| 16 | 66.9% | Florida | 18 | Conference (Republican) | 712,790 | 476,672 |
| 17 | 66.5% | New York | 16 | Caucus (Democrat) | 693,819 | 461,580 |
| 18 | 66.5% | California | 39 | Caucus (Democrat) | 643,115 | 427,353 |
| 19 | 66.4% | Texas | 23 | Conference (Republican) | 847,651 | 562,913 |
| 20 | 64.2% | California | 32 | Judy May Chu (Jul 19th 2009) | 642,236 | 412,275 |
| 21 | 63.9% | Arizona | 4 | Caucus (Democrat) | 698,314 | 446,159 |
| 22 | 62.4% | California | 51 | Bob Filner (Jan 3, 1993) | 757,891 | 473,224 |
| 23 | 57.5% | California | 28 | Howard Berman (Jan 3, 2003) | 660,194 | 379,697 |
| 24 | 56.0% | Arizona | 7 | Caucus (Democrat) | 855,769 | 479,014 |
| 25 | 54.5% | California | 35 | Maxine Waters (Jan 3, 1991) | 662,413 | 360,796 |
| 26 | 52.7% | California | 18 | Caucus (Democrat) | 723,607 | 381,039 |
| 27 | 51.8% | New Mexico | 2 | Conference (Republican) Associate | 663,956 | 343,856 |
| 28 | 51.2% | California | 21 | Conference (Republican) | 784,176 | 401,194 |
| 29 | 50.6% | New Jersey | 13 | Caucus (Democrat) | 684,965 | 346,294 |
| 30 | 50.4% | California | 17 | Sam Farr (Jun 8, 1993) | 664,240 | 334,955 |
| 35 | 45.2% | California | 45 | Conference (Republican) Associate | 914,209 | 413,441 |
| 36 | 44.6% | New York | 12 | Caucus (Democrat) | 672,358 | 299,572 |
| 40 | 42.4% | Texas | 32 | Conference (Republican) Associate | 640,419 | 271,442 |
| 46 | 39.0% | New Mexico | 3 | Caucus (Democrat) | 693,284 | 270,117 |
| 57 | 33.8% | Texas | 19 | Conference (Republican) Associate | 698,137 | 235,973 |
| 107 | 20.8% | Arizona | 2 | Conference (Republican) Associate | 972,839 | 202,001 |
| 213 | 9.9% | Idaho | 1 | Conference (Republican) | 841,930 | 83,326 |
| 255 | 7.4% | Washington | 3 | Conference (Republican) | 779,348 | 57,604 |
African American plurality, majority non-white [edit]
- Florida's 3rd congressional district
- Missouri's 1st congressional district
- Texas's 9th congressional district
- Texas's 18th congressional district
Hispanic plurality, majority non-white [edit]
- California's 16th congressional district
- California's 18th congressional district
- California's 33rd congressional district
- California's 35th congressional district
- California's 37th congressional district
- New York's 12th congressional district
- New York's 15th congressional district
- Texas's 30th congressional district
White plurality, combined minority majority [edit]
- California's 7th congressional district
- California's 6th congressional district
- California's 5th congressional district
- California's 12th congressional district
- California's 13th congressional district
- California's 15th congressional district
- California's 17th congressional district
- California's 21st congressional district
- California's 23rd congressional district
- California's 27th congressional district
- California's 29th congressional district
- California's 36th congressional district
- California's 40th congressional district
- Florida's 11th congressional district
- Georgia's 13th congressional district
- Hawaii's 2nd congressional district
- New York's 5th congressional district
- New York's 27th congressional district
See also [edit]
References [edit]
External links [edit]
- Use of Racial Data in Redistricting - Background Paper Prepared for the Minnesota Legislature Subcommittee on Geographic Information Systems
- Majority-Minority Voting Districts and Their Role in Politics: Their Advantages, Their Drawbacks, and the Current Law
- Voting wrongs - racial reapportionment
- Race and Redistricting: The Shaw-Cromartie Cases
- The Electoral Competitiveness of Majority-Minority Districts
- Redrawing Lines of Power: Redistricting 2011 Making Contact, produced by the National Radio Project, April 12, 2011