Louisiana's 1st congressional district

      Louisiana's 1st congressional district
      Current Representative Steve Scalise (RJefferson)
      Cook PVI R+23[1]

      Louisiana's 1st congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S. state of Louisiana. The district comprises land from the eastern and shore of Lake Pontchartrain south to the Mississippi River delta.

      The district is currently represented by Republican Steve Scalise.

      The district from 2003 to 2013

      History

      Prior to 1974 the 1st Congressional District was entirely south of Lake Pontchartrain; as a result of the 1970 U.S. Census and a concern to ensure that the 2nd Congressional District was majority African American, in 1974, the 1st Congressional District shed precincts south of the lake and acquired St. Tammany Parish, which borders Lake Pontchartrain on the north, from the 6th Congressional District. Subsequently, the 1st Congressional District has acquired Tangipahoa and Washington parishes, both north of the lake, from the 6th Congressional District.

      Correspondingly, the 1st Congressional District has shed conservative St. Bernard Parish and other areas south of the lake to the 3rd Congressional District, but overall, the 1st Congressional District has become a very safe district for the Republican Party.[2] The number of registered voters north of the lake is, as of 2008, slightly higher than south of the lake; however, the 1st Congressional District has yet to be represented by a resident from north of Lake Pontchartrain.[3] The reformulation of the 1st Congressional District so that it virtually surrounds "the nation's second-largest saltwater lake" has generated a local joke that in the 1st Congressional District of Louisiana the voters are outnumbered by the fish.

      The seat was held by current Governor Bobby Jindal. Republicans have held the seat since 1977, when Bob Livingston won a special election after Richard Alvin Tonry, who won the seat in 1976, was forced to resign the seat and lost the Democratic primary in the special election.

      From 2003 to 2013, the district comprised mostly land on the North Shore and South Shore of Lake Pontchartrain, although it also contained areas west of Lake Pontchartrain. The district included some or all of the following parishes: Washington, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Jefferson, Orleans and St. Charles. It also included the cities of Hammond and Slidell and most of the western suburbs of New Orleans that include Metairie and Kenner, along with a small portion of the city itself. The district had the lowest percentage of African American residents among the state's six-district delegation in the U.S. House of Representatives.


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      List of representatives

      Representative Party Years Electoral history
      District created March 4, 1823
      Edward Livingston Jacksonian D-R March 4, 1823 –
      March 3, 1825
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Jacksonian March 4, 1825 –
      March 3, 1829
      Edward Douglass White Sr. Anti-Jacksonian March 4, 1829 –
      ?????, 1834
      Resigned
      Vacant  ??????, 1834 –
      ??????, 1834
      Henry Johnson Anti-Jacksonian  ????, 1834 – March 3, 1837 [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Whig March 4, 1837 –
      March 3, 1839
      Edward Douglass White Sr. Whig March 4, 1839 –
      March 3, 1843
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      John Slidell Democratic March 4, 1843 –
      November 10, 1845
      Resigned
      Emile La Sére Democratic January 29, 1846 –
      March 3, 1851
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Louis St. Martin Democratic March 4, 1851 –
      March 3, 1853
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      William Dunbar Democratic March 4, 1853 –
      March 3, 1855
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      George Eustis Jr. Know Nothing March 4, 1855 –
      March 3, 1859
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      J. E. Bouligny Know Nothing March 4, 1859 –
      March 3, 1861
      Bouligny opposed Louisiana's secession and remained in Washington during the American Civil War. He never retook residency in Louisiana.
      Vacant March 4, 1861 –
      December 3, 1862
      (Civil War)
      Benjamin Flanders Unionist December 3, 1862 –
      March 3, 1863
      Remained seated for his term during War
      Vacant March 3, 1863 –
      July 18, 1868
      colspan=3 | (Civil War
      Louisiana under occupation)
      Jacob Hale Sypher Republican July 18, 1868 –
      March 3, 1869
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Vacant March 3, 1869 –
      November 7, 1870
      Contested election of Louis St. Martin and Jacob Hale Sypher, House decided neither candidate entitled to seat
      Jacob Hale Sypher Republican November 7, 1870 –
      March 3, 1875
      Sypher's 1872 re-election was successfully contested by Effingham Lawrence: Sypher lost, but only after the original returns were certified in his favor; after protracted court intervention, Lawrence was declared elected, but just one day (March 4, 1875) remained in the 1873-1875 term, and in the meantime Lawrence had lost the 1874 election to Democrat Randall Lee Gibson.
      Effingham Lawrence Democratic March 4, 1875 –
      March 4, 1875
      Successfully contested Sypher's election, then retired after one day in office—the shortest service ever by a member of the House of Representatives.
      Randall Lee Gibson Democratic March 4, 1875 –
      March 3, 1883
      Resigned from House on election to U.S. Senate.
      Carleton Hunt Democratic March 4, 1883 –
      March 3, 1885
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Louis St. Martin Democratic March 4, 1885 –
      March 3, 1887
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Theodore Stark Wilkinson Democratic March 4, 1887 –
      March 3, 1891
      [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
      Adolph Meyer Democratic March 4, 1891 –
      March 8, 1908
      Died
      Vacant March 8, 1908 –
      November 3, 1908
      Albert Estopinal Democratic November 3, 1908 –
      April 28, 1919
      Died
      Vacant April 28, 1919 –
      June 5, 1919
      James O'Connor Democratic June 5, 1919 –
      March 3, 1931
      Lost renomination
      Joachim O. Fernandez Democratic March 4, 1931 –
      January 3, 1941
      Lost renomination
      Felix Edward Hébert Democratic January 3, 1941 –
      January 3, 1977
      Retired
      Richard Alvin Tonry Democratic January 3, 1977 –
      May 4, 1977
      Resigned
      Vacant May 4, 1977 –
      August 27, 1977
      BobLivingston.jpg Bob Livingston Republican August 27, 1977 –
      March 1, 1999
      Resigned
      Vacant March 2, 1999 –
      May 29, 1999
      DVitterOfficial.jpg David Vitter Republican May 29, 1999 –
      January 3, 2005
      Retired to run for U.S. Senator
      Bobby Jindal, official 109th Congressional photo.jpg Bobby Jindal Republican January 3, 2005 –
      January 14, 2008
      Resigned to become Governor
      Vacant January 14, 2008 –
      May 3, 2008
      Steve Scalise.jpg Steve Scalise Republican May 3, 2008 –
      Present
      First elected to finish Jindal's term
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      Recent Election Results

      2002

      Louisiana's 1st Congressional District Election (2002)
      Party Candidate Votes Percentage
      Republican David Vitter* 147,117 81.47%
      Republican Monica L. Monica 20,268 11.22%
      Republican Robert Namer 7,229 4.00%
      Libertarian Ian P. Hawxhurst 5,956 3.30%
      Totals 180,570 100.00%
      Voter turnout  %
      Republican hold

      2004

      Louisiana's 1st Congressional District Election (2004)
      Party Candidate Votes Percentage
      Republican Bobby Jindal 225,708 78.40%
      Democratic Roy Armstrong 19,266 6.69%
      Democratic Vinny Mendoza 12,779 4.44%
      Democratic Daniel Zimmerman 12,135 4.22%
      Democratic Jerry Watts 10,034 3.49%
      Republican Mike Rogers 7,975 2.77%
      Totals 287,897 100.00%
      Voter turnout  %
      Republican hold

      2006

      Louisiana's 1st Congressional District Election (2006)
      Party Candidate Votes Percentage
      Republican Bobby Jindal* 130,508 88.11%
      Democratic David Gereighty 10,919 7.37%
      Democratic Stacey Tallitsch 5,025 3.39%
      Libertarian Peter L. Beary 1,676 1.13%
      Totals 148,128 100.00%
      Voter turnout  %
      Republican hold

      2008

      Louisiana's 1st Congressional District Special Election (May 3, 2008)
      Party Candidate Votes Percentage
      Republican Steve Scalise 33,867 75.14%
      Democratic Gilda Reed 10,142 22.50%
      Independent R.A. "Skip" Galan 786 1.74%
      Independent Anthony Gentile 280 0.62%
      Totals 45,075 100.00%
      Voter turnout  %
      Republican hold
      Louisiana's 1st Congressional District General Election (2008)
      Party Candidate Votes Percentage
      Republican Steve Scalise* 189,168 65.68%
      Democratic Jim Harlan 98,839 34.32%
      Totals 288,007 100.00%
      Voter turnout  %
      Republican hold

      2010

      Louisiana's 1st Congressional District Election (2010)
      Party Candidate Votes Percentage
      Republican Steve Scalise* 157,182 78.52%
      Democratic Myron Katz 38,416 19.19%
      Independent Arden Wells 4,578 2.29%
      Totals 200,176 100.00%
      Voter turnout  %
      Republican hold
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      References

      1. ^ "Partisan Voting Index Districts of the 113th Congress: 2004 & 2008". The Cook Political Report. 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-10. 
      2. ^ Cook Partisan Voting Index
      3. ^ Several residents of the northlake area (eastern Florida Parishes) have served in Congress to represent the 6th Congressional District before it ceded territory to the 1st Congressional District.

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      Last modified on 18 May 2013, at 19:51