Oregon's 50th House district

District 50 of the Oregon House of Representatives is one of 60 House legislative districts in the state of Oregon. As of 2021, the district is contained entirely within Multnomah County and includes most of Gresham south of Stark Street as well as a small portion of east Portland in the Centennial neighborhood.

Oregon's 50th House district after redistricting after the 2020 Census

Election results edit

District boundaries have changed over time. Therefore, representatives before 2021 may not represent the same constituency as today. General election results from 2000 to present[1][2] are as follows:

Year Candidate Party Percent Opponent Party Percent Opponent Party Percent Write-in percentage
2000 Rob Patridge Republican 62.25% Barbara Davidson Democratic 37.75% No third candidate
2002[a] Laurie Monnes Anderson Democratic 60.80% Ernest Hodgin Republican 38.70% 0.50%
2004 John Lim Republican 52.31% Jim Buck Democratic 47.69%
2006 John Lim Republican 62.87% Jill Selman-Ringer Democratic 33.78% Brian Lowery Libertarian 3.08% 0.27%
2008 Greg Matthews Democratic 54.54% John Lim Republican 45.18% No third candidate 0.28%
2010 Greg Matthews Democratic 53.97% Andre Wang Republican 45.79% 0.24%
2012 Greg Matthews Democratic 66.00% Logan Boettcher Republican 33.52% 0.48%
2014 Carla Piluso Democratic 54.75% Dan Chriestenson Republican 44.69% 0.55%
2016 Carla Piluso Democratic 50.25% Stella Armstrong Republican 30.79% Michael Calcagno Independent 18.82% 0.14%
2018 Carla Piluso Democratic 93.83% Unopposed 6.17%
2020 Ricki Ruiz Democratic 53.59% Amelia Salvador Republican 46.29% No third candidate 0.12%
2022 Ricki Ruiz Democratic 51.78% Amelia Salvador Republican 48.13% 0.09%
  1. ^ Laurie Monnes Anderson was the incumbent in this election. She previously represented District 22, but was moved to this district due to redistricting following the 2000 United States Census.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "OR State House 50 - History". Our Campaigns. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  2. ^ "Election History: Oregon Statewide Election Results". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  3. ^ "Monnes Anderson, Laurie". Our Campaigns. Retrieved May 13, 2019.

External links edit