U.S. House districts represented by a Republican in 2022 and won by Joe Biden in 2020

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2022 U.S. House Elections
2022 U.S. House Elections with multiple incumbents

Election Date
November 8, 2022

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There were 14 Republican-held U.S. House districts up for election in 2022 that Joe Biden (D) won in the 2020 presidential election. Incumbents sought re-election in 10 of those districts. Biden's margin of victory in the 14 districts ranged from 0.2% to 12.9%.

In 2020, there were five Republican-held U.S. House districts up for election that Hillary Clinton won in 2016. Two of the districts flipped, voting in a Democratic representative in 2020.

Click here to see the 13 U.S. House districts represented by a Democrat in 2022 and won by Donald Trump (R) in 2020.

District-by-district breakdown

The map below highlights these districts. Hover over or click a district to see information such as the incumbent and the presidential vote counts.

2022 Republican-held U.S. House districts won by Joe Biden in 2020
District Incumbent 2020 presidential margin
Arizona's 1st David Schweikert 1.5%
California's 22nd David Valadao 12.9%
California's 27th Mike Garcia 12.4%
California's 40th Young Kim 1.9%
California's 45th Michelle Steel 6.2%
Illinois' 13th Open 11.2%
Michigan's 3rd Peter Meijer 8.5%
North Carolina's 13th Open 1.7%
Nebraska's 2nd Don Bacon 6.3%
New Mexico's 2nd Yvette Herrell 5.9%
New York's 1st Open 0.2%
New York's 22nd Open 7.5%
Ohio's 1st Steve Chabot 8.5%
Pennsylvania's 1st Brian Fitzpatrick 4.6%

Split congressional districts historically

From 1900 to 2020, the percentage of congressional districts that voted for a presidential candidate of one party and a U.S. representative from a different party ranged from 1.6 percent (five districts) in 1904 to 44.1 percent (192 districts) in 1972.[1] The 2020 election had the sixth fewest split districts since 1904 with 6.2 percent (27 total).

Click on the box below to see the data used in the graph.

Full presidential results by district

The map below shows how each district would have voted in the 2020 presidential election. Hover over or click a district to see the presidential vote counts.

See also

Footnotes

  1. The number of districts available for analysis changes year-by-year.
  2. Before 1952 complete data are not available on every congressional district.
  3. The original data source did not have complete information due to the damage caused by Hurricane Sandy the month before the 2012 presidential election.
  4. Three congressional districts from Pennsylvania that were created in the 2018 redistricting are excluded from this figure.