U.S. House districts represented by a Republican in 2022 and won by Joe Biden in 2020
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November 8, 2022 |
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.
| Split congressional districts, 1900-2020 | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Districts analyzed[2] | Split districts | Split districts (%) | ||||||||||
| 1900 | 295 | 10 | 3.4% | ||||||||||
| 1904 | 310 | 5 | 1.6% | ||||||||||
| 1908 | 314 | 21 | 6.7% | ||||||||||
| 1912 | 333 | 84 | 25.2% | ||||||||||
| 1916 | 333 | 35 | 10.5% | ||||||||||
| 1920 | 344 | 11 | 3.2% | ||||||||||
| 1924 | 356 | 42 | 11.8% | ||||||||||
| 1928 | 359 | 68 | 18.9% | ||||||||||
| 1932 | 355 | 50 | 14.1% | ||||||||||
| 1936 | 361 | 51 | 14.1% | ||||||||||
| 1940 | 362 | 53 | 14.6% | ||||||||||
| 1944 | 367 | 41 | 11.2% | ||||||||||
| 1948 | 422 | 90 | 21.3% | ||||||||||
| 1952 | 435 | 84 | 19.3% | ||||||||||
| 1956 | 435 | 130 | 29.9% | ||||||||||
| 1960 | 437 | 114 | 26.1% | ||||||||||
| 1964 | 435 | 145 | 33.3% | ||||||||||
| 1968 | 435 | 139 | 32.0% | ||||||||||
| 1972 | 435 | 192 | 44.1% | ||||||||||
| 1976 | 435 | 124 | 28.5% | ||||||||||
| 1980 | 435 | 143 | 32.9% | ||||||||||
| 1984 | 435 | 190 | 43.7% | ||||||||||
| 1988 | 435 | 148 | 34.0% | ||||||||||
| 1992 | 435 | 100 | 23.0% | ||||||||||
| 1996 | 435 | 110 | 25.3% | ||||||||||
| 2000 | 435 | 86 | 19.8% | ||||||||||
| 2004 | 435 | 59 | 13.6% | ||||||||||
| 2008 | 435 | 83 | 19.1% | ||||||||||
| 2012 | 424[3] | 25 | 5.9% | ||||||||||
| 2016 | 435 | 35[4] | 8.0% | ||||||||||
| 2020 | 435 | 27 | 6.2% | ||||||||||
| Source: Brookings Institute | |||||||||||||
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
- U.S. House battlegrounds, 2022
- United States Congress elections, 2022
- United States House of Representatives elections, 2022
- United States House of Representatives
Footnotes
- ↑ The number of districts available for analysis changes year-by-year.
- ↑ Before 1952 complete data are not available on every congressional district.
- ↑ The original data source did not have complete information due to the damage caused by Hurricane Sandy the month before the 2012 presidential election.
- ↑ Three congressional districts from Pennsylvania that were created in the 2018 redistricting are excluded from this figure.