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North Carolina's 13th congressional district was re-established in 2002 after the state gained population in the 2000 United States census. Previously, the state had 13 districts from the first election following the 1810 census until the reapportionment following the 1840 census .
On February 4, 2022, the North Carolina Supreme Court struck down the congressional and state legislative district maps drawn by the GOP-controlled General Assembly as an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander in a 4–3 ruling, after a testimony had shown that Republicans were likely to win 10 out of 14 U.S. House seats under the proposed map ...
The final congressional map passed by the N.C. General Assembly on Oct. 25, 2023, for use in the 2024 elections.
Here’s a map that shows where North Carolina’s 13th Congressional District falls. Republican Bo Hines is facing Democrat Wiley Nickel in the 2022 race.
Changes to NC congressional districts for 2024. The congressional map will help determine which lawmakers will stay or go. The current makeup is an even 7-7 split between Democrats and Republicans.
English: The congressional district, highlighted in red, overlayed with other congressional districts and county boundaries, as well as major cities, major roads, water areas, national parks and other publicly owned land, American Indian areas, military areas, and urban clusters in North Carolina.
As soon as North Carolina’s lawmakers approved a congressional map, incumbents began declaring their intentions for the 2024 elections. And challengers began making clear who they would run against.
Current U.S. representatives from North Carolina District Member (Residence) [2] Party Incumbent since CPVI (2022) [3] District map 1st: Don Davis : Democratic January 3, 2023 D+2: 2nd: Deborah Ross : Democratic January 3, 2021 D+12: 3rd: Greg Murphy : Republican September 17, 2019 R+15: 4th: Valerie Foushee (Hillsborough) Democratic