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Montana has two congressional districts. A state since 1889, it gained its second seat in the U.S. House for the 1912 election. Both seats were at-large selections on the ballot (entire state) for three elections, until the two districts were established prior to the 1918 election.
On November 12, 2021, Montana's Districting and Apportionment Commission approved a new congressional map in which the 2nd congressional district would cover the eastern portion of Montana, in a configuration similar to the 1983–1993 map. However, the state capital, Helena, which had historically been in the 1st district, was drawn into the ...
Montana currently has two congressional districts. Every ten years, the number of congressional districts is reapportioned based on the state's population as determined by the United States census ; [ 8 ] Montana had had two districts from 1913 to 1993 and one at-large district from 1993 to 2023.
Montana's redistricting commission chair selected on Thursday a congressional district map proposed by Republicans, dealing a blow to Democrats who hoped to craft a western district that would ...
English: Map of the congressional districts of Montana, complemented with county boundaries and neighbouring states, as well as freeways and arterial roads, water areas, urban areas, national parks and forests, military installations, and American Indian areas (including reservations) in Montana. These congressional districts are put into ...
From 1993 to 2023, Montana was represented in the United States House of Representatives by one at-large congressional district, among the 435 in the United States Congress. The district was the most populous U.S. congressional district at the time, with just over 1 million constituents, [ 1 ] and the second-largest by land area , after Alaska ...
Mar. 13—Incumbent U.S. Rep. Ryan Zinke will face a familiar opponent in the Republican primary for Montana's western congressional district: retired pastor Mary Todd. Todd, a Kalispell ...
After 1993, the 2nd district was eliminated and the remaining seat was elected at-large. Following the release of the 2020 United States census results, Montana was once again split into two congressional districts. [3] The reconstituted 1st district covers the western third of the state, in a configuration similar to the 1983–1993 map.