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On February 19, 2018, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court released its new congressional map, to take effect for the May 15, 2018, primaries. [11] The Court voted to implement the new map by a 4–3 vote. [12] The map was designed with the assistance of Stanford University law professor Nathaniel Persily. [13]
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The new second district is essentially the successor to the previous first district. As such, it remained heavily Democratic for the 2018 election and representation thereafter. Brendan Boyle, the incumbent from the previous 13th district, ran for re-election in the new 2nd district. [3] Parts of the previous second district were shifted to the ...
The state congressional district map was redrawn by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in February 2018 after ruling the previous map unconstitutional due to partisan gerrymandering; the previous 1st district was geographically succeeded by the newly redrawn 2nd district which on November 6, 2018, elected Brendan Boyle, the incumbent from the ...
A precinct counter would only show in-person votes, giving the public a false impression. Mail ballots don’t have a precinct-level designation. Pa. bill would update precinct votes online.
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The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania redrew the district in 2018 after ruling the previous map unconstitutional because of gerrymandering. The court added State College to the old district's boundaries while removing some Democratic-leaning areas and redesignated it the twelfth district; an area encompassing Harrisburg and York was numbered as the ...
District home Note Prior to 1969, seats were apportioned by county. Francis J. Rush: Democrat: 1969 – 1972: David P. Richardson: Democrat: 1973 – 1995: Died 18 August 1995. [2] John L. Myers: Democrat: 1995 – 2013: Elected November 7, 1995 to fill vacancy. Sworn in 21 November 1995. [3] Stephen Kinsey: Democrat: 2013 – 2024: Resigned in ...