Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Map of Oklahoma's congressional districts since 2023 As of the 2020 census , there are five United States congressional districts in Oklahoma . It was one of the states that was able to keep the same number of congressional districts from the previous census (in the past, Oklahoma has had as many as nine House of Representatives seats).
Map of Oklahoma's congressional districts since 2023 These are tables of congressional delegations from Oklahoma to the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate . The current dean of the Oklahoma delegation is Representative Frank Lucas (R), having served in Congress since 1994.
The Oklahoma House of Representatives draws its own maps of its district lines, which are subject to the approval of both the state senate and the governor. Should the redistricting not occur in the time limits prescribed by law, the lines are determined by a panel of five statewide elected officials.
District 38: Incumbent Republican John Pfeiffer, a rancher, is the deputy floor leader in the Oklahoma House who’s pushed to improve rural schools and rural highways, roads and bridges. He ...
Oklahoma's 4th congressional district is located in south-central Oklahoma and covers (in whole or in part) a total of 15 counties. Its principal cities include Midwest City, Norman, Moore, Ada, Duncan, Lawton/Ft. Sill, and Ardmore. The district also includes much of southern Oklahoma City. The district is currently represented by Republican ...
The district contains all of Tulsa County as well as portions of Creek, Rogers & Wagoner counties. Although it has long been reckoned as the Tulsa district, a small portion of Tulsa itself is located in the 3rd district. Principal cities in the district (other than Tulsa) include Broken Arrow, Bixby, Jenks, Owasso, Sand Springs, and Wagoner.
• District 26: Republican incumbent Dell Kerbs, the chair of the House Agriculture and Rural Development Committee, won a third term representing parts of Pottawatomie County in central Oklahoma ...
In the 20th century, the district heavily favored conservative Democratic candidates, being represented in the House only by Democrats from 1923 to 1994. The district's Democratic leanings stem partly from historic migration patterns into the state– the Little Dixie region of the district imported the people and culture of southern states such as Mississippi after Reconstruction. [5]