Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Maryland's congressional districts since 2023 Maryland is divided into eight congressional districts , each represented by a member of the United States House of Representatives . After the 2020 census , the number of Maryland 's seats remained unchanged, giving evidence of stable population growth relative to the United States at large.
Current U.S. representatives from Maryland District Member (Residence) [1] Party Incumbent since CPVI (2022) [2] District map 1st: Andy Harris : Republican January 3, 2011 R+11: 2nd: Johnny Olszewski (Sparrows Point) Democratic January 3, 2025 D+7: 3rd: Sarah Elfreth : Democratic January 3, 2025 D+10: 4th: Glenn Ivey : Democratic January 3, 2023
Matthew Fogg, retired Chief Deputy U.S. Marshal, anti-racism and anti-corruption activist, and candidate for Maryland's 4th congressional district in 2016 [48] Gregory Holmes, former Republican candidate for Maryland's 4th congressional district in 2012 and 2014 and for the U.S. Senate in 2016 [48] Robert K. McGhee [48] Kim A. Shelton, bus ...
With a primary election scheduled for July 19, the boundary lines of Maryland’s eight congressional districts were in flux. A map adopted in December to account for population changes determined ...
District 2A: Neil Parrott retired to run for Congress in Maryland's 6th congressional district. [21] District 4: Dan Cox retired to run for governor. [22] District 5: Susan W. Krebs retired. [23] District 5: Haven Shoemaker retired to run for Carroll County state's attorney. [24] District 9A: Reid Novotny retired to run for state senator in ...
A Maryland judge on Friday rejected the General Assembly's newly drawn Congressional district map, declaring them unconstitutional. After a four-day trial, Judge Lynne Battaglia on Friday issued a ...
Fifteen weeks before the primary election, a judge is to open a trial Tuesday in which Republicans seek to scrap a Democratic-approved map of Maryland’s congressional district boundary lines.
Maryland's 8th congressional district is concentrated almost entirely in Montgomery County, with a small portion in Prince George's County. [3] Adjacent to Washington, D.C., the 8th district takes in many of the city’s wealthiest inner-ring suburbs, including Bethesda, Chevy Chase, and Potomac.