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Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district
U.S. House district for Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district is located in the northeastern region of the state. It encompasses all of Wayne, Pike, and Lackawanna Counties; along with portions of Luzerne and Monroe counties.
The district had been anchored in Bucks County from the 1940s until 2018, even as most other districts in Pennsylvania changed drastically during that time frame due to population shifts and Pennsylvania's loss of seats in the House.[2]
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania redrew the district in February 2018 after ruling the previous map unconstitutional due to gerrymandering. The 8th district was reassigned to the northeastern part of the state for the 2018 elections and representation thereafter. It is geographically the successor of the former 17th district, including the ancestrally Democratic cities of Scranton and Wilkes-Barre in the Wyoming Valley. Portions of the new 8th district also came from the old 10th district, including the more conservative counties of Pike and Wayne. Meanwhile, the Bucks County district was renumbered as the 1st district.[3]
The district contains a mix of suburban and rural communities centered around the industrial hubs of Scranton and Wilkes-Barre that are predominantly white and working class. While a longtime Democratic stronghold, the Democrats in this region are populist-leaning, different from their counterparts in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. The district voted for Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012 but swung for Donald Trump in 2016, 2020, and 2024, the first time much of this area had voted for a Republican since the 1980s.
However, Democrats still dominate down ballot. It was one of five districts that voted for Donald Trump in the 2020 while being won or held by a Democrat in 2022. At the time it was also the most Republican-leaning district held by a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus based on the Cook Partisan Voting Index. The district has only elected a Republican to Congress three times since 1947, in the Republican waves of 1980 and 2010 and most recently in 2024 when current representative Rob Bresnahan narrowly ousted then-incumbent Matt Cartwright, a Democrat.
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Recent election results from statewide races
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Composition
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Lackawanna County (40)
- All 40 municipalities
Luzerne County (55)
- Ashley, Avoca, Bear Creek Township, Bear Creek Village, Buck Township, Butler Township (part; also 9th; includes Beech Mountain Lakes), Courtdale, Dallas Township, Dennison Township, Dupont, Duryea, Edwardsville, Exeter Borough, Exeter Township, Fairview Township, Freeland, Forty Fort, Foster Township, Franklin Township, Hanover Township, Harveys Lake, Hazle Township, Hazleton, Jackson Township, Jeddo, Jenkins Township, Kingston Borough, Kingston Township, Laflin, Larksville, Laurel Run, Luzerne, Nanticoke, Newport Township (part; also 9th; includes Sheatown and Wanamie), Nuangola, Penn Lake Park, Pittston, Pittston Township, Plains Township, Plymouth Borough, Plymouth Township, Pringle, Rice Township, Sugar Notch, Swoyersville, Warrior Run, West Pittston, West Hazleton, West Wyoming, White Haven, Wilkes-Barre, Wilkes-Barre Township, Wright Township, Wyoming, Yatesville
Monroe County (18)
- Barrett Township, Chestnuthill Township, Coolbaugh Township, Delaware Water Gap, East Stroudsburg, Hamilton Township, Jackson Township, Middle Smithfield Township, Mount Pocono, Paradise Township, Pocono Township, Price Township, Ross Township (part; also 7th; includes part of Saylorsburg), Smithfield Township, Stroud Township, Stroudsburg, Tobyhanna Township, Tunkhannock Township
Pike County (13)
- All 13 municipalities
Wayne County (28)
- All 28 municipalities
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List of members representing the district
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The district was created in 1791.
1791–1793: one seat
District eliminated in 1793 and replaced by the at-large district.
1795–1813: one seat
District restored in 1795.
1823–1833: two seats
1833–present: one seat
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Election results
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See also
References
External links
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