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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Composition  





2 Presidential election results  





3 Recent election results from statewide races  





4 Prominent representatives  





5 List of members representing the district  





6 Election results  



6.1  2012  





6.2  2014  





6.3  2016  





6.4  2018  





6.5  2020  





6.6  2022  







7 See also  





8 References  





9 External links  














Illinois's 5th congressional district






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Coordinates: 41°5549N 87°4951W / 41.93028°N 87.83083°W / 41.93028; -87.83083
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Illinois's 5th congressional district

Map
Interactive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023
Representative

Mike Quigley
DChicago

Area158.3 sq mi (410 km2)
Distribution
  • 100.0% urban
  • 0.0% rural
  • Population (2022)732,819
    Median household
    income
    $104,191[1]
    Ethnicity
  • 11.7% Hispanic
  • 10.7% Asian
  • 3.3% Two or more races
  • 2.4% Black
  • 0.5% other
  • Cook PVID+18[2]

    The 5th congressional districtofIllinois covers parts of Cook and Lake counties, as of the 2023 redistricting which followed the 2010 census. All or parts of Chicago, Inverness, Arlington Heights, Barrington Hills, Des Plaines, Palatine, Mount Prospect, Deer Park, Kildeer, Lake Zurich, Long Grove, and North Barrington are included.

    It has been represented by Democrat Mike Quigley since the April 2009 special election.

    The district was created as part of the 28th United States Congress, which first met on March 4, 1843; it was initially represented by Stephen A. Douglas, whose Kansas–Nebraska Act prompted the creation of the Republican Party. Since the 1990s redistricting, it has covered most of Chicago's North Side; the 2010 redistricting extended it into DuPage County. It was represented by Democrat Rahm Emanuel from January 2003 until he resigned on January 2, 2009, to become White House Chief of Staff. On April 8, 2009, Mike Quigley won a special election to fill the seat.[3]

    The district has a Cook Partisan Voting Index score of D +20.[4] The district and its predecessors have been in Democratic hands for all but four years since 1909. Two of those years came after Dan Rostenkowski lost his seat to Republican Michael Patrick Flanagan because of the Congressional Post Office scandal. On a national level, the scandal helped prompt the Republican Revolutionof1994. However, Flanagan was defeated after only one term by State Representative Rod Blagojevich in 1996, and no Republican has managed even 35 percent of the vote in the district since then. Blagojevich handed the seat to Emanuel in 2003.

    Composition[edit]

    # County Seat Population
    31 Cook Chicago 5,173,146
    97 Lake Waukegan 711,239

    Following the 2020 redistricting, this district will shift from a Chicago-based district to one primarily based in Cook County with a portion in southern Lake County.

    The 5th district takes in the Chicago neighborhoods of Jefferson Park; the vast majority of O'Hare, Lincoln Park, Norwood Park, North Park, and Lake View; the historic North Mayfair neighborhood of Albany Park; most of Lincoln Square; and part of Irving Park.

    Outside of the Chicago city limits, this district takes in the Cook County municipalities of Inverness; most of Arlington Heights and Barrington Hills; half of Des Plaines, Palatine, and Mount Prospect.

    Lake County is split between this district and the 9th district. They are partitioned by the Fox River, Kelsey Rd, W Miller Rd, Echo Lake Rd, Sacomano Meadows Pond 1, Midlothian Rd, N Old Henry Rd, N Quentin Rd, Lake Zurich Rd, Twin Orchard Country Club, Mundelein Rd, Hicks Rd, Bridgewater Farm, Crossing Pond Park, and Arlington Heights Rd. The 5th district takes in the municipalities of Deer Park and Kildeer; the vast majority of Lake Zurich; the southern half of Long Grove; and the portion of North Barrington south of Miller Rd.

    Presidential election results[edit]

    This table indicates how the district has voted in U.S. presidential elections; election results reflect voting in the district as it was configured at the time of the election, not as it is configured today.
    Year Office Results
    2000 President Al Gore 63% - George W. Bush 33%
    2004 President John Kerry 67% - George W. Bush 33%
    2008 President Barack Obama 70% - John McCain 29%
    2012 President Barack Obama 66% - Mitt Romney 32%
    2016 President Hillary Clinton 71% - Donald Trump 24%
    2020 President Joe Biden 72% - Donald Trump 26%

    Recent election results from statewide races[edit]

    This table indicates how the district has voted in recent statewide elections; election results reflect voting in the district as it is currently configured, not necessarily as it was at the time of these elections.
    Year Office Results
    2016 President Hillary Clinton 65.5% – Donald Trump 27.3%
    Senate Tammy Duckworth 58.6% – Mark Kirk 36.5%
    2018 Governor J. B. Pritzker 61.6% – Bruce Rauner 34.5%
    Attorney General Kwame Raoul 62.9% – Erika Harold 34.8%
    Secretary of State Jesse White 75.4% – Jason Helland 21.9%
    2020 President Joe Biden 69.0% – Donald Trump 29.2%
    Senate Dick Durbin 65.2% – Mark Curran 29.2%
    2022 Senate Tammy Duckworth 69.9% – Kathy Salvi 28.6%
    Governor J. B. Pritzker 69.5% – Darren Bailey 28.0%
    Attorney General Kwame Raoul 68.1% – Tom DeVore 30.1%
    Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias 68.6% – Dan Brady 29.5%

    Prominent representatives[edit]

    Representative Notes

    Stephen A. Douglas
    Appointed the 7th Illinois Secretary of State (1840 – 1841)
    Elected an associate justice of the Illinois Supreme Court (1841 – 1843)
    Elected U.S. Senator from Illinois (1847 – 1861)
    Democratic nominee for the 1860 United States presidential election

    William Alexander Richardson
    Elected the 12th Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives (1842 – 1844)
    Served as a captain and later major for the U.S. Army during the Mexican–American War
    Democratic nominee for the 1856 Illinois gubernatorial election
    Appointed the 5th Governor of Nebraska Territory (1858)
    Elected U.S. Senator from Illinois (1863 – 1865)

    Robert M. A. Hawk
    Served as a first lieutenant, captain, and major for the Union Army during the American Civil War (1862 – 1865)

    Robert R. Hitt
    Chargé d'Affaires ad interimtoParis (1874 – 1881)
    Appointed the 13th United States Assistant Secretary of State (1881)
    Regent of the Smithsonian Institution (1893 – 1906)

    Horatio C. Burchard
    Appointed the 15th Director of the United States Mint (1879 – 1885)

    Albert J. Hopkins
    Elected U.S. Senator from Illinois (1903 – 1909)

    Adolph J. Sabath
    Served as 35th Dean of the United States House of Representatives (1934 – 1952)

    Dan Rostenkowski
    Served as U.S. House Majority Chief Deputy Whip (1977 – 1981)

    Michael Patrick Flanagan
    Served as a captain for the U.S. Army and fought in the Gulf War (1991 – 1992)

    Rod Blagojevich
    Elected the 40th Governor of Illinois (2003 – 2009)

    Rahm Emanuel
    Appointed White House Political Director under President Bill Clinton (1993)
    Appointed Senior Advisor to the President of the United States under President Bill Clinton (1993 – 1998)
    Appointed the 23rd White House Chief of Staff under President Barack Obama (2009 – 2010)
    Elected the 55th Mayor of Chicago (2011 – 2019)

    List of members representing the district[edit]

    Member Party Years Cong
    ress
    Electoral history District location
    District created March 4, 1843

    Stephen A. Douglas
    (Quincy)
    Democratic March 4, 1843 –
    March 3, 1847
    28th
    29th
    Elected in 1842.
    Re-elected in 1844.
    Re-elected in 1846.
    Resigned when elected U.S. Senator.
    Vacant March 3, 1847 –
    December 6, 1847
    30th

    William A. Richardson
    (Quincy)
    Democratic December 6, 1847 –
    August 25, 1856
    30th
    31st
    32nd
    33rd
    34th
    Elected to finish Douglas's term.
    Re-elected in 1848.
    Re-elected in 1850.
    Re-elected in 1852.
    Re-elected in 1854.
    Resigned.
    Vacant August 25, 1856 –
    November 4, 1856
    34th
    Jacob C. Davis
    (Warsaw)
    Democratic November 4, 1856 –
    March 3, 1857
    Elected to finish Richardson's term.
    [data missing]

    Isaac N. Morris
    (Quincy)
    Democratic March 4, 1857 –
    March 3, 1861
    35th
    36th
    Elected in 1856.
    Re-elected in 1858.
    [data missing]

    William A. Richardson
    (Quincy)
    Democratic March 4, 1861 –
    January 29, 1863
    37th Elected in 1860.
    Re-elected in 1862.
    Resigned when elected U.S. Senator.
    Vacant January 29, 1863 –
    March 3, 1863

    Owen Lovejoy
    (Princeton)
    Republican March 4, 1863 –
    March 25, 1864
    38th Redistricted from the 3rd district and re-elected in 1862.
    Died.
    Vacant March 25, 1864 –
    May 20, 1864

    Ebon C. Ingersoll
    (Peoria)
    Republican May 20, 1864 –
    March 3, 1871
    38th
    39th
    40th
    41st
    Elected to finish Lovejoy's term.
    Re-elected in 1864.
    Re-elected in 1866.
    Re-elected in 1868.
    [data missing]

    Bradford N. Stevens
    (Tiskilwa)
    Democratic March 4, 1871 –
    March 3, 1873
    42nd Elected in 1870.
    [data missing]

    Horatio C. Burchard
    (Freeport)
    Republican March 4, 1873 –
    March 3, 1879
    43rd
    44th
    45th
    Redistricted from the 3rd district and re-elected in 1872.
    Re-elected in 1874.
    Re-elected in 1876.
    [data missing]

    Robert M.A. Hawk
    (Mount Carroll)
    Republican March 4, 1879 –
    June 29, 1882
    46th
    47th
    Elected in 1878.
    Re-elected in 1880.
    Died.
    Vacant June 29, 1882 –
    November 7, 1882
    47th

    Robert R. Hitt
    (Mount Morris)
    Republican December 4, 1882 –
    March 3, 1883
    Elected to finish Hawk's term.
    Redistricted to the 6th district.

    Reuben Ellwood
    (Sycamore)
    Republican March 4, 1883 –
    July 1, 1885
    48th
    49th
    Elected in 1882.
    Re-elected in 1884.
    Died.
    Vacant July 1, 1885 –
    December 7, 1885
    49th

    Albert J. Hopkins
    (Aurora)
    Republican December 7, 1885 –
    March 3, 1895
    49th
    50th
    51st
    52nd
    53rd
    Elected to finish Ellwood's term.
    Re-elected in 1886.
    Re-elected in 1888.
    Re-elected in 1890.
    Re-elected in 1892.
    Redistricted to the 8th district.

    George E. White
    (Chicago)
    Republican March 4, 1895 –
    March 3, 1899
    54th
    55th
    Elected in 1894.
    Re-elected in 1896.
    [data missing]

    Edward T. Noonan
    (Chicago)
    Democratic March 4, 1899 –
    March 3, 1901
    56th Elected in 1898.
    [data missing]

    William F. Mahoney
    (Chicago)
    Democratic March 4, 1901 –
    March 3, 1903
    57th Elected in 1900.
    Redistricted to the 8th district.

    James McAndrews
    (Chicago)
    Democratic March 4, 1903 –
    March 3, 1905
    58th Redistricted from the 4th district and re-elected in 1902.
    [data missing]

    Anthony Michalek
    (Chicago)
    Republican March 4, 1905 –
    March 3, 1907
    59th Elected in 1904.
    [data missing]

    Adolph J. Sabath
    (Chicago)
    Democratic March 4, 1907 –
    January 3, 1949
    60th
    61st
    62nd
    63rd
    64th
    65th
    66th
    67th
    68th
    69th
    70th
    71st
    72nd
    73rd
    74th
    75th
    76th
    77th
    78th
    79th
    80th
    Elected in 1906.
    Re-elected in 1908.
    Re-elected in 1910.
    Re-elected in 1912.
    Re-elected in 1914.
    Re-elected in 1916.
    Re-elected in 1918.
    Re-elected in 1920.
    Re-elected in 1922.
    Re-elected in 1924.
    Re-elected in 1926.
    Re-elected in 1928.
    Re-elected in 1930.
    Re-elected in 1932.
    Re-elected in 1934.
    Re-elected in 1936.
    Re-elected in 1938.
    Re-elected in 1940.
    Re-elected in 1942.
    Re-elected in 1944.
    Re-elected in 1946.
    Redistricted to the 7th district.

    Martin Gorski
    (Chicago)
    Democratic January 3, 1949 –
    December 4, 1949
    81st Redistricted from the 4th district and re-elected in 1948.
    Died.
    Vacant December 4, 1949 –
    January 3, 1951

    John C. Kluczynski
    (Chicago)
    Democratic January 3, 1951 –
    January 26, 1975
    82nd
    83rd
    84th
    85th
    86th
    87th
    88th
    89th
    90th
    91st
    92nd
    93rd
    94th
    Elected in 1950.
    Re-elected in 1952.
    Re-elected in 1954.
    Re-elected in 1956.
    Re-elected in 1958.
    Re-elected in 1960.
    Re-elected in 1962.
    Re-elected in 1964.
    Re-elected in 1966.
    Re-elected in 1968.
    Re-elected in 1970.
    Re-elected in 1972.
    Re-elected in 1974.
    Died.
    Vacant January 26, 1975 –
    July 8, 1975
    94th

    John G. Fary
    (Chicago)
    Democratic July 8, 1975 –
    January 3, 1983
    94th
    95th
    96th
    97th
    Elected to finish Kluczynski's term.
    Re-elected in 1976.
    Re-elected in 1978.
    Re-elected in 1980.
    [data missing]

    Bill Lipinski
    (Chicago)
    Democratic January 3, 1983 –
    January 3, 1993
    98th
    99th
    100th
    101st
    102nd
    Elected in 1982.
    Re-elected in 1984.
    Re-elected in 1986.
    Re-elected in 1988.
    Re-elected in 1990.
    Redistricted to the 3rd district.

    Dan Rostenkowski
    (Chicago)
    Democratic January 3, 1993 –
    January 3, 1995
    103rd Redistricted from the 8th district and re-elected in 1992.
    Lost re-election.

    Michael P. Flanagan
    (Chicago)
    Republican January 3, 1995 –
    January 3, 1997
    104th Elected in 1994.
    Lost re-election.

    Rod Blagojevich
    (Chicago)
    Democratic January 3, 1997 –
    January 3, 2003
    105th
    106th
    107th
    Elected in 1996.
    Re-elected in 1998.
    Re-elected in 2000.
    Retired to run for Governor of Illinois.

    Rahm Emanuel
    (Chicago)
    Democratic January 3, 2003 –
    January 2, 2009
    108th
    109th
    110th
    Elected in 2002.
    Re-elected in 2004.
    Re-elected in 2006.
    Re-elected in 2008,
    but resigned to become White House Chief of Staff.
    2003–2013
    Vacant January 2, 2009 –
    April 7, 2009
    110th
    111th

    Mike Quigley
    (Chicago)
    Democratic April 7, 2009 –
    present
    111th
    112th
    113th
    114th
    115th
    116th
    117th
    118th
    Elected to finish Emanuel's term.
    Re-elected in 2010.
    Re-elected in 2012.
    Re-elected in 2014.
    Re-elected in 2016.
    Re-elected in 2018.
    Re-elected in 2020.
    Re-elected in 2022.
    2013–2023
    2023–present

    Election results[edit]

    2012[edit]

    Illinois's 5th congressional district, 2012[5]
    Party Candidate Votes %
    Democratic Mike Quigley (incumbent) 177,729 65.7
    Republican Dan Schmitt 77,289 28.6
    Green Nancy Wade 15,359 5.7
    Total votes 270,377 100.0
    Democratic hold

    2014[edit]

    Illinois's 5th congressional district, 2014[6]
    Party Candidate Votes %
    Democratic Mike Quigley (incumbent) 116,364 63.3
    Republican Vince Kolber 56,350 30.6
    Green Nancy Wade 11,305 6.1
    Total votes 184,019 100.0
    Democratic hold

    2016[edit]

    Illinois's 5th congressional district, 2016 [6]
    Party Candidate Votes %
    Democratic Mike Quigley (incumbent) 212,842 67.8
    Republican Vince Kolber 86,222 27.5
    Green Rob Sherman 14,657 4.7
    Independent Michael Krynski (write-in) 3 0.0
    Total votes 313,724 100.0
    Democratic hold

    2018[edit]

    Illinois's 5th congressional district, 2018[7]
    Party Candidate Votes %
    Democratic Mike Quigley (incumbent) 213,992 76.7
    Republican Tom Hanson 65,134 23.3
    Independent Frank Rowder (write-in) 5 0.0
    Total votes 279,131 100.0
    Democratic hold

    2020[edit]

    Illinois's 5th congressional district, 2020[8][9]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Mike Quigley (incumbent) 255,661 70.77 −5.89%
    Republican Tom Hanson 96,200 26.63 +3.30%
    Green Thomas J. Wilda 9,408 2.60 N/A
    Write-in 2 0.00 N/A
    Total votes 361,271 100.0
    Democratic hold

    2022[edit]

    Illinois's 5th congressional district, 2022
    Party Candidate Votes %
    Democratic Mike Quigley (incumbent) 190,999 69.56
    Republican Tommy Hanson 79,112 28.81
    Independent Jerico Matias Cruz 4,439 1.61
    Total votes 274,550 100.0
    Democratic hold

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "My Congressional District".
  • ^ "2022 Cook PVI: District Map and List". Cook Political Report. July 12, 2022. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  • ^ "Topic Galleries". Chicago Tribune.
  • ^ "Cook Political Report, PVI for the 110th Congress" (PDF). Cook Political Report. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 26, 2008. Retrieved October 8, 2008.
  • ^ "2012 General Election Official Vote Totals" (PDF). Illinois State Board of Elections. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 19, 2013. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  • ^ a b "Illinois General Election 2014". Illinois State Board of Elections. November 4, 2014. Archived from the original on December 15, 2014. Retrieved March 2, 2015.
  • ^ "2018 General Election Official Vote Totals Book".
  • ^ "Election Results 2020 GENERAL ELECTION". Illinois State Board of Elections. December 4, 2020. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
  • ^ "Illinois 2020 Election Results". Chicago Sun-Times. November 20, 2020. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  • External links[edit]

    41°55′49N 87°49′51W / 41.93028°N 87.83083°W / 41.93028; -87.83083


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