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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Current boundaries  





2 Recent election results  





3 Election results from statewide races  





4 History  





5 List of members representing the district  





6 See also  





7 Notes  





8 References  





9 External links  














Tennessee's 5th congressional district






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Coordinates: 36°1114N 87°0427W / 36.18722°N 87.07417°W / 36.18722; -87.07417
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Tennessee's 5th congressional district

Map
Interactive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023
Representative
  Andy Ogles
RColumbia
Distribution
  • 88.68% urban[1]
  • 11.32% rural
  • Population (2022)784,695[2][3]
    Median household
    income
    $86,017[4]
    Ethnicity
  • 11.8% Black
  • 10.3% Hispanic
  • 4.2% Asian
  • 3.9% Two or more races
  • 0.6% other
  • Cook PVIR+9[5]

    The 5th congressional district of Tennessee is a congressional districtinMiddle Tennessee. It has been represented by Republican Andy Ogles since January 2023.

    In the past, the fifth district has been nearly synonymous with Tennessee's capital city, Nashville, as the district has almost always been centered on Nashville throughout the 20th and early 21st centuries. The city is a center for the music, healthcare, publishing, banking and transportation industries, and is home to numerous colleges and universities (its old nickname was "the Athens of the South"). It is also home to the Grand Ole Opry and Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, earning it the nickname "Music City".[6]

    Since the 2022 election cycle, there is no longer a congressional district centered on the city of Nashville itself. Democrat Jim Cooper, the prior holder of the office, alleged that the district was gerrymandered to favor Republican candidates.[7] Prior to the 2020 House Redistricting Cycle, the district contained the entirety of Davidson County (which is coterminous with Nashville), making it a safe seat for the Democratic Party. Following redistricting, Nashville was split into 3 separate districts, effectively diluting the city's heavily Democratic voter base into the surrounding suburban and rural counties, which lean strongly Republican.[citation needed]

    Current boundaries[edit]

    As of the 2020 United States redistricting cycle, the 5th District comprises a southern portion of Davidson County; portions of Wilson and Williamson Counties; and the entirety of Maury, Lewis, and Marshall Counties.[8]

    Recent election results[edit]

    Results under old lines (2013-2023)
    United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2012: District 5[9]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Jim Cooper (incumbent) 171,358 65.22 +9.0
    Republican Brad Staats 86,153 32.79 -9.3
    Green John Miglietta 5,208 1.98 +1.8
    Write-in candidate Sean Puckett 12 0.0
    Total votes 262,731 100.00
    Democratic hold
    United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2014: District 5[10]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Jim Cooper (incumbent) 96,148 62.32 -2.9
    Republican Bob Ries 55,078 35.70 +2.91
    Independent Paul Deakin 9,634 6.24 +6.2
    Total votes 160,860 100.00
    Democratic hold
    United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2016: District 5[11]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Jim Cooper (incumbent) 171,111 62.55 +0.23
    Republican Stacy Ries Snyder 102,433 37.44 +1.74
    Total votes 273,544 100.00
    Democratic hold
    United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2018: District 5[12]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Jim Cooper (incumbent) 177,923 67.84 +5.29
    Republican Jody M. Ball 84,317 32.15 -5.29
    Write-in candidate Marshal Weaver 8 0.0
    Total votes 202,248 100.00
    Democratic hold
    United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2020: District 5[13]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Jim Cooper (incumbent) 252,155 100.00 +32.16
    Write-in 14 0.0
    Total votes 252,169 100.00
    Democratic hold

    Results under new lines (2023-present)

    United States House of Representatives Elections in Tennessee, 2022: District 5[14]
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Republican Andy Ogles 123,558 55.84 +55.84
    Democratic Heidi Campbell 93,648 42.32 −57.75
    Independent Derrick Brantley 2,090 0.95
    Independent Daniel Cooper 1,132 0.51
    Independent Rich Shannon 847 0.38
    Total votes 221,275 100.00
    Republican gain from Democratic

    Election results from statewide races[edit]

    Election results from presidential and statewide races under current lines:

    Year Office Result
    2016 President Donald Trump 55.6% - Hillary Clinton 38.5%
    2018 Governor Bill Lee 54.2% - Karl Dean 42.8%
    2018 Senate Phil Bredesen 49.5% - Marsha Blackburn 49.5%
    2020 President Donald Trump 54.5% - Joe Biden 43.2%
    2020 Senate Bill Hagerty 57.6% - Marquita Bradshaw 39.8%
    2022 Governor Bill Lee 58.4% - Jason Martin 40.1%
    Results under old lines (2013-2023)
    Results under old lines (2003-2013)

    History[edit]

    Following the 1950 census, Tennessee expanded briefly to ten districts. Even though it has since contracted back to nine districts, that marked the beginning of the continuous period where the 5th district was centered on Davidson County/Nashville.[15]

    From 1941 to 1957, Nashville was represented by J. Percy Priest, who was the House majority whip in the 81st and 82nd Congresses. A dam in eastern Davidson County and the lake formed by the dam are both named in his memory.

    Priest died just before the Election of 1956,[16] and the Democrats turned to Carlton Loser. Loser won that election, and then to two more Congresses after that. Loser appeared to win another Democratic nomination in 1962, but his primary came under investigation for voter fraud, and a court ordered a new election. In this new election, Loser was defeated by former state senator Richard Fulton.[17]

    Richard "Dick" Fulton represented the 5th from 1963 until August 1975, when he retired from Congress to become the second mayor of metropolitan Nashville. Following the 1970 census, while Fulton was representing the district, Tennessee briefly contracted to eight congressional districts. During the 1970s, the district encompassed Davidson, Cheatham, and Robertson counties. This contraction of congressional districts forced the first time in thirty years that Davidson County was not the sole county in the district. (The fifth was only Davidson County from 1943 to 1972.)[15]

    Once Fulton was Nashville's mayor, he was succeeded in Congress by former state senator Clifford Allen. Allen served for only a term and a half (November 1975 - June 1978) before he died in office due to complications from a heart attack suffered a month earlier.[18]

    In the election of 1978, the fifth district selected state senator Bill Boner. He served in Congress for ten years, and then succeeded Fulton as mayor of Nashville. Boner was succeeded in 1988 by Bob Clement, former president of Cumberland University and son of the former governor Frank G. Clement. Clement served seven terms in Congress, where he represented Davidson and Robertson counties. He was one of the 81 Democratic congressmen who voted for the Iraq Resolution of 2002.[19]

    Clement did not run for re-election in 2002, as he was running for the open U.S. Senate seat left by retiring Fred Thompson. He won the Democratic nomination easily, but was defeated in the general election by former governor Lamar Alexander.[20] Clement was succeeded in Congress by Jim Cooper, who, like Clement, was also the son of a former governor. Cooper is considered a blue dog Democrat. According to On The Issues, he is deemed "moderate", but is slightly to the left of the political center.[21] After the 2020 United States redistricting cycle moved the 5th district to the Republican-leaning suburbs to the south of Nashville, Cooper announced that he would not run again in 2022.[22] He was succeeded in Congress by Andy Ogles, the former mayor of Maury County.

    List of members representing the district[edit]

    Member
    (Residence)
    Party Years Cong
    ress
    Electoral history District location
    District formatting March 4, 1813

    Felix Grundy
    (Nashville)
    Democratic-Republican March 4, 1813 –
    July 1814
    13th Redistricted from the 3rd district and re-elected in 1813.
    Resigned.
    1813–1823
    Bedford, Davidson, Lincoln, Rutherford, and Williamson counties
    Vacant July 1814 –
    September 16, 1814

    Newton Cannon
    (Williamson County)
    Democratic-Republican September 16, 1814 –
    March 3, 1817
    13th
    14th
    Elected to finish Grundy's term.
    Re-elected in 1815.
    Lost re-election.

    Thomas Claiborne
    (Nashville)
    Democratic-Republican March 4, 1817 –
    March 3, 1819
    15th Elected in 1817.
    Retired.

    Newton Cannon
    (Williamson County)
    Democratic-Republican March 4, 1819 –
    March 3, 1823
    16th
    17th
    Elected in 1819.
    Re-elected in 1821.
    Retired.
    Robert Allen
    (Carthage)
    Democratic-Republican[a] March 4, 1823 –
    March 3, 1825
    18th
    19th
    Redistricted from the 4th district and re-elected in 1823.
    Re-elected in 1825.
    Retired.
    1823–1833
    Smith, Sumner, and Wilson counties
    Jacksonian March 4, 1825 –
    March 3, 1827
    Robert Desha
    (Gallatin)
    Jacksonian March 4, 1827 –
    March 3, 1831
    20th
    21st
    Elected in 1827.
    Re-elected in 1829.
    Retired.

    William Hall
    (Sumner County)
    Jacksonian March 4, 1831 –
    March 3, 1833
    22nd Elected in 1831.
    Retired.
    John B. Forester
    (McMinnville)
    Jacksonian March 4, 1833 –
    March 3, 1835
    23rd
    24th
    Elected in 1833.
    Re-elected in 1835.
    Retired.
    1833–1843
    [data missing]
    Anti-Jacksonian March 4, 1835 –
    March 3, 1837

    Hopkins L. Turney
    (Winchester)
    Democratic March 4, 1837 –
    March 3, 1843
    25th
    26th
    27th
    Elected in 1837.
    Re-elected in 1839.
    Re-elected in 1841.
    Retired.

    George Washington Jones
    (Fayetteville)
    Democratic March 4, 1843 –
    March 3, 1853
    28th
    29th
    30th
    31st
    32nd
    Elected in 1843.
    Re-elected in 1845.
    Re-elected in 1847.
    Re-elected in 1849.
    Re-elected in 1851.
    Redistricted to the 6th district.
    1843–1853
    [data missing]

    Charles Ready
    (Murfreesboro)
    Whig March 4, 1853 –
    March 3, 1855
    33rd
    34th
    35th
    Elected in 1853.
    Re-elected in 1855.
    Re-elected in 1857.
    Lost re-election.
    1853–1861
    [data missing]
    Know Nothing March 4, 1855 –
    March 3, 1859

    Robert H. Hatton
    (Lebanon)
    Opposition March 4, 1859 –
    March 3, 1861
    36th Elected in 1859.
    Retired to join the Confederate Army.
    District inactive March 3, 1861 –
    July 24, 1866
    37th
    38th
    39th
    Civil War and Reconstruction

    William B. Campbell
    (Lebanon)
    Unionist July 24, 1866 –
    March 3, 1867
    39th Elected in 1865.
    Retired.
    1866–1873
    [data missing]
    John Trimble
    (Nashville)
    Republican March 4, 1867 –
    March 3, 1869
    40th Elected in 1867.
    Retired.

    William F. Prosser
    (Nashville)
    Republican March 4, 1869 –
    March 3, 1871
    41st Elected in 1868.
    Lost re-election.

    Edward I. Golladay
    (Lebanon)
    Democratic March 4, 1871 –
    March 3, 1873
    42nd Elected in 1870.
    Lost re-election.

    Horace Harrison
    (Nashville)
    Republican March 4, 1873 –
    March 3, 1875
    43rd Elected in 1872.
    Redistricted to the 6th district and lost re-election.
    1873–1883
    [data missing]

    John M. Bright
    (Fayetteville)
    Democratic March 4, 1875 –
    March 3, 1881
    44th
    45th
    46th
    Redistricted from the 4th district and re-elected in 1874.
    Re-elected in 1876.
    Re-elected in 1878.
    Lost re-election as an Independent Democrat.

    Richard Warner
    (Lewisburg)
    Democratic March 4, 1881 –
    March 3, 1885
    47th
    48th
    Elected in 1880.
    Re-elected in 1882.
    Lost renomination.
    1883–1893
    [data missing]

    James D. Richardson
    (Murfreesboro)
    Democratic March 4, 1885 –
    March 3, 1905
    49th
    50th
    51st
    52nd
    53rd
    54th
    55th
    56th
    57th
    58th
    Elected in 1884.
    Re-elected in 1886.
    Re-elected in 1888.
    Re-elected in 1890.
    Re-elected in 1892.
    Re-elected in 1894.
    Re-elected in 1896.
    Re-elected in 1898.
    Re-elected in 1900.
    Re-elected in 1902.
    Retired.
    1893–1903
    [data missing]
    1903–1913
    [data missing]

    William C. Houston
    (Woodbury)
    Democratic March 4, 1905 –
    March 3, 1919
    59th
    60th
    61st
    62nd
    63rd
    64th
    65th
    Elected in 1904.
    Re-elected in 1906.
    Re-elected in 1908.
    Re-elected in 1910.
    Re-elected in 1912.
    Re-elected in 1914.
    Re-elected in 1916.
    Retired.
    1913–1923
    [data missing]

    Ewin L. Davis
    (Tullahoma)
    Democratic March 4, 1919 –
    March 3, 1933
    66th
    67th
    68th
    69th
    70th
    71st
    72nd
    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.
    Lost renomination.
    1923–1933
    [data missing]

    Jo Byrns
    (Nashville)
    Democratic March 4, 1933 –
    June 4, 1936
    73rd
    74th
    Redistricted from the 6th district and re-elected in 1932.
    Re-elected in 1934.
    Died.
    1933–1943
    [data missing]
    Vacant June 4, 1936 –
    January 3, 1937
    74th
    Richard M. Atkinson
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 3, 1937 –
    January 3, 1939
    75th Elected in 1936.
    Lost renomination.

    Jo Byrns Jr.
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 3, 1939 –
    January 3, 1941
    76th Elected in 1938.
    Lost re-election.

    Percy Priest
    (Nashville)
    Independent Democratic January 3, 1941 –
    January 3, 1943
    77th Elected in 1940.
    Redistricted to the 6th district.

    Jim Nance McCord
    (Lewisburg)
    Democratic January 3, 1943 –
    January 3, 1945
    78th Elected in 1942.
    Retired to run for Governor of Tennessee.
    1943–1953
    [data missing]

    Harold Earthman
    (Murfreesboro)
    Democratic January 3, 1945 –
    January 3, 1947
    79th Elected in 1944.
    Lost renomination.

    Joe L. Evins
    (Smithville)
    Democratic January 3, 1947 –
    January 3, 1953
    80th
    81st
    82nd
    Elected in 1946.
    Re-elected in 1948.
    Re-elected in 1950.
    Redistricted to the 4th district.

    Percy Priest
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 3, 1953 –
    October 12, 1956
    83rd
    84th
    Redistricted from the 6th district and re-elected in 1952.
    Re-elected in 1954.
    Died.
    1953–1963
    [data missing]
    Vacant October 12, 1956 –
    January 3, 1957
    84th

    J. Carlton Loser
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 3, 1957 –
    January 3, 1963
    85th
    86th
    87th
    Elected in 1956.
    Re-elected in 1958.
    Re-elected in 1960.
    Lost renomination.

    Richard Fulton
    (Goodlettsville)
    Democratic January 3, 1963 –
    August 14, 1975
    88th
    89th
    90th
    91st
    92nd
    93rd
    94th
    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.
    Resigned to become Mayor of Nashville.
    1963–1973
    [data missing]
    1973–1983
    Cheatham, Davidson, and Robertson counties.
    Vacant August 14, 1975 –
    November 25, 1975
    94th

    Clifford Allen
    (Nashville)
    Democratic November 25, 1975 –
    June 18, 1978
    94th
    95th
    Elected to finish Fulton's term.
    Re-elected in 1976.
    Died.
    Vacant June 18, 1978 –
    January 3, 1979
    95th

    Bill Boner
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 3, 1979 –
    October 5, 1987
    96th
    97th
    98th
    99th
    100th
    Elected in 1978.
    Re-elected in 1980.
    Re-elected in 1982.
    Re-elected in 1984.
    Re-elected in 1986.
    Resigned to become Mayor of Nashville.
    1983–1993
    Davidson and Robertson counties.
    Vacant October 5, 1987 –
    January 19, 1988
    100th

    Bob Clement
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 19, 1988 –
    January 3, 2003
    100th
    101st
    102nd
    103rd
    104th
    105th
    106th
    107th
    Elected to finish Boner's term.
    Re-elected in 1988.
    Re-elected in 1990.
    Re-elected in 1992.
    Re-elected in 1994.
    Re-elected in 1996.
    Re-elected in 1998.
    Re-elected in 2000.
    Retired to run for U.S. senator.
    1993–2003
    Davidson and Robertson counties.

    Jim Cooper
    (Nashville)
    Democratic January 3, 2003 –
    January 3, 2023
    108th
    109th
    110th
    111th
    112th
    113th
    114th
    115th
    116th
    117th
    Elected in 2002.
    Re-elected in 2004.
    Re-elected in 2006.
    Re-elected in 2008.
    Re-elected in 2010.
    Re-elected in 2012.
    Re-elected in 2014.
    Re-elected in 2016.
    Re-elected in 2018.
    Re-elected in 2020.
    Retired.
    2003–2013

    Cheatham, Davidson, and Wilson counties.
    2013–2023

    Cheatham, Davidson, and Dickson counties.

    Andy Ogles
    (Columbia)
    Republican January 3, 2023 –
    present
    118th Elected in 2022. 2023–present

    Davidson, Lewis, Marshall, Maury, Williamson, and Wilson counties.

    See also[edit]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Supported the Jackson faction in the 1824 United States presidential election

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Congressional Districts Relationship Files (state-based)". www.census.gov. US Census Bureau Geography. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ "B03002: 2022 American Community Survey 1-year Estimates - Congressional District 5 (118th Congress), Tennessee". United States Census Bureau.
  • ^ "My Congressional District". www.census.gov. Center for New Media & Promotion (CNMP), US Census Bureau. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
  • ^ "My Congressional District".
  • ^ "2022 Cook PVI: District Map and List". Cook Political Report. July 12, 2022. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  • ^ "Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI)". Archived from the original on July 7, 2001.
  • ^ "Gov. Lee signs congressional redistricting bill splitting Davidson County". WTVF. February 7, 2022. Retrieved April 25, 2022.
  • ^ "DRA 2020". Daves Redistricting. Retrieved April 25, 2022.
  • ^ "November 6, 2012 General Election" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  • ^ "November 4, 2014 General Election" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  • ^ "November 8, 2016 General Election" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  • ^ "November 6, 2018 General Election" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  • ^ "November 3, 2020 General Election" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  • ^ "November 8, 2022 General Election" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved January 9, 2023.
  • ^ a b "JeffreyBLewis/congressional-district-boundaries". GitHub. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ "J. PERCY PRIEST, 56, LEGISLATOR, DEAD; Tennessee Representative 16 Years, Ex-Democratic Whip, Was Commerce Chairman Was Teacher and Coach". The New York Times. October 13, 1956. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ "It Starts with Richard Fulton | Politics | Nashville Banner". www.thenashvillebanner.com. Archived from the original on January 25, 2015. Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  • ^ "Observer-Reporter - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ "H.J.Res. 114 (107th): Authorization for Use of Military Force Against ... -- House Vote #455 -- Oct 10, 2002". GovTrack.us. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ "Our Campaigns - TN US Senate Race - Nov 05, 2002". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ OnTheIssues.org. "Jim Cooper on the Issues". house.ontheissues.org. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  • ^ Sutton, Caroline (January 25, 2022). "US Rep. Jim Cooper announces he will not seek reelection in 2022". News Channel 5 Nashville. Retrieved January 15, 2023.
  • External links[edit]

    U.S. House of Representatives
    Preceded by

    Illinois's 20th congressional district

    Home district of the speaker of the House
    January 3, 1935 – June 4, 1936
    Succeeded by

    Alabama's 7th congressional district

    36°11′14N 87°04′27W / 36.18722°N 87.07417°W / 36.18722; -87.07417


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