Our 2021-22 redistricting tracker is no longer updating, but please check out our 2022 midterm election forecast to see how competitive the House map is.

UPDATED Jul. 19, 2022, at 3:50 PM

What Redistricting Looks Like In Every State

An updating tracker of proposed congressional maps — and whether they might benefit Democrats or Republicans in the 2022 midterms and beyond. How this works »

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The partisan breakdown of this proposed map in Nevada
Status:Tabled
partisan lean of districts:
Old map
4 districts
majority
This map
4 districts
There are 1 Democratic-leaning seat, 1 Republican-leaning seat and 2 highly competitive seats in this proposed map.Change from old map: None.

Map source: Nevada Democrats

The competitiveness and fairness of Nevada's maps
Median seat
Difference between the partisan lean of the state’s median district and the state as a whole.
New mapD+5.5
Democratic planD+5.5
Old mapR+0.2
Republican planR+0.5
Efficiency gap
Difference between each party’s share of “wasted votes” — those that don’t contribute to a candidate winning.
Old mapD+19.8
Democratic planD+19.2
New mapD+19.2
Republican planR+11.4
Competitiveness
The number of districts in the state whose partisan leans are between R+5 and D+5.
Old map2/4
Democratic plan2/4
New map2/4
Republican plan0/4
The demographic and partisan breakdown of this proposed map in Nevada
White
Black
Hispanic
Asian
Other
DistrictIncumbentPartisan leanRacial makeup
1st
Dina TitusD
D+4
2nd
Mark AmodeiR
R+13
3rd
Susie LeeD
D+2
4th
Steven A. HorsfordD
D+5

The racial makeup of each district is of the voting-age population.

The latest in Nevada

Jan. 7, 2022

On Nov. 16, Gov. Steve Sisolak signed into law a new map — slightly amended from Democrats’ original proposal — that will “unpack” the solidly blue 1st District in an attempt to shore up Democratic prospects in two other seats, which they currently control but are competitive. The map features three seats that all favor Democrats by low single-digit margins and one seat that favors Republicans by double digits.

Hispanic advocacy groups, however, are unhappy with the map, as it splits up Las Vegas’s Hispanic community, thus diluting its political influence. While 41 percent of the voting-age population in the current 1st District is Hispanic, no district in the new map has a Hispanic VAP above 32 percent.

In addition, residents of Nye County, a rural, Republican-leaning country that was split into three Assembly districts, have filed a lawsuit asking the state court to overturn both the state legislative and congressional maps. The plaintiffs claims the maps, as drawn, dilute their voting power.

Latest updates
Icon of the Nevada state boundaries
Nov. 25, 2021
A Nevada state assembly member and a Nye County commissioner have filed a state court challenge to Nevada's legislative and congressional maps claiming they violate the state and federal constitutions.
Icon of the Nevada state boundaries
Nov. 16, 2021
The Nevada Legislature approved new congressional and state legislative districts (SB1). Gov. Sisolak signed the new districts into law.
Icon of the Nevada state boundaries
Nov. 9, 2021
Democratic lawmakers released preliminary draft legislative (assembly and senate) and draft congressional maps ahead of the legislature's redistricting special session.

Our latest coverage

Who controls redistricting in Nevada right now?
Democrats fully control the congressional redistricting process. New maps are drawn and passed by the Democratic state legislature and signed into law by the Democratic governor.
All of the other proposed maps in Nevada
MapPlanProposed byPartisan breakdown
Republican planNevada Republicans
Democratic planNevada Democrats