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 »
Map source: New Hampshire Committee of Conference
Committee of Conference revisions | D+0.3 |
Republican proposal | D+0.3 |
Old map | D+0.2 |
State House Republican plan | D+0.1 |
Governor's proposal | D+0.1 |
New map | D+0.1 |
State House Democratic plan | D+0.0 |
"I-93 Corridor Map" | R+0.0 |
Old map | D+42.5 |
Governor's proposal | D+42.5 |
State House Democratic plan | D+42.5 |
Committee of Conference revisions | D+42.5 |
New map | D+42.5 |
Republican proposal | D+42.5 |
"I-93 Corridor Map" | R+7.0 |
State House Republican plan | R+8.2 |
Old map | 2/2 |
New map | 2/2 |
Governor's proposal | 2/2 |
State House Democratic plan | 2/2 |
Committee of Conference revisions | 0/2 |
Republican proposal | 0/2 |
State House Republican plan | 0/2 |
"I-93 Corridor Map" | 0/2 |
District | Partisan lean | Racial makeup |
---|---|---|
1st | R+6 | |
2nd | D+7 |
The racial makeup of each district is of the voting-age population.
The latest in New Hampshire
On May 31, the New Hampshire Supreme Court adopted a new congressional redistricting map released by the court-appointed special master the previous week. The new map makes minimal changes to the current map and gives the state two highly competitive districts. The court got involved after a monthslong stalemate between the legislature and Gov. Chris Sununu failed to produce a map through the legislative process.
Sununu had pledged to veto two previous maps passed by Republican legislators that each created one Democratic-leaning seat and one Republican-leaning seat. The first map made some of the biggest changes to New Hampshire’s congressional map since the late 1800s, removing several Democratic-leaning communities from the 1st District. The second map would have put both incumbents in the same district. Sununu said New Hampshire citizens were counting on them to deliver a map with competitive districts to keep incumbents accountable and that neither of the maps proposed by the legislature would suit that purpose. He released his own map on March 22, though the legislature never acted on it.
After a group of New Hampshire voters sued, the New Hampshire Supreme Court decided to appoint a special master to draw a new map using a “least-change” approach based on the 2020 census if Sununu and the legislature could not come to an agreement. The new maps had to be ready before the state’s candidate filing period in June.
Latest changes 🤖
May 31, 2022
May 27, 2022
May 16, 2022
May 13, 2022
Our latest coverage
Map | Plan | Partisan breakdown |
---|---|---|
Committee of Conference revisions | ||
Republican proposal | ||
"I-93 Corridor Map" | ||
Governor's proposal | ||
State House Republican plan | ||
State House Democratic plan |
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