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 »

The partisan breakdown of Oklahoma’s new map
Status:Approved
partisan lean of districts:
Old map
5 districts
majority
This map
5 districts
There are 5 Republican-leaning seats in Oklahoma’s new map.Change from old map: None.
The competitiveness and fairness of Oklahoma's maps
Median seat
Difference between the partisan lean of the state’s median district and the state as a whole.
New mapD+1.8
Old mapR+0.5
Efficiency gap
Difference between each party’s share of “wasted votes” — those that don’t contribute to a candidate winning.
New mapR+15.6
Old mapR+16.1
Competitiveness
The number of districts in the state whose partisan leans are between R+5 and D+5.
Old map0/5
New map0/5
The demographic and partisan breakdown of Oklahoma’s new map
White
Black
Hispanic
Asian
Other
DistrictIncumbentPartisan leanRacial makeup
1st
Kevin HernR
R+28
2nd
Markwayne MullinR
R+55
3rd
Frank LucasR
R+47
4th
Tom ColeR
R+35
5th
Stephanie I. BiceR
R+24

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

The latest in Oklahoma

Nov. 23, 2021

On Nov. 22, Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt signed the GOP proposal for the state’s five congressional districts into law. The new map creates five safely red seats, undoing Oklahoma’s one competitive seat: the Oklahoma City-based 5th District, which currently has a FiveThirtyEight partisan lean of R+11. Instead, the new map moves the 5th District all the way to R+24 by shedding heavily Democratic parts of Oklahoma City and giving them to the dark-red 3rd District.

In theory, a single congressional district could cover almost all of Oklahoma County, which would result in a swing seat, but the Republican-drawn map instead splits it between three districts. The Democrats’ alternative proposal in the state Senate did lay out an R+8 5th District based almost entirely in Oklahoma County. But the Democratic plan never had any hope of passing in the overwhelmingly Republican legislature.

Latest updates
Icon of the Oklahoma state boundaries
Nov. 22, 2021
Oklahoma Gov. Stitt signed HB 1002 into law, approving the state's new congressional districts.
Icon of the Oklahoma state boundaries
Nov. 17, 2021
The Oklahoma state House approved new congressional districts. The Senate is scheduled to vote on the districts on Friday, Nov. 18.
Icon of the Oklahoma state boundaries
Sept. 24, 2021
Oklahoma Governor Stitt calls for a special session of the Legislature, beginning Nov. 15, 2021 to draw new congressional districts and to recalibrate the state's legislative districts that were approved in May based on Census estimates.

Latest changes 🤖

Our latest coverage

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