California's congressional districts


is the most populous U.S. state and as a result has the most representation in the United States House of Representatives, with 53 Representatives. Each Representative represents one congressional district.

1992: Court ordered districts

The 1990 census gave California seven additional congressional seats. Attempts by the legislature to draw up new districts were unsuccessful, as three different plans drawn up by the Democratic-controlled Legislature were vetoed by Republican governor Pete Wilson. In September 1991 the California Supreme Court took jurisdiction over the redistricting process to break the stalemate. Districts were drawn up by a panel of retired judges.

2002: Bipartisan redistricting

After the 2000 census, the California State Legislature was obliged to complete redistricting for House of Representatives districts as well as California State Assembly and California State Senate districts. It was mutually decided by legislators that the status quo in terms of balance of power would be preserved - a so-called Incumbent Protection Plan. A bipartisan gerrymandering effort was done, and districts were configured in such a way that they were dominated by one or the other party, with few districts that could be considered competitive. In some cases this resulted in extremely convoluted boundary lines.
In the 2004 elections, a win by less than 55 percent of the vote was quite rare. This was seen in only five out of 80 State Assembly seats and two out of 20 State Senate seats up for election. The congressional seats were even less competitive than the state legislative districts - just three of the 53 districts were won with less than 60 percent of the vote in 2004.

2012: Citizens Redistricting Commission

, a California ballot proposition known as the Voters FIRST Act, was approved by the voters on November 4, 2008. It removed from the California Legislature the responsibility for drawing the state's congressional districts, and gave the responsibility instead to a 14-member Citizens Commission. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of removing the responsibility from the legislature. The proposition also required that the districts drawn up comply with the federal Voting Rights Act; make districts contiguous; respect, to the extent possible, the integrity of cities, counties, neighborhoods and "communities of interest"; and to the extent possible, make districts compact. Several of these terms are not defined in law.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger had earlier proposed placing the redistricting process in the hands of retired judges, which was on the November ballot as an initiative in a special election, Proposition 77. The special election was held on November 8, 2005. However, the initiative was overwhelmingly defeated, with 59 percent voting no. All initiatives, including those proposed by the Governor's allies and several independent initiatives, failed that year.
The California Citizens Redistricting Commission certified final district maps on August 15, 2011, and they took effect with the 2012 election. The new districts are described as more "purple" than "red" or "blue" - that is, more mixed in electoral composition compared to the mostly "safe" districts of the previous decade, where incumbents were almost guaranteed re-election. These new districts, combined with demographic trends over several decades that favored the Democratic party, resulted in a gain of four House of Representatives seats for California Democrats in the 2012 elections.

Current districts and representatives

List of members of the California United States House delegation, their terms in office, district boundaries, and their political ratings according to the CPVI. The delegation for the 116th Congress has a total of 53 members, with 45 Democrats and 7 Republicans. This represents an increase in the Democrats' hold on California from the preceding 115th Congress; in the 2018 elections, Democrats were elected in 7 previously Republican-held seats. in May 2020, Republican Mike Garcia won the 25th district special election to succeed Democrat Katie Hill increasing Republican's seat total by 1. One seat is vacant since the resignation of Republican Duncan D. Hunter on January 13, 2020.
DistrictRepresentativePartyCPVIIncumbent time in officeDistrict map
1st Doug LaMalfa RepublicanJanuary 3, 2013 – present
2nd Jared Huffman DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
3rd John Garamendi DemocraticNovember 3, 2009 – present
4th Tom McClintock RepublicanJanuary 3, 2009 – present
5th Mike Thompson DemocraticJanuary 3, 1999 – present
6th Doris Matsui DemocraticMarch 10, 2005 – present
7th Ami Bera DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
8th Paul Cook RepublicanJanuary 3, 2013 – present
9th Jerry McNerney DemocraticJanuary 3, 2007 – present
10th Josh Harder DemocraticJanuary 3, 2019 - present
11th Mark DeSaulnier DemocraticJanuary 3, 2015 – present
12th Nancy Pelosi DemocraticJune 2, 1987 – present
13th Barbara Lee DemocraticApril 21, 1998 – present
14th Jackie Speier DemocraticApril 8, 2008 – present
15th Eric Swalwell DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
16th Jim Costa DemocraticJanuary 3, 2005 – present
17th Ro Khanna DemocraticJanuary 3, 2017 – present
18th Anna Eshoo DemocraticJanuary 3, 1993 – present
19th Zoe Lofgren DemocraticJanuary 3, 1995 – present
20th Jimmy Panetta DemocraticJanuary 3, 2017 – present
21st TJ Cox DemocraticJanuary 3, 2019 - present
22nd Devin Nunes RepublicanJanuary 3, 2003 – present
23rd Kevin McCarthy RepublicanJanuary 3, 2007 – present
24th Salud Carbajal DemocraticJanuary 3, 2017 – present
25th Mike Garcia RepublicanMay 19, 2020 - present
26th Julia Brownley DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
27th Judy Chu DemocraticJuly 14, 2009 – present
28th Adam Schiff DemocraticJanuary 3, 2001 – present
29th Tony Cárdenas DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
30th Brad Sherman DemocraticJanuary 3, 1997 – present
31st Pete Aguilar DemocraticJanuary 3, 2015 – present
32nd Grace Napolitano DemocraticJanuary 3, 1999 – present
33rd Ted Lieu DemocraticJanuary 3, 2015 – present
34th Jimmy Gomez DemocraticJuly 11, 2017 – present
35th Norma Torres DemocraticJanuary 3, 2015 – present
36th Raul Ruiz DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
37th Karen Bass DemocraticJanuary 3, 2011 – present
38th Linda Sánchez DemocraticJanuary 3, 2003 – present
39th Gil Cisneros DemocraticJanuary 3, 2019 - present
40th Lucille Roybal-Allard DemocraticJanuary 3, 1993 – present
41st Mark Takano DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
42nd Ken Calvert RepublicanJanuary 3, 1993 – present
43rd Maxine Waters DemocraticJanuary 3, 1991 – present
44th Nanette Barragán DemocraticJanuary 3, 2017 – present
45th Katie Porter DemocraticJanuary 3, 2019 - present
46th Lou Correa DemocraticJanuary 3, 2017 – present
47th Alan Lowenthal DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
48th Harley Rouda DemocraticJanuary 3, 2019 - present
49th Mike Levin DemocraticJanuary 3, 2019 - present
50thVacantJanuary 13, 2020 – present
51st Juan Vargas DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
52nd Scott Peters DemocraticJanuary 3, 2013 – present
53rd Susan Davis DemocraticJanuary 3, 2001 – present

Historical district boundaries