Ohio's 6th congressional district


Ohio's 6th congressional district is represented by Representative Bill Johnson. This district runs along the southeast side of the state, bordering Kentucky, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. It stretches from rural Lucasville through Athens and several older Ohio River industrial towns all the way to the Youngstown city limits.

History

When Robert McEwen was first elected in 1980, the Sixth District of Ohio consisted of Adams, Brown, Clinton, Fayette, Highland, Pickaway, Pike, Scioto, and Ross Counties plus Clermont County outside the city of Loveland, Harrison Township in Vinton County and the Warren County townships of Clearcreek, Deerfield, Hamilton, Harlan, Massie, Salem, and Wayne. At that time, The Washington Post described the Sixth as "a fail-safe Republican district."
The Ohio General Assembly redrew the Sixth District following the results of the 1980 Census. The boundaries from 1983 to 1987 included all of Adams, Clinton, Fayette, Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Pike, Ross, Scioto, Vinton and Warren Counties, plus Waterloo and York Townships in Athens County; Wayne Township in Clermont County; Concord, Jasper, Marion, Perry, Union, and Wayne Townships in Fayette County; and Washington Township and the Cities of Miamisburg and West Carrollton in Montgomery County.
Beginning with the 100th Congress in 1987, adjustments were made by the legislature to the boundaries; reapportionment between censuses is unusual in American politics. A small part of the Montgomery County territory was detached, as were parts of Fayette County in Washington Court House in Union Township and the townships of Jasper and Marion. Part of Brown County was added, Jackson and Eagle Townships. These were the boundaries for the rest of McEwen's service in Congress.
The district was largely rural and agricultural with no large cities. One of the major industries was the United States Department of Energy's Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant at Piketon, which manufactured uranium for nuclear weapons. The district was 97 per cent white with a median household income of $21,761.
In 1992, the district was altered significantly to accommodate Ohio's loss of two House seats in redistricting. The state legislature anticipated that Clarence Miller of the neighboring Tenth District would retire, and thus combined the southern end of his district with most of the area previously represented by McEwen. Although the district did not include Miller's hometown of Lancaster, Miller decided not to retire and instead challenged McEwen in the Sixth District primary in 1992. The campaign was bitter, and McEwen eked out only a narrow victory. In November, McEwen was upset by Democrat Ted Strickland, a prison psychologist. Strickland himself was defeated in 1994 by Republican Frank Cremeans, but won the seat back in 1996.
For 2002 the district was shifted dramatically eastward to make the seat friendlier for Strickland. At the same time, it effectively ended the career of James Traficant in the neighboring 17th District by placing his hometown of Poland into the 6th. Traficant opted to run in his old district and lost. The district currently includes all of Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Gallia, Guernsey, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, Noble and Washington counties, and portions of Athens, Mahoning, Muskingum, Scioto and Tuscarawas counties.
In 2010, Republican Bill Johnson defeated incumbent Democrat Charles Wilson, returning the seat Republican for the first time since 1997. Following the 2010 United States Census, the bounds of the sixth district were changed again as Ohio lost two seats in Congress.
In recent years and like much of coal country, the district has swung decidedly toward the Republican Party at local, state and national levels. Going from what was once a dead heat in presidential elections, such as in 2000 or 2004, to a 42-point win for Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton in 2016.

List of members representing the district

Recent election results

The following chart shows historic election results.
YearDemocraticRepublicanOther
1920Cleona Searles: 30,903√ Charles C. Kearns : 38,044
1922William N. Gableman: 28,939√ Charles C. Kearns : 32,416
1924Edward N. Kennedy: 29,283√ Charles C. Kearns : 33,064
1926Edward H. Kennedy: 24,730√ Charles C. Kearns : 27,688
1928George D. Nye: 33,020√ Charles C. Kearns : 43,519
1930√ James G. Polk: 37,158Charles C. Kearns : 33,300
1932√ James G. Polk : 50,913Mack Sauer: 39,668
1934√ James G. Polk : 42,340Albert L. Daniels: 38,538Mark A. Crawford: 312
1936√ James G. Polk : 54,904Emory F. Smith: 45,733
1938√ James G. Polk : 43,646Emory F. Smith: 42,847
1940√ Jacob E. Davis: 52,769Chester P. Fitch: 48,257
1942Jacob E. Davis : 31,793√ Edward O. McCowen: 33,171
1944John W. Bush: 42,167√ Edward O. McCowen : 45,284
1946Franklin E. Smith: 33,013√ Edward O. McCowen : 39,992
1948√ James G. Polk: 46,944Edward O. McCowen : 41,402
1950√ James G. Polk : 40,335Edward O. McCowen: 38,996
1952√ James G. Polk : 67,220Leo Blackburn: 66,896
1954√ James G. Polk : 54,044Leo Blackburn: 49,531
1956√ James G. Polk : 72,229Albert L. Daniels: 60,300
1958√ James G. Polk : 76,566Elmer S. Barrett: 46,924
1960Franklin E. Smith: 65,045Bill Harsha: 80,124
1960 sGladys E. Davis: 61,713Ward Miller: 76,520
1962Jerry C. Rasor: 47,737√ Bill Harsha : 72,743
1964Franklin E. Smith: 57,223√ Bill Harsha : 86,015
1966Ottie W. Reno: 35,345√ Bill Harsha : 74,847
1968Kenneth L. Kirby: 40,964√ Bill Harsha : 107,289
1970Raymond H. Stevens: 39,265√ Bill Harsha : 82,772
1972√ Bill Harsha : 128,394
1974Lloyd Allan Wood: 42,316√ Bill Harsha : 93,400
1976Ted Strickland: 67,067√ Bill Harsha : 107,064
1978Ted Strickland: 46,313√ Bill Harsha : 85,592
1980Ted Strickland: 84,235Bob McEwen: 101,288
1982Lynn Alan Grimshaw: 63,435√ Bob McEwen : 92,135
1984Bob Smith: 52,727√ Bob McEwen : 150,101
1986Gordon R. Roberts: 42,155√ Bob McEwen : 106,354Amos Seeley: 2,829
1988Gordon R. Roberts: 52,635√ Bob McEwen : 152,235
1990Ray Mitchell: 47,415√ Bob McEwen : 117,220
1992√ Ted Strickland: 122,720Bob McEwen : 119,252
1994Ted Strickland : 87,861√ Frank Cremeans: 91,263
1996√ Ted Strickland: 118,003Frank Cremeans : 111,907
1998√ Ted Strickland : 102,852Nancy P. Hollister: 77,711
2000√ Ted Strickland : 138,849Mike Azinger: 96,966Kenneth R. MacCutcheon : 4,759
2002√ Ted Strickland : 113,972Mike Halleck: 77,643
2004√ Ted Strickland : 223,884-John Stephen Luchansky : 145
2006√ Charles A. Wilson Jr.: 131,322Chuck Blasdel: 80,705
2008√ Charles A. Wilson Jr. : 176,330Richard Stobbs: 92,968Dennis Spisak : 13,812
2010Charles A. Wilson Jr. : 91,039√ Bill Johnson: 101,580Richard Cadle : 4,963
Martin Elass : 4,424
2012Charles A. Wilson Jr.: 144,444√ Bill Johnson : 164,536
2014Jennifer Garrison: 73,561√ Bill Johnson : 111,026Dennis Lambert : 6,065
2016Michael L. Lorentz: 88,780√ Bill Johnson : 213,975-
2018Shawna Roberts: 76,716√ Bill Johnson : 172,774

Competitiveness

Election results from presidential races:
YearOfficeResults
2000PresidentGeorge W. Bush 49 - Al Gore 47%
2004PresidentGeorge W. Bush 51 - John Kerry 49%
2008PresidentJohn McCain 50 - Barack Obama 48%
2012PresidentMitt Romney 55 - Barack Obama 43%
2016PresidentDonald Trump 69 - Hillary Clinton 27%

Historical district boundaries