ALABAMA'S 2ND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT


'Alabama's Second Congressional District' is a U.S. congressional district in Alabama, which elects a representative to the United States House of Representatives. It encompasses the counties of Autauga, Barbour, Bullock, Butler, Coffee, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Dale, Elmore, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Lowndes, and Montgomery (partial).
It is currently represented by Republican Terry Everett.

Contents
Character
Representation
Results
2004
External links

Character


The second district covers the south-east corner of Alabama. For most of its history, it has been based in Montgomery. However, in the 2000 round of redistricting, it lost the capitol area and most of the outlying districts to the 3rd District. The 2nd was one of five districts to swing Republican in 1964, when Barry Goldwater swept the state, and Republicans have not let go since then. It has become progressively more Republican in the last two redistricting rounds. The 1990 round shifted most of Montgomery's blacks to the majority-black 7th District, while the areas removed in 2000 were mostly Democratic. Elmore, Autauga, Dothan and Houston counties are heavily Republican; made up mostly of whites who tend to take a hard line on defense and "law and order." The blackbelt counties - Lowndes, Bullock and Barbour-- tend to be more Democratic, however this area's votes are easily outweighed by the more populated counties of the Wiregrass region. George W. Bush won 67% of the vote in this district in 2004. The district has a Cook Partisan Voting Index score of R +13.
Defense and agriculture are the mainstays of the 2nd district's economy. The soil was first tilled for cotton, but in the early part of this century the boll weevil wiped out more than two-thirds of the cotton crop. Now the area grows more peanuts than almost any other part of the country. Enterprise in Coffee County erected a monument to the boll weevil as a tribute to the insect whose destruction of the cotton crop persuaded farmers to switch their efforts to growing peanuts. Dothan hosts the National Peanut Festival and Parade each October, offers the Azalea Dogwood Trail in the spring, and is home to a Robert Trent Jones golf course. Ozark has the Claybank Jamboree each fall.
In addition to Montgomery, the major cities of the district are Dothan, Ozark, Troy and Greenville.

Representation


A visual representation of party control of Alabama's 2nd Congressional District. The district first elected a member for the 18th congress.


Terry Everett (R): 1993 onwards

William L. Dickinson (R): 1965-1993

George M. Grant (D): 1938-1965

J. Lister Hill (D): 1924-1938

John R. Tyson (D): 1921-1924

S. Hubert Dent, Jr. (D): 1909-1921

Oliver C. Wiley (D): 1907-1909

Aristo A. Wiley (D): 1901-1907

Jesse F. Stallings (D): 1893-1907

Hilary A. Herbert (D): 1877-1893

Jeremiah Norman Williams (D): 1875-1877

James T. Rapier (R): 1873-1875

Charles Waldron Buckley (R): 1867-1873

★ None due to American Civil War: 1861-1867

James L. Pugh (D): 1859-1861

Eli Sims Shorter (D): 1855-1859

James Abercrombie (W): 1851-1855

Henry Washington Hillard (W): 1845-1851

James Edwin Belser (D): 1843-1845

George S. Houston (D): 1841-1843

David Hubbard (D): 1839-1841

Joshua L. Martin (D): 1835-1839

John McKinley (D-R): 1833-1835

Samuel Wright Mardis (D-R): 1831-1833

Robert E.B. Baylor (D-R): 1829-1831

John McKee (I): 1823-1829

Results


2004

Main articles: U.S. House election, 2004

Party Canadidate Votes % Republican Party Terry Everett177,08671.5 Democratic Party Chuck James70,56228.5

External links



CNN coverage of the 2006 election

CNN converage of the 2004 election

CNN converage of the 2002 election

CNN converage of the 2000 election

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