Oregon's 21st House district

District 21 of the Oregon House of Representatives is one of 60 House legislative districts in the state of Oregon. As of 2021, the district is contained entirely within Marion County and covers Keizer and downtown Salem, including the Oregon State Capitol. The current representative for the district is Republican Kevin Mannix of Salem.[1][2]

Oregon's 21st House district after redistricting after the 2020 Census

Election results

edit

District boundaries have changed over time. Therefore, representatives before 2021 may not represent the same constituency as today. General election results from 2000 to present[3][4] are as follows:

Year Candidate Party Percent Opponent Party Percent Opponent Party Percent Write-in percentage
2000 Randy Leonard Democratic 100.00% Unopposed
2002 Billy Dalto Republican 52.51% Mike Swaim Democratic 46.94% No third candidate 0.54%
2004 Billy Dalto Republican 52.23% Claudia Howells Democratic 47.77%
2006 Brian Clem Democratic 61.08% Billy Dalto Republican 38.27% 0.65%
2008 Brian Clem Democratic 95.73% Unopposed 4.27%
2010 Brian Clem Democratic 57.88% Marvin Sannes Republican 41.74% No third candidate 0.37%
2012 Brian Clem Democratic 57.88% Dan Farrington Republican 36.91% Marvin Sannes Independent 3.87% 0.26%
2014 Brian Clem Democratic 63.75% Beverly Wright Republican 35.52% No third candidate 0.73%
2016 Brian Clem Democratic 55.52% Doug Rodgers Republican 37.60% Alvin Klausen Independent 6.40% 0.48%
2018 Brian Clem Democratic 63.50% Jack Esp Republican 36.06% No third candidate 0.43%
2020 Brian Clem Democratic 60.58% Jack Esp Republican 39.11% 0.31%
2022 Kevin Mannix Republican 51.38% Ramiro Navarro, Jr. Democratic 45.63% Michael Morrow Libertarian 2.89% 0.10%

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "State Representatives by District". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  2. ^ "Representative Kevin Mannix". Oregon State Legislature. Retrieved January 12, 2024.
  3. ^ "OR State House 21 - History". Our Campaigns. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  4. ^ "Election History: Oregon Statewide Election Results". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
edit