Washington's 6th legislative district

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Washington 6th legislative district map

Washington's 6th legislative district is one of forty-nine districts in Washington state for representation in the state legislature. The district is entirely within Spokane County. The district includes part or all of the cities of Airway Heights, Medical Lake, and Spokane. It was most recently redrawn by the 2021 Washington State Redistricting Commission.[1]

The district is represented by state senator Jeff Holy (R) and state representatives Mike Volz (R; position 1), and Jenny Graham (R; position 2).[2]

Statehood-1932

During this period, the state senate and state house districts were geographically distinct.[3]

Year Senate House
Senator Senate District Geography House Position 1 House Position 2 House District Geography
1st (1889-1890) C. G. Austin (R) Asotin and Garfield Counties
2nd (1891-1892) R. C. McCroskey (D) Whitman County (part) House District Established Whitman County (part)
F. L. Moore (D) D. M. Holt (D)
3rd (1893-1894) D. F. Anderson (R) Thomas G. Mulkey (D)
4th (1895-1896) L. C. Crow (P.P.) Neal Cheetham (P.P.) Cleveland Smith (P.P.), (Pop.)[a]
5th (1897-1898) H. D. Smith (Pop.)
6th (1899-1900) John H. Carper (Pop.)[b] B. F. Totten (R) J. B. Frick (R)
L. C. Crow (D)[c]
7th (1901-1902) C. W. Waters (D) T. C. Miles (D)
8th (1903-1904) Will G. Graves (D) Spokane County (part) Joseph B. Lindsley (R) Dana Child (D) Spokane County (part)
9th (1905-1906) G. T. Doolittle (R) Joseph B. Lindsley (R)
10th (1907-1908) L. P. Hornberger (R) Alexander H. Gregg (R)
11th (1909-1910) James W. McArthur (R) John Anderson (R)
12th (1911-1912) George W. Shaefer (R) Harve H. Phipps (R) E. H. Eshleman (R)
13th (1913-1914) Frank W. Middaugh (Prog.) Max M. Neumann (Prog.)
14th (1915-1916) Guy B. Groff (R) Alex M. Winston (R) John Anderson (R)
15th (1917-1918) Fred A. Adams (R)
16th (1919-1920) John Anderson (R) Fred A. Adams (R)[d]
17th (1921-1922) W. H. Winfree (R) John Anderson (R)
18th (1923-1924) Charles H. Voss (R)
19th (1925-1926)
20th (1927-1928) Harry L. Williams (R) John Anderson (R) Chan Wakefield (R)
21st (1929-1930) Chan Wakefield (R) John Anderson (R)
22nd (1931-1932) John Anderson (R) W. Storey Buck (R)

1933-Present

After the passage of Initiative 57 and the 1930 redistricting cycle, the state senate and state house districts were geographically similar. While some senate districts would occasionally be broken up into house seats A and B, seats A and B were always contained in the Senate district boundaries.

The 2nd Legislative district's state senate and house seats are identical geographically from 1933 to the present day.[3]

Year Senate House District Geography
Senator House Position 1 House Position 2
23rd (1933-1934) Harry L. Williams (R) Fred Schade (D) Will W. Wentworth (D) Spokane County (part)
24th (1935-1936) Fred S. Duggan (D) Lyle D. Keith (D)
25th (1937-1938)
26th (1939-1940) Charles C. Finucane (D)
27th (1941-1942) Duke Taft (R) Harold Zent (R)[e]
28th (1943-1944) Virgil A. Warren (R)
29th (1945-1946)
30th (1947-1948) John H. Happy (R) Elmer E. Johnston (R)
31st (1949-1950)
32nd (1951-1952)
Richard W. Axtell (R)[f]
33rd (1953-1954) Alfred O. Adams (R) Elmer E. Johnston (R)[g]
34th (1955-1956)
35th (1957-1958)
36th (1959-1960)
37th (1961-1962)
Marjorie Happy (R)[h]
38th (1963-1964) Sam C. Guess (R)
39th (1965-1966)
Jerry C. Kopet (R)[i]
40th (1967-1968) 1965 Redistricting
Spokane County (part)
41st (1969-1970) Jerry C. Kopet (R) A. J. Pardini (R)
42nd (1971-1972)
43rd (1973-1974) 1972 Redistricting
Spokane County (part)
44th (1975-1976) A. J. Pardini (R) Dick Bond (R)
45th (1977-1978)
46th (1979-1980) Michael R. McGinnis (R)
47th (1981-1982)
48th (1983-1984) James E. West (R)
49th (1985-1986)
50th (1987-1988) James E. West (R)[j] Duane Sommers (R) John A. Moyer (R)
51st (1989-1990)
52nd (1991-1992)
53rd (1993-1994) B. Jean Silver (R) Todd Mielke (R)[k]
54th (1995-1996)
Duane Sommers (R)[l]
55th (1997-1998) Brad Benson (R)
56th (1999-2000)
57th (2001-2002) John Ahern (R)
58th (2003-2004)
Brian Murray (R)[m]
Brad Benson (R)[n][o]
59th (2005-2006) John Serben (R)
Jon Wyss (R)[p]
Brad Benson (R)[o]
60th (2007-2008) Chris Marr (D) Don Barlow (D)
61st (2009-2010) Kevin Parker (R) John F. Driscoll (D)
62nd (2011-2012) Michael Baumgartner (R) John Ahern (R)
63rd (2013-2014) Jeff Holy (R)
64th (2015-2016)
65th (2017-2018) Mike Volz (R)
66th (2019-2020) Jeff Holy (R) Jenny Graham (R)
67th (2021-2022)
68th (2023-2024)
69th (2025-2026)

Key

See also

Notes

References

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