Alabama House District 60: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''Alabama State House of Representatives, District 60''' covers the Birmingham communities of Pratt City, Ensley, Five Points West, and North Birmingham as well as [[C...)
 
 
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'''Alabama State House of Representatives, District 60''' covers the [[Birmingham]] communities of [[Pratt City]], [[Ensley]], [[Five Points West]], and [[North Birmingham]] as well as [[Cardiff]], [[Forestdale]], [[Graysville]], part of [[Fultondale]] and a small part of [[Adamsville]].
'''Alabama State House of Representatives, District 60''' covers the [[Birmingham]] communities of [[Pratt City]], [[Ensley]], [[Five Points West]], and [[North Birmingham]] as well as [[Cardiff]], [[Forestdale]], [[Graysville]], part of [[Fultondale]] and a small part of [[Adamsville]].


District 54 is represented by [[Earl Hilliard, Jr]], who was elected to the seat in [[2006]]. Hilliard declared his intention to run for the vacancy left by [[Artur Davis]] in the [[7th Congressional District of Alabama]], leaving the seat open in the [[2010 general election]]. [[John Hilliard]], who held the seat from [[1992]] to [[2002]], has declared his candidacy to return.
According to the [[2010]] U.S. Census, District 60 has 36,704 residents, 65% of whom are African-American and 30% of whom are White.
 
District 60 is represented by [[Juandalynn Givan]], who won the unoccupied seat in the [[2010 general election]].
 
[[Earl Hilliard Jr]] was elected to the seat in [[2006]]. Hilliard declared his intention to run for the vacancy left by [[Artur Davis]] in the [[7th Congressional District of Alabama]], leaving the seat open for the 2010 election. [[John Hilliard]], who held the seat from [[1992]] to [[2002]], declared his candidacy to return, but lost in the primary to Givan. As an incumbent, Givan easily defeated challenger [[Arthur Shores Lee]] in the [[2014 primary elections|2014 Democratic primary]] and was unopposed in the general election.
 
==Representatives==
* [[Gerald Dial]], 1974-1982
* [[John Casey]], 1982-1983
* [[Sundra Escott]], 1983-1994
* [[John Hilliard]], 1994-2002
* [[Linda Coleman]], 2002-2006
* [[Earl Hilliard Jr]], 2006-2010
* [[Juandalynn Givan]], 2010-


==References==
==References==
* "2010 legislative elections: John Hilliard to run for Alabama House District 60." (February 15, 2010) ''Birmingham News''
* "2010 legislative elections: John Hilliard to run for Alabama House District 60." (February 15, 2010) {{BN}}


[[Category:Alabama House Districts|60]]
[[Category:Alabama House Districts|60]]

Latest revision as of 11:25, 4 September 2019

Alabama State House of Representatives, District 60 covers the Birmingham communities of Pratt City, Ensley, Five Points West, and North Birmingham as well as Cardiff, Forestdale, Graysville, part of Fultondale and a small part of Adamsville.

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, District 60 has 36,704 residents, 65% of whom are African-American and 30% of whom are White.

District 60 is represented by Juandalynn Givan, who won the unoccupied seat in the 2010 general election.

Earl Hilliard Jr was elected to the seat in 2006. Hilliard declared his intention to run for the vacancy left by Artur Davis in the 7th Congressional District of Alabama, leaving the seat open for the 2010 election. John Hilliard, who held the seat from 1992 to 2002, declared his candidacy to return, but lost in the primary to Givan. As an incumbent, Givan easily defeated challenger Arthur Shores Lee in the 2014 Democratic primary and was unopposed in the general election.

Representatives

References

  • "2010 legislative elections: John Hilliard to run for Alabama House District 60." (February 15, 2010) The Birmingham News