Oregon's 6th House district

{{short description|Legislative districts in the state of Oregon}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

File:Oregon's 6th House district after redistricting after the 2020 Census.pdf

District 6 of the Oregon House of Representatives is one of 60 House legislative districts in the state of Oregon. As of 2021, the boundary for the district includes a portion of Jackson County and almost entirely consists of the city of Medford. The current representative for the district is Republican Kim Wallan of Medford.{{cite web|url=https://sos.oregon.gov/blue-book/Pages/state/legislative/house-district.aspx|title=State Representatives by District|publisher=Oregon Secretary of State|accessdate=June 6, 2019}}{{cite web|url=https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/wallan|title=Representative Kim Wallan|publisher=Oregon State Legislature|accessdate=June 4, 2019}}

Election results

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{{cite web|url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/ContainerHistory.html?ContainerID=17231|title=OR State House 06 - History|publisher=Our Campaigns|accessdate=May 13, 2019}}{{cite web|url=https://sos.oregon.gov/elections/Pages/electionhistory.aspx|title=Election History: Oregon Statewide Election Results|publisher=Oregon Secretary of State|accessdate=June 4, 2019}} are as follows:

class="wikitable sortable" style="margin:0.5em auto; font-size:95%;"

! Year

! Candidate

! Party

! Percent

! Opponent

! Party

! Percent

! Opponent

! Party

! Percent

! Write-in percentage

2000

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Charlie Ringo

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 51.15%

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| John Scruggs

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 44.45%

| {{Party shading/Libertarian}}| Kevin Schaumleffle

| {{Party shading/Libertarian}}| Libertarian

| {{Party shading/Libertarian}}| 4.41%

|

2002{{efn|Rob Patridge was the incumbent in this election. He previously represented District 50, but was moved to this district due to redistricting following the 2000 United States census.{{cite web|url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/CandidateDetail.html?CandidateID=22168|title=Patridge, Rob|publisher=Our Campaigns|accessdate=May 13, 2019}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Rob Patridge

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 62.66%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Barbara Davidson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 36.98%

| colspan="3" rowspan="5"|No third candidate

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.35%

2004

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 58.36%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| John Doty

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 41.64%

|

2006

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 51.92%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Mike Moran

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 47.88%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.20%

2008

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 53.55%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Lynn Howe

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 46.28%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.17%

2010

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 56.55%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Lynn Howe

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 43.16%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.29%

2012

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 96.09%

| colspan="6" rowspan="2"|Unopposed

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 3.91%

2014

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 95.87%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 4.13%

2016

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Sal Esquivel

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 56.49%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Mike Moran

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 43.25%

| colspan="3" rowspan="2"|No third candidate

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.27%

2018

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Kim Wallan

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 53.89%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Michelle Blum Atkinson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 45.99%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.12%

2020

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Kim Wallan

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 54.57%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Alberto Enriquez

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 43.10%

| {{Party shading/Libertarian}}| Alex Levi Usselman

| {{Party shading/Libertarian}}| Libertarian

| {{Party shading/Libertarian}}| 2.28%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.06%

2022

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Kim Wallan

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 60.21%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Dan Davis

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 39.69%

| colspan="3" rowspan="2"|No third candidate

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.10%

2024

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Kim Wallan

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| Republican

| {{Party shading/Republican}}| 58.0%

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Lilia Caballero

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| Democratic

| {{Party shading/Democratic}}| 41.9%

| {{Party shading/Independent}}| 0.1%

{{notelist}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}