Washington state, 7th legislative district map
Washington's 7th legislative district is one of 49 districts in Washington for representation in the state legislature . The district is in the extreme northeast of the state and borders Canada's British Columbia on the north and Idaho on the east. It includes all of Ferry , Okanogan , Pend Orielle , and Stevens counties, along with portions of Chelan , Douglas and Spokane counties.[ 1] An earlier redistricting proposal from 2021 would have divided Okanogan County between the 7th and 13th districts.[ 2] The district was most recently redrawn by court order in the 2024 case Soto Palmer v. Hobbs .[ 3]
The largely rural district is represented by Shelly Short in the state senate and state representatives Andrew Engell (R -pos. 1) and Hunter Abell (R -pos. 2).
Recent election results
State senator
2006 general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Bob Morton (inc. )
31,243
68.0%
Democratic
Chris Zaferes
14,439
32.0%
2010 general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Bob Morton (inc. )
37,649
74.86%
Democratic
Barbara Mowrey
13,359
26.17%
2013 special election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Brian Dansel
18,873
53.63%
Republican
John Smith (inc. )
16,324
46.37%
2014 general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Brian Dansel (inc. )
32,702
72.17%
Republican
Tony Booth
12,612
27.83%
2017 special election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Shelly Short (inc. )
25,444
68.29%
Democratic
Karen Hardy
11,814
31.71%
2018 general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Shelly Short (inc. )
48,042
69.01%
Democratic
Karen Hardy
21,592
30.99%
Past legislators
Statehood-1932
During this period, the state senate and state house districts were geographically distinct.[ 4]
Year
Senate
House
Senator
Senate District Geography
House Position 1
House Position 2
House District Geography
1st (1889-1890)
H. H. Wolfe (R)
Columbia County
2nd (1891-1892)
Thomas J. Smith (R)
Whitman County (part)
House District Established
Whitman County (part)
Joseph Arrasmith (R) [ a]
O. E. Young (R)
3rd (1893-1894)
E. H. Letterman (R)
4th (1895-1896)
Oliver Hall (R)
Moses Bull (R)
W. S. Johnston (R)
5th (1897-1898)
John L. Canutt (Pop.)
Miles T. Hooper (Pop.)
6th (1899-1900)
William L. La Follette (R)
Wilford Allen (R)
7th (1901-1902)
G. W. Barkhuff (D)
E. J. Durham (R)
8th (1903-1904)
Huber Rasher (D)
Spokane County (part)
E. J. Durham (R)
Charles L. Mackenzie (D)
9th (1905-1906)
Peter McGregor (R)
LeRoy Stilson (R)
10th (1907-1908)
Harry Rosenhaupt (R)
J. Hugh Sherfey (R)
Mark W. Whitlow (D)
11th (1909-1910)
O. E. Young (R)
Hugh C. Todd (D)
12th (1911-1912)
Charles R. Larue (D)
13th (1913-1914)
George H. Newman (R)
Charles L. Chamberlin (R)
14th (1915-1916)
Frank A. Chase (R)
James H. T. Smith (R)
George H. Watt (R)
15th (1917-1918)
C. E. Hoover (R)
Roy Jones (R)
16th (1919-1920)
Edwin T. Coman (R)
Frank E. Sanger (R)
17th (1921-1922)
Roy Jones (R)
Frank E. Sanger (R)
18th (1923-1924)
Reba Hurn (R)
A. E. Olson (R)
John M. Klemgard (D)
19th (1925-1926)
Roy Jones (R)
20th (1927-1928)
21st (1929-1930)
22nd (1931-1932)
Charles H. Voss (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 7th Legislative district's state senate and house seats are identical geographically from 1933 to the present day.[ 4]
Year
Senate
House
District Geography
Senator
House Position 1
House Position 2
23rd (1933-1934)
Charles H. Voss (R)
Frank Anderson (D)
Dave Cohn (D)
Spokane County (part)
24th (1935-1936)
Joseph Drumheller (D)
David C. Cowen (D)
Edward J. Reilly (D) [ b]
25th (1937-1938)
26th (1939-1940)
27th (1941-1942)
28th (1943-1944)
David C. Cowen (D)
P. J. Oldershaw (R)
29th (1945-1946)
Edward T. Chambers (D)
William H. Price Jr. (D)
30th (1947-1948)
Howard T. Ball (R)
Harry W. Pierong (R)
31st (1949-1950)
James P. Dillard (D)
32nd (1951-1952)
C. A. Orndorff (R)
33rd (1953-1954)
Edward J. Reilly (D)
34th (1955-1956)
Edward F. Harris (R)
35th (1957-1958)
Edward F. Harris (R)
Richard W. Morphis (R)
36th (1959-1960)
37th (1961-1962)
38th (1963-1964)
39th (1965-1966)
40th (1967-1968)
Robert W. Twigg (R)
Carlton A. Gladder (R)
Edward F. Harris (R)
1965 Redistricting
Spokane County (part)
41st (1969-1970)
42nd (1971-1972)
43rd (1973-1974)
Joe Haussler (D)
Bill Schumaker (R)
1972 Redistricting
Ferry , Lincoln , Pend Oreille , Stevens , Okanogan (part), and Spokane (part)
44th (1975-1976)
Bruce A. Wilson (D)
45th (1977-1978)
Helen Fancher (R)
Scott Barr (R)
46th (1979-1980)
47th (1981-1982)
48th (1983-1984)
Scott Barr (R) [ c]
Steve Fuhrman (R)
Louis M. Egger (D)
49th (1985-1986)
Tom Bristow (D) [ d]
50th (1987-1988)
51st (1989-1990)
Neal Kirby (D) [ e]
Bob Morton (R) [ f] [ g]
52nd (1991-1992)
53rd (1993-1994)
Bob Morton (R) [ g] [ h]
Cathy McMorris (R)
54th (1995-1996)
55th (1997-1998)
Bob Sump (R)
56th (1999-2000)
57th (2001-2002)
58th (2003-2004)
59th (2005-2006)
Joel Kretz (R)
60th (2007-2008)
61st (2009-2010)
Shelly Short (R) [ i]
62nd (2011-2012)
63rd (2013-2014)
John Smith (R) [ j]
Ferry , Pend Oreille , Stevens , Okanogan (part), and Spokane (part)
Brian Dansel (R) [ k] [ l]
64th (2015-2016)
65th (2017-2018)
Shelly Short (R) [ i]
Jacquelin Maycumber (R) [ m]
66th (2019-2020)
67th (2021-2022)
68th (2023-2024)
Ferry , Okanogan , Pend Oreille , Stevens , Douglas (part), Grant (part), and Spokane (part)
69th (2025-2026)
Andrew Engell (R)
Hunter Abell (R)
Ferry , Okanogan , Pend Oreille , Stevens , Chelan (part), Douglas (part), and Spokane (part)[ n]
Key
See also
Notes
^ Elected Speaker of the House for the 3rd legislative session (1893-94
^ Elected Speaker of the House for the 25th, 27th, & 28th legislative sessions (1937-38, 41-44)
^ Resigned Dec. 16, 1993
^ Resigned Dec. 1, 1989
^ Appointed Dec. 29, 1989
^ Elected Nov. 6, 1990 to serve unexpired term
^ a b Resigned house seat; Appointed Jan. 5, 1994 to the serve unexpired term in the state senate
^ Resigned Dec. 31, 2012
^ a b Resigned house seat; Appointed Jan. 30; Sworn in Feb. 1; Elected Nov. 8, 2017 to serve unexpired term in the state senate
^ Appointed Jan. 3; Sworn in Jan. 14, 2013
^ Elected Nov. 5, 2013; Sworn in Dec. 6, 2013 to serve unexpired term
^ Resigned Jan. 24, 2017
^ Appointed Feb. 1, 2017; Elected Nov. 8, 2017 to serve unexpired term)
^ 2024 court ordered redistricting in Soto Palmer v. Hobbs
References
External links
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48°N 118°W / 48°N 118°W / 48; -118