Home Politics County Commissioners want Bucks to remain a single congressional district

County Commissioners want Bucks to remain a single congressional district

The county could soon be divided among two congressional districts, and the commissioners approved a resolution condemning the idea

All of Bucks County has been part of one congressional district for more than 170 years, and the Bucks County Commissioners want it to stay that way.

Last week, amid preliminary political discussions in Harrisburg that Bucks could soon be divided among two congressional districts, the commissioners approved a resolution condemning the idea. The resolution said, to split the county “would divide our community, create administrative problems and violate fair redistricting principles.”

“I don’t think anybody in Bucks County wants to see [a split] happen, whether you’re a Democrat, Republican, Independent or whatever party you belong to,” said Republican County Commissioner Gene DiGirolamo.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Census Bureau released its decennial congressional apportionment counts based on data from the 2020 census. Pennsylvania is one of seven states that will lose a seat, starting with the 2022 midterms. Six states will gain one congressional seat, while Texas will gain two.

“We are going to forward the resolution to our state House and Senate delegation,” DiGirolamo said. “I think it’s important to let lawmakers know that we want Bucks County to stay whole as one district.”

Bucks’ 54 municipalities and a portion of Montgomery County currently make up Pennsylvania’s 1st Congressional District, which is represented by Republican Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick. Statewide, the 18 congressional seats – nine held by Republicans and nine by Democrats – will soon be cut to 17.

In 2020, the 1st District constituents voted for Fitzpatrick, but also favored Democrat Joe Biden for president.

“We want to keep Bucks County intact,” said Democrat Commissioner Bob Harvie. “We know that there are other counties that are chopped up into pieces, but it would certainly make the job of elected officials, like ourselves, more difficult, and more complicated for voters.”

Congressional lines were last redrawn in 2018, when the state Supreme Court ruled that the map violated a state constitution prohibition on partisan gerrymandering. The ruling addressed a 2011 map approved under former Republican Gov. Tom Corbett.

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