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・ Californium oxychloride
・ Californium(III) polyborate
・ Californië
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・ California's 46th State Assembly district
・ California's 47th congressional district
・ California's 47th district
・ California's 47th State Assembly district
・ California's 48th congressional district
・ California's 48th congressional district special election, 2005
・ California's 48th district
・ California's 48th State Assembly district
・ California's 49th congressional district
・ California's 49th district
・ California's 49th State Assembly district
California's 4th congressional district
・ California's 4th congressional district election, 2006
・ California's 4th district
・ California's 4th State Assembly district
・ California's 4th State Senate district
・ California's 50th congressional district
・ California's 50th congressional district special election, 2006
・ California's 50th district
・ California's 50th State Assembly district
・ California's 51st congressional district
・ California's 51st district
・ California's 51st State Assembly district
・ California's 52nd congressional district
・ California's 52nd district
・ California's 52nd State Assembly district


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California's 4th congressional district : ウィキペディア英語版
California's 4th congressional district

California's 4th congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S. state of California.
Tom McClintock, a Republican, has represented the district since January 2009.
Currently, the 4th district encompasses the Sierra from Truckee to the Sequoia National Forest. It consists of Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, El Dorado, Mariposa, and Tuolumne counties plus portions of Fresno, Madera, Nevada, and Placer counties.
Prior to redistricting by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission of 2011, the 4th district encompassed the northeast corner of the state, stretching from the eastern suburbs of Sacramento north to the Oregon border. It consisted of El Dorado, Lassen, Modoc, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, and Sierra counties plus portions of Butte and Sacramento counties.
==Competitiveness==
George W. Bush won the district in 2004 with 61.3% of the vote. John McCain carried the district in 2008 with 53.98% of the vote while Barack Obama received 43.83%.
As of 2006, Republicans had 48 percent of voter registrations, Democrats had 30 percent, and Libertarians had roughly 5 percent.〔("Editorial: 4th Congressional District" ), ''The Sacramento Bee'', May 10, 2006〕
A Democratic congressional candidate nearly won the district in 2008, losing by only half a percentage point and less than 1,600 votes, indicating that the district was much more competitive than it appeared to be. But in the more recent 〔Ballotpedia〕2012 and 2014 elections the Republican candidate won over 60% of the vote indicating the District remains solidly Republican.
New district boundaries for the 2012 elections shifted the population center to the south and east. Registered Democrats and Independents/Decline to State voters in the new district area outnumber registered Republicans by 12%. However Republicans, Independents/Decline to State and small third parties outnumber Democrats well over a 2 to 1 ratio. There are 183,800 Republicans, 117,300 Democrats and 97,200 other.〔Ballotpedia.org〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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