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・ Louisiana Wildlife Agents Association
・ Louisiana wine
・ Louisiana Wing Civil Air Patrol
・ Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man
・ Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man (song)
・ Louisiana World War II Army Airfields
・ Louisiana's 1st congressional district
・ Louisiana's 1st congressional district special election, 2008
・ Louisiana's 2nd congressional district
・ Louisiana's 2nd congressional district election, 2006
・ Louisiana's 2nd congressional district election, 2008
・ Louisiana's 3rd congressional district
・ Louisiana's 4th congressional district
・ Louisiana's 5th congressional district
・ Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election, 2013
Louisiana's 6th congressional district
・ Louisiana's 6th congressional district special election, 2008
・ Louisiana's 7th congressional district
・ Louisiana's 8th congressional district
・ Louisiana's at-large congressional district
・ Louisiana's at-large congressional district special election, 1818
・ Louisiana's congressional districts
・ Louisiana, Kansas
・ Louisiana, Missouri
・ Louisiana-Pacific
・ Louisiana/Pearl (RTD)
・ Louisiana–Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns
・ Louisiana–Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns baseball
・ Louisiana–Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns basketball
・ Louisiana–Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns football


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Louisiana's 6th congressional district : ウィキペディア英語版
Louisiana's 6th congressional district

Louisiana's 6th congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S. state of Louisiana. Located in south-central Louisiana, the district contains most of the state capital of Baton Rouge, the bulk of Baton Rouge's suburbs, and continues south to Houma. It also includes the western shores of Lake Pontchartrain.
The district is currently represented by Republican Garret Graves.
==History==
Since the 6th Congressional District's creation, its boundaries have migrated from a position astraddle the Mississippi River to completely east of the Mississippi River and more recently astraddle the river again.
For decades prior to 1974, the district was virtually coterminous with the Florida Parishes centered on Hammond. In 1974, the 6th Congressional District shed St. Tammany Parish to the 1st Congressional District, and since then several redistrictings have incrementally moved the 6th Congressional District's boundaries westward so that it has shed both Washington and Tangipahoa parishes (including Hammond, home of James H. Morrison, who represented the district for 24 years, the longest tenure of anyone ever to represent the district). Washington and Tangipahoa parishes switched, like St. Tammany Parish, to the strongly Republican 1st Congressional District.
For most of its existence, the district's lines generally followed parish lines. In the 1990s redistricting, however, most of the district's black voters were transferred to the black-majority 4th District. Those lines, however, were thrown out in 1995 when the 4th was ruled to be an unconstitutional racial gerrymander, and for the 1996 election the 6th included all of Baton Rouge. After the 2010 redistricting, a gash in western Baton Rouge, including most of the city's black precincts, was transferred to the New Orleans-based 2nd District.

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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