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United States House of Representatives, Tennessee District 5 : ウィキペディア英語版
Tennessee's 5th congressional district

The 5th Congressional District of Tennessee is a congressional district in Middle Tennessee. The most regularly drawn of the state's nine districts, it includes all of Davidson and Dickson counties and most of Cheatham County. Nearly two-thirds of the district's voting population lives in the state capital, Nashville.
Democrat Jim Cooper, who represented the 4th District in southern middle Tennessee for six terms, has represented the 5th since 2003.
==Political characteristics==
The 5th is historically a very safe seat for the Democratic Party, due almost entirely to the influence of heavily Democratic Nashville. Some pockets of Republican influence exist in Belle Meade, and portions of neighboring Cheatham county undergoing rapid suburbanization. However, they are no match for the overwhelming Democratic trend in most of Nashville. While Republicans made several strong bids for the district in the late 1960s and early 1970s (largely over racial issues such as a 1971 busing order), they have only put up token candidates since 1972.
Demographics are a major factor behind the Democrats' near-absolute dominance of the political scene. Many conservative white voters (including Nashville natives) have increasingly moved out of Metro Nashville/Davidson County to more Republican suburban counties such as Williamson and Sumner. They have been replaced largely by liberal-oriented constituencies such as students (and alumni) of the Nashville area's several colleges and universities, music industry professionals, and white-collar professionals, in a manner similar to that of cities such as Atlanta, Houston, Charlotte, Raleigh/Durham, and Austin. In the entire state, only Memphis has a comparable constituency of liberal-minded whites. The clout of Nashville's African-American electorate, a traditionally Democratic constituency, has grown steadily in recent years as well.
Although the district's Cook Partisan Voting Index of D+5 suggests a marginally Democratic district, Davidson County has more people than the rest of the district combined. For this reason, the 5th is one of two seats in Tennessee that are usually not seriously contested by Republicans (the other being the 9th district).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tennessee's 5th congressional district」の詳細全文を読む



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