Texas District 4 of the
United States House of Representatives is a Congressional district that serves an area that includes some counties along the
Red River north of the
Dallas/
Fort Worth Metroplex, including semi-rural
Rockwall County and the large non-urbanized portion of
Collin County. It also includes counties in
East Texas such as
Van Zandt County and
Rains County. As of the 2000 census, District 4 represents 651,620 people who are predominantly
Caucasian (80.8%) and middle-class (median family income is US$46,086, compared to $50,046 nationwide).
Texas has had at least four congressional districts since the state was readmitted to the Union after the
Civil War. The district's current seat dates from 1903; only four men have represented it since then.
Once a reliably
Democratic district, the district swung rapidly into the
Republican column as Dallas' suburbs spilled into the western portion of the district. In fact, it has not supported a Democrat for president since 1964. For many years, it was based in
Tyler, but a controversial 2003
redistricting orchestrated by then-
House Majority Leader Tom DeLay drew it and neighboring
Longview out of District 4 and into neighboring
District 1 which made District 1 significantly more Republican.
Ralph Hall, the current dean of the Texas congressional delegation, has represented the district since 1981. Originally a Democrat, he became a Republican in 2004. Congressman Ralph Hall has been a fence rider for many years, voting in...
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