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9th federal electoral district of Chihuahua

Federal electoral district of Mexico

9th federal electoral district of Chihuahua

Summary

Federal electoral district of Mexico

FieldValue
nameChihuahua's 9th
image9th Federal Electoral District of Chihuahua (since 2022).svg
captionChihuahua's 9th district since 2022
memberNoel Chávez Velázquez
partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
congress66th (2024–2027)
stateChihuahua
head-townParral
coordinates
covers{{Collapsible list
title27 municipalities
frame_styleborder:none; padding: 0;
regionFirst
precincts413
population378,424
population-year2020

| head-town = Parral |Allende, Balleza, Batopilas, Bocoyna, Carichí, Coronado, Chínipas, Dr. Belisario Domínguez, Guachochi, Guadalupe y Calvo, Guazapares, Hidalgo del Parral, Huejotitán, López, Maguarichi, Matamoros, Morelos, Nonoava, Rosario, San Francisco de Borja, San Francisco del Oro, Santa Bárbara, Satevó, El Tule, Urique, Uruachi, Valle de Zaragoza}} | population-year = 2020

9th district in 2017–2022
9th district in 2005–2017

The 9th federal electoral district of Chihuahua () is one of the 300 electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for elections to the federal Chamber of Deputies and one of nine such districts in the state of Chihuahua.

It elects one deputy to the lower house of Congress for each three-year legislative session by means of the first-past-the-post system. Votes cast in the district also count towards the calculation of proportional representation ("plurinominal") deputies elected from the first region.

The 9th district was created as part of the 1977 electoral reforms. Under the 1975 districting plan, Chihuahua had only six congressional districts; with the 1977 reforms, the number increased to ten. The newly created district elected its first deputy in the 1979 mid-term election.

The current member for the district, elected in the 2024 general election, is Noel Chávez Velázquez of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).

District territory

Under the 2023 districting plan adopted by the National Electoral Institute (INE), which is to be used for the 2024, 2027 and 2030 federal elections, the 9th district comprises 413 electoral precincts (secciones electorales) across 27 municipalities in the south of the state:

  • Allende, Balleza, Batopilas, Bocoyna, Carichí, Coronado, Chínipas, Dr. Belisario Domínguez, Guachochi, Guadalupe y Calvo, Guazapares, Hidalgo del Parral, Huejotitán, López, Maguarichi, Matamoros, Morelos, Nonoava, Rosario, San Francisco de Borja, San Francisco del Oro, Santa Bárbara, Satevó, El Tule, Urique, Uruachi and Valle de Zaragoza.

The head town (cabecera distrital), where results from individual polling stations are gathered together and tallied, is the city of Parral. The district reported a population of 378,424 in the 2020 Census.

Previous districting schemes

197419781996200520172023
Chihuahua610999
Chamber of Deputies196300
Sources:

2017–2022 :Between 2017 and 2022, the district covered the municipalities of Allende, Balleza, Batopilas de Manuel Gómez Morín, Carichí, Coronado, Dr. Belisario Domínguez, Guachochi, Guadalupe y Calvo, Hidalgo del Parral, Huejotitán, López, Matamoros, Morelos, Nonoava, Rosario, San Francisco de Borja, San Francisco del Oro, Santa Bárbara, Satevó, El Tule, Urique and Valle de Zaragoza. The head town was at Parral.

2005–2017 :Under the 2005 districting scheme, the district covered the state's southern municipalities of Balleza, Batopilas, Bocoyna, Carichi, Chínipas, Cusihuiriachi, Dr. Belisario Domínguez, Guachochi, Gran Morelos, Guadalupe y Calvo, Guazapares, Hidalgo del Parral, Huejotitán, Maguarichi, Matamoros, Morelos, Nonoava, Rosario, San Francisco de Borja, San Francisco del Oro, Santa Bárbara, Santa Isabel, Satevó, El Tule, Urique, Uruachi and Valle de Zaragoza. The head town was the city of Parral.

1996–2005 :Chihuahua lost its 10th district in the 1996 redistricting process. Between 1996 and 2005, the 9th district covered the southern municipalities of Allende, Balleza, Coronado, Guadalupe y Calvo, Hidalgo del Parral, Huejotitán, Jiménez, López, Matamoros, Rosario, San Francisco del Oro, Santa Bárbara, El Tule and Valle de Zaragoza. Its head town was the city of Parral.

1978–1996 :The districting scheme in force from 1978 to 1996 was the result of the 1977 electoral reforms, which increased the number of single-member seats in the Chamber of Deputies from 196 to 300. Under that plan, Chihuahua's seat allocation rose from six to ten. The new 9th district was located in the north-west of the state and its head town was the city of Nuevo Casas Grandes. It comprised the municipalities of Ahumada, Ascensión, Buenaventura, Casas Grandes, Galeana, Guadalupe, Ignacio Zaragoza, Janos, Madera, Nuevo Casas Grandes and Práxedis G. Guerrero.

Deputies returned to Congress

ElectionDeputyPartyTermLegislature
1979Rebeca Anchondo Fernández[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1979–198251st Congress
1982[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1982–198552nd Congress
1985Fernando Abarca Fernández[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1985–198853rd Congress
1988Rebeca Anchondo Fernández[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1988–199154th Congress
1991Luis Carlos Rentería Torres[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1991–199455th Congress
1994Sergio Prieto Gamboa[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1994–199756th Congress
1997Jesús José Villalobos Sáenz[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]1997–200057th Congress
2000Manuel Payán Nova[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2000–200358th Congress
2003Jesús Aguilar Bueno[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]] [[File:Gray flag waving.png22pxlink=Independent politician]]2003–200659th Congress
2006César Duarte Jáquez[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2006–200960th Congress
2009Luis Carlos Campos Villegas[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2009–201261st Congress
2012Karina Velázquez Ramírez[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2012–201562nd Congress
2015Carlos Hermosillo Arteaga
Antonio Enrique Tarín García[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2015–201863rd Congress
2018[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=National Action Party (Mexico)]]2018–202064th Congress
2021[[File:PAN Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=National Action Party (Mexico)]]2021–202465th Congress
2024title=Perfil: Dip. Noel Chávez Velázquez, LXVI Legislaturapublisher=SEGOBwebsite=Sistema de Información Legislativa (SIL)accessdate=4 September 2024url=http://sil.gobernacion.gob.mx/Librerias/pp_PerfilLegislador.php?SID=&Referencia=9228511}}[[File:PRI Party (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Institutional Revolutionary Party]]2024–202766th Congress

Congressional results

The corresponding page on the Spanish-language Wikipedia contains full electoral results from 1979 to 2021.

Presidential elections

ElectionDistrict won byParty or coalition%
2018Andrés Manuel López Obrador[[File:Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Labour Party (Mexico)]] [[File:Morena logo (alt).svg22pxlink=National Regeneration Movement]] [[File:Partido Encuentro Social (México).svg22pxlink=Social Encounter Party]]
Juntos Haremos Historia29.1027
2024Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo[[File:PVE dark logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Ecologist Green Party of Mexico]] [[File:Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg22pxlink=Labour Party (Mexico)]] [[File:Morena logo (alt).svg22pxlink=National Regeneration Movement]]
Sigamos Haciendo Historia45.6911

Notes

References

References

  1. "Memoria de la Distritación Nacional 2021–2023". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  2. (31 January 2024). "How Mexico Elects Its Leaders – The Rules".
  3. (27 February 2023). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Nacional Electoral por el que se aprueba la demarcación territorial de las cinco circunscripciones electorales plurinominales federales en que se divide el país". [[Diario Oficial de la Federación]].
  4. (1993). "Las Elecciones en México: evolución y perspectivas". Siglo XXI.
  5. (2014). "Evolución territorial de los distritos electorales federales uninominales, 1977–2010". Instituto de Geografía, [[National Autonomous University of Mexico.
  6. (20 February 2023). "Nueva distritación electoral le quita diputados a la CDMX y le agrega a Nuevo León". Forbes México.
  7. (20 February 2023). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Nacional Electoral por el que se aprueba el proyecto de la demarcación territorial de los trescientos distritos electorales federales uninominales".
  8. (5 March 2024). "Así será la distribución de los Distritos Electorales Federales en Chihuahua". El Heraldo de Chihuahua.
  9. (15 March 2017). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Nacional Electoral por el que se aprueba la demarcación territorial de los 300 distritos electorales federales uninominales". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  10. "Descriptivo de la distritación federal: Chihuahua, marzo 2017". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  11. "Distritación federal escenario final: Chihuahua 2017". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  12. (2 March 2005). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Federal Electoral por el que se establece la demarcación territorial de los trescientos distritos electorales federales uninominales".
  13. "Condensado estatal de Chihuahua: Distritación 1996–2005". [[Instituto Federal Electoral.
  14. (12 August 1996). "Acuerdo del Consejo General del Instituto Federal Electoral por el que se establece la demarcación territorial de los trescientos distritos electorales federales uninominales".
  15. (29 May 1978). "División del territorio de la República en 300 distritos electorales uninominales para elecciones federales: Chihuahua".
  16. "Legislatura 51". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  17. "Legislatura 52". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  18. "Legislatura 53". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  19. "Legislatura 54". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  20. "Legislatura 55". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  21. "Legislatura 56". [[Chamber of Deputies (Mexico).
  22. "Perfil: Dip. Jesús José Villalobos Sáenz, LVII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  23. "Perfil: Dip. Manuel Payán Nova, LVIII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  24. "Perfil: Dip. Jesús Aguilar Bueno, LIX Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  25. "Perfil: Dip. César Horacio Duarte Jáquez, LX Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  26. "Perfil: Dip. Luis Carlos Campos Villegas, LXI Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  27. "3-D Reporte distrital: Resultados del Cómputo Distrital de la elección de diputados federales por el principio de Mayoría Relativa de 2009, por casilla.".
  28. "Perfil: Dip. Diana Karina Velázquez Ramírez, LXII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  29. "Perfil: Dip. Carlos Gerardo Hermosillo Arteaga, LXIII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  30. (7 April 2023). "¿Quién era Antonio Tarín? El exduartista acusado de desvío de dinero público". El Heraldo de Chihuahua.
  31. "Perfil: Dip. Antonio Enrique Tarín García, LXIII Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  32. "Diputaciones: Chihuahua. Distrito 9. Hidalgo del Parral". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  33. "Perfil: Dip. María de los Angeles Gutiérrez Valdez, LXIV Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  34. "Diputaciones: Chihuahua. Distrito 9. Hidalgo del Parral". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  35. "Perfil: Dip. María de los Angeles Gutiérrez Valdez, LXV Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  36. "Diputaciones: Chihuahua. Distrito 9. Hidalgo del Parral". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  37. "Perfil: Dip. Noel Chávez Velázquez, LXVI Legislatura". [[Secretariat of the Interior.
  38. "Presidencia: Chihuahua. Distrito 9. Hidalgo del Parral". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
  39. "Presidencia: Chihuahua. Distrito 9. Hidalgo del Parral". [[Instituto Nacional Electoral.
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