Pennsylvania House of Representatives, District 56
The 56th district is located in Westmoreland County and has been represented by George Dunbar since 2010.
Current | George Dunbar (R–Penn Township, Westmoreland County) |
---|---|
Demographics | 98.3% White 0.6% Black 0.5% Hispanic |
Population (2011) • Citizens of voting age | 60,428 44,372 |
District profile
The 56th Pennsylvania House of Representatives District is located in Westmoreland County and includes the following areas:[1]
- Hempfield Township (PART, District Wegley)
- Irwin
- Manor
- North Huntingdon Township
- North Irwin
- Penn Township (PART)
- Ward 01 [PART, Division 01]
- Ward 02
- Ward 03
- Ward 04
- Ward 05
- Trafford (Westmoreland County Portion)
Representatives
Representative | Party | Years | District home | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|
Prior to 1969, seats were apportioned by county. | ||||
John F. Laudadio, Sr. | Democrat | 1969 – 1977 | Died on June 6, 1977[2] | |
Allen Kukovich | Democrat | 1977 – 1996 | Manor | Elected November 8, 1977 to fill vacancy[2] Elected to the Pennsylvania State Senate |
James E. Casorio, Jr. | Democrat | 1997 – 2010 | North Huntingdon Township | Defeated for reelection |
George Dunbar | Republican | 2011 – | Penn Township | Incumbent |
Recent election results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | James Casorio | 10885 | 48.18 | ||
Republican | George Dunbar | 11708 | 51.82 | ||
Margin of victory | 823 | 3.64 | {{{change}}} | ||
Turnout | 22593 | 100 | {{{change}}} |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | George Dunbar | 17497 | 58.37 | 6.55 | |
Democratic | Raymond Geissler | 12,476 | 41.63 | ||
Margin of victory | 5018 | 16.74 | {{{change}}} | ||
Turnout | 29,970 | 100 | 7,017 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | George Dunbar | 15653 | 100 | ||
Turnout | 15653 | 100 | decrease |
Recent election results
{{Election box candidate with party link
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
party = Republican Party (United States) | candidate = George Dunbar | votes = 27727 | percentage = 100
{{Election box turnout |
votes = 27727 | percentage = 100 |
gollark: It's ARBITRARY C!
gollark: HOW?!
gollark: WHY(JIT) is capable of arbitrary IO.
gollark: Er, you'd need to sandbox it.
gollark: ```python#!/usr/bin/env python3import argparseimport subprocessimport randomimport stringparser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Compile a WHY program using WHYJIT.")parser.add_argument("input", help="File containing WHY source code")parser.add_argument("-o", "--output", help="Filename of the output executable to make", default="./a.why")parser.add_argument("-O", "--optimize", help="Optimization level", type=int, default="0")args = parser.parse_args()def randomword(length): letters = string.ascii_lowercase return ''.join(random.choice(letters) for i in range(length))def which(program): proc = subprocess.run(["which", program], stdout=subprocess.PIPE) if proc.returncode == 0: return proc.stdout.replace(b"\n", b"") else: return Nonedef find_C_compiler(): compilers = ["gcc", "clang", "tcc", "cc"] for compiler in compilers: path = which(compiler) if path != None: return pathdef build_output(code, mx): C_code = f"""#define QUITELONG long long intconst QUITELONG max = {mx};int main() {{ volatile QUITELONG i = 0; // disable some "optimizations" that RUIN OUR BEAUTIFUL CODE! while (i < max) {{ i++; }} {code}}} """ heredoc = randomword(100) devnull = "2>/dev/null" shell_script = f"""#!/bin/shTMP1=/tmp/ignore-meTMP2=/tmp/ignore-me-tooTMP3=/tmp/dont-look-here cat << {heredoc} > $TMP1{C_code}{heredoc}sed -e '1,/^exit \$?$/d' "$0" > $TMP3chmod +x $TMP3$TMP3 -x c -o $TMP2 $TMP1chmod +x $TMP2$TMP2exit $?""".encode("utf-8") with open(find_C_compiler(), "rb") as f: return shell_script + f.read()input = args.inputoutput = args.outputwith open(input, "r") as f: contents = f.read() looplen = max(1000, (2 ** -args.optimize) * 1000000000) code = build_output( contents, looplen ) with open(output, "wb") as out: out.write(code)```
References
- Cox, Harold (2004). "Legislatures - 1776-2004". Wilkes University Election Statistics Project. Wilkes University.
- "Composite Listing of House of Representatives Districts" (PDF). Pennsylvania Department of State. Retrieved 2015-02-19.
- Cox, Harold (November 3, 2004). "Pennsylvania House of Representatives - 1977-1978" (PDF). Wilkes University Election Statistics Project. Wilkes University.
External Links
- District map from the United States Census Bureau
- Pennsylvania House Legislative District Maps from the Pennsylvania Redistricting Commission.
- [http://www.redistricting.state.pa.us/CensusDisplay.cfm?DistBody=H&District=001&Plan=2011-Revised-Final.
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