| Iowa's 11th State Senate district | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Senator |
| ||
The11th District of theIowa Senate is located in centralIowa, and is currently composed ofWarren County and parts ofMarion County.[1]
Julian Garrett is the senator currently representing the 11th District.[2]
The area of the 11th District contains twoIowa House of Representatives districts:
The district is also located inIowa's 1st congressional district, which is represented by U.S. RepresentativeMariannette Miller-Meeks.[3]
Source:[4]
| Map | Description | Years effective | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Benton County | 1846-1849 | From 1846 to 1857, district numbering was not utilized by the Iowa State Legislature. This convention was added with the passing of the 1857 Iowa Constitution. Numbering of districts pre-1857 is done as a matter of historic convenience.[5] | |
| Benton County | 1850-1851 | ||
| Adams County Fremont County | 1852-1859 | ||
| Wapello County | 1860-1863 | ||
| Jefferson County | 1864-1867 | ||
| Henry County | 1868-1877 | ||
| Jefferson County | 1878-1883 | ||
| Louisa County | 1884-1887 | ||
| Clarke County | 1888-1962 | ||
| Keokuk County | 1963-1966 | ||
| Marion County | 1967-1970 | ||
| Woodbury County (partial) | 1971-1972 | In 1970, the Iowa Legislature passed an amendment to the Iowa Constitution setting forth the rules for legislative redistricting in order to abide by the rules established by theReynolds v. Sims Supreme Court case. The first reapportionment map created by the Republican controlled legislature was deemed unconstitutional, but was still used for the 1970 election.[6] | |
| Delaware County (partial) Dubuque County (partial) | 1973-1982 | ||
| Black Hawk County (partial) | 1983-1992 | ||
| Black Hawk County (partial) | 1993-2002 | ||
| Black Hawk County (partial) | 2003-2012 | ||
| Adams County Cass County (partial) Pottawattamie County (partial)
| 2013-2022 | ||
| Marion County (partial) | 2023-present |