Indiana's 8th congressional district

Indiana's 8th congressional district
Map
Interactive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023
Representative
Area7,041.64 mi2 (18,237.8 km2)
Distribution
  • 58.10% urban
  • 41.90% rural
Population (2024)758,402
Median householdincome$65,297[1]
Ethnicity
Cook PVIR+18[2]

Indiana's 8th congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S. state of Indiana. Based in southwest and west central Indiana, the district is anchored in Evansville and also includes Jasper, Princeton, Terre Haute, Vincennes, and Washington.

Previously referred to as "The Bloody Eighth" at the local (and sometimes national) levels (see below for explanation), it was formerly a notorious swing district. However, due to a political realignment, it has in recent elections become a safe Republican district. With a Cook Partisan Voting Index rating of R+18, it is the most Republican district in Indiana.[2]

Recent election results from statewide races

Year Office Results[3]
2008 PresidentMcCain 50% - 48%
2012 PresidentRomney 60% - 40%
2016 PresidentTrump 64% - 30%
SenateYoung 54% - 41%
GovernorHolcomb 53% - 45%
Attorney GeneralHill 66% - 34%
2018 SenateBraun 58% - 38%
2020 PresidentTrump 65% - 33%
GovernorHolcomb 65% - 25%
Attorney GeneralRokita 61% - 39%
2022 SenateYoung 68% - 30%
TreasurerElliott 67% - 33%
AuditorKlutz 67% - 30%
Secretary of StateMorales 63% - 33%
2024 PresidentTrump 67% - 31%
SenateBanks 66% - 31%
GovernorBraun 62% - 33%
Attorney GeneralRokita 67% - 33%

Composition

# County Seat Population
11 ClayBrazil26,379
13 CrawfordEnglish10,536
14 DaviessWashington33,418
19 DuboisJasper43,362
23 FountainCovington16,574
26 GibsonPrinceton32,993
28 GreeneBloomfield31,006
42 KnoxVincennes35,789
51 MartinShoals9,803
59 OrangePaoli19,623
60 OwenSpencer21,482
61 ParkeRockville16,369
62 PerryTell City19,183
63 PikePetersburg12,168
65 PoseyMt. Vernon25,063
74 SpencerRockport19,967
77 SullivanSullivan20,670
82 VanderburghEvansville179,744
83 VermillionNewport15,451
84 VigoTerre Haute106,006
87 WarrickBoonville65,185

As of 2023, Indiana's 8th congressional district is located in southwest and west central Indiana. It includes Clay, Crawford, Daviess, Dubois, Gibson, Greene, Knox, Martin, Orange, Owen, Parke, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Sullivan, Vanderburgh, Vermillion, Vigo, and Warrick Counties, and half of Fountain.

Fountain County is split between this district and the 4th district. They are partitioned on the western border by Indiana State Rt 32, East Prairie Chapel Road, and South New Liberty Road, and on the southeastern border by North Sandhill Road, Indiana West 260N, North Portland Arch Road, West County Home Road, and Indiana West 450N. The 8th district takes in the five townships of Fulton, Jackson, Millcreek, Van Buren, and Wabash, as well as most of the township of Troy and part of the township of Cain.

Cities of 10,000 or more people

2,500 – 10,000 people

History

Based in Evansville, the 8th congressional district was widened when Indiana lost a seat after the 2000 U.S. census to include much of the former 5th and 7th congressional districts. At that time, Bloomington (the home of former U.S. RepresentativeFrank McCloskey) was moved into the 9th congressional district, while the 8th congressional district was extended northward to include much of the former 7th congressional district in west-central Indiana, including Terre Haute. As a result of this expansion, the district is the largest in area in Indiana with all or part of 18 counties.

The district has been nicknamed "The Bloody Eighth" because of a series of hard-fought campaigns and political reversals. Unlike most other districts in the state, which tend to give their representatives long tenures in Washington, the 8th congressional district has a reputation for frequently ousting incumbents from both parties.[4] Since 1983, no one has held the seat or its predecessors for longer than 12 years. Voters in the district ousted six incumbents from 1966 to 1982. The election in 1984 was so close that the House of Representatives itself determined which of two candidates to seat, accepting the recommendation of the Democratic-controlled House task force sent to Indiana to count the ballots. Democratic incumbent Frank McCloskey ultimately won by a margin of four votes out of 233,000 cast.[5] After that, McCloskey was reelected four more times before losing to Republican John Hostettler in 1994, amid the Republican Revolution. Hostettler represented the district for six terms before being defeated in a landslide by moderate Democrat Brad Ellsworth in 2006. It was the first district picked up by the Democrats that year, and was one of thirty nationwide that they gained while regaining control of the House.[6] Ellsworth ran unsuccessfully for U.S. Senate in 2010 and was succeeded by Republican Larry Bucshon in the same election cycle and has since become the first representative of the district to surpass six terms. Although Southern Indiana is ancestrally Democratic, the Democrats in this area are nowhere near as liberal as their counterparts in the rest of the state. Historically, it had a character similar to Yellow Dog Democrat districts in neighboring Kentucky. The district also has a strong tint of social conservatism.

In 2000, a New York Times reporter said of the district: "With a populist streak and a conservative bent, this district does not cotton to country club Republicans or to social-engineering liberals," and also said, "More than 95 percent white and about 41 percent rural, the region shares much of the flavor of the Bible Belt."[7]

In 2013, the district shifted and was pushed southward toward Evansville, losing Fountain and Warren Counties, and gaining Dubois, Perry, and Spencer Counties, and a portion of Crawford County, uniting southwestern Indiana under one district.

In 2023, the district regained some its former territory, pushing back into Fountain County, but also gained the remainder of Crawford County and the entirety of Orange County from the 9th District.

List of members representing the district

Representative Party Years Congress Electoral history
District created March 4, 1843
John Pettit(Lafayette)DemocraticMarch 4, 1843 –March 3, 1849 28th29th30thElected in 1843.Re-elected in 1845.Re-elected in 1847.Lost renomination.
Joseph E. McDonald(Crawfordsville)DemocraticMarch 4, 1849 –March 3, 1851 31stElected in 1849.Retired.
Daniel Mace(Lafayette)DemocraticMarch 4, 1851 –March 3, 1855 32nd33rd34thElected in 1851.Re-elected in 1852.Re-elected in 1854.Retired.
People'sMarch 4, 1855 –March 3, 1857
James Wilson(Crawfordsville)RepublicanMarch 4, 1857 –March 3, 1861 35th36thElected in 1856.Re-elected in 1858.Retired.
Albert S. White(Stockwell)RepublicanMarch 4, 1861 –March 3, 1863 37thElected in 1860.Retired.
Godlove S. Orth(Lafayette)RepublicanMarch 4, 1863 –March 3, 1869 38th39th40thElected in 1862.Re-elected in 1864.Re-elected in 1866.Redistricted to the 7th district.
James N. Tyner(Peru)RepublicanMarch 4, 1869 –March 3, 1875 41st42nd43rdElected to the term left vacant by the resignation of Representative-elect Daniel D. Pratt.Re-elected in 1870.Re-elected in 1872.Lost renomination.
Morton C. Hunter(Bloomington)RepublicanMarch 4, 1875 –March 3, 1879 44th45thRedistricted from the 6th district and re-elected in 1874.Re-elected in 1876.Lost re-election.
Abraham J. Hostetler(Bedford)DemocraticMarch 4, 1879 –March 3, 1881 46thElected in 1878.Retired.
Robert B. F. Peirce(Crawfordsville)RepublicanMarch 4, 1881 –March 3, 1883 47thElected in 1880.Lost re-election.
John E. Lamb(Terre Haute)DemocraticMarch 4, 1883 –March 3, 1885 48thElected in 1882.Lost re-election.
James T. Johnston(Rockville)RepublicanMarch 4, 1885 –March 3, 1889 49th50thElected in 1884.Re-elected in 1886.Lost re-election.
Elijah V. Brookshire(Crawfordsville)DemocraticMarch 4, 1889 –March 3, 1895 51st52nd53rdElected in 1888.Re-elected in 1890.Re-elected in 1892.Lost re-election.
George W. Faris(Terre Haute)RepublicanMarch 4, 1895 –March 3, 1897 54thElected in 1894.Redistricted to the 5th district.
Charles L. Henry(Anderson)RepublicanMarch 4, 1897 –March 3, 1899 55thRedistricted from the 7th district and re-elected in 1896.Retired.
George W. Cromer(Muncie)RepublicanMarch 4, 1899 –March 3, 1907 56th57th58th59thElected in 1898.Re-elected in 1900.Re-elected in 1902.Re-elected in 1904.Lost re-election.
John A. M. Adair(Portland)DemocraticMarch 4, 1907 –March 3, 1917 60th61st62nd63rd64thElected in 1906.Re-elected in 1908.Re-elected in 1910.Re-elected in 1912.Re-elected in 1914.Retired to run for Governor of Indiana.
Albert H. Vestal(Anderson)RepublicanMarch 4, 1917 –April 1, 1932 65th66th67th68th69th70th71st72ndElected in 1916.Re-elected in 1918.Re-elected in 1920.Re-elected in 1922.Re-elected in 1924.Re-elected in 1926.Re-elected in 1928.Re-elected in 1930.Died.
VacantApril 1, 1932 –March 3, 1933 72nd
John W. Boehne Jr.(Evansville)DemocraticMarch 4, 1933 –January 3, 1943 73rd74th75th76th77thRedistricted from the 1st district and re-elected in 1932.Re-elected in 1934.Re-elected in 1936.Re-elected in 1938.Re-elected in 1940.Lost re-election.
Charles M. La Follette(Evansville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 1943 –January 3, 1947 78th79thElected in 1942.Re-elected in 1944.Retired to run for U.S. Senator.
E. A. Mitchell(Evansville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 1947 –January 3, 1949 80thElected in 1946.Lost re-election.
Winfield K. Denton(Evansville)DemocraticJanuary 3, 1949 –January 3, 1953 81st82ndElected in 1948.Re-elected in 1950.Lost re-election.
D. Bailey Merrill(Evansville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 1953 –January 3, 1955 83rdElected in 1952.Lost re-election.
Winfield K. Denton(Evansville)DemocraticJanuary 3, 1955 –December 30, 1966 84th85th86th87th88th89thElected in 1954.Re-elected in 1956.Re-elected in 1958.Re-elected in 1960.Re-elected in 1962.Re-elected in 1964.Lost re-election and resigned early.
VacantDecember 30, 1966 –January 3, 1967 89th
Roger H. Zion(Evansville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 1967 –January 3, 1975 90th91st92nd93rdElected in 1966.Re-elected in 1968.Re-elected in 1970.Re-elected in 1972.Lost re-election.
Philip H. Hayes(Evansville)DemocraticJanuary 3, 1975 –January 3, 1977 94thElected in 1974.Retired to run for U.S. Senator.
David L. Cornwell(Paoli)DemocraticJanuary 3, 1977 –January 3, 1979 95thElected in 1976.Lost re-election.
H. Joel Deckard(Evansville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 1979 –January 3, 1983 96th97thElected in 1978.Re-elected in 1980.Lost re-election.
Frank McCloskey(Bloomington)DemocraticJanuary 3, 1983 –January 3, 1985 98thElected in 1982.Seat left vacant while election contest resolved.
VacantJanuary 3, 1985 –May 1, 1985 99thElection contested and the House of Representatives refused to seat anyone.
Frank McCloskey(Smithville)DemocraticMay 1, 1985 –January 3, 1995 99th100th101st102nd103rdRe-elected in 1985.Re-elected in 1986.Re-elected in 1988.Re-elected in 1990.Re-elected in 1992Lost re-election.
John Hostettler(Blairsville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 1995 –January 3, 2007 104th105th106th107th108th109thElected in 1994.Re-elected in 1996.Re-elected in 1998.Re-elected in 2000.Re-elected in 2002.Re-elected in 2004.Lost re-election.
Brad Ellsworth(Evansville)DemocraticJanuary 3, 2007 –January 3, 2011 110th111thElected in 2006.Re-elected in 2008.Retired to run for U.S. Senator.
Larry Bucshon(Evansville)RepublicanJanuary 3, 2011 –January 3, 2025 112th113th114th115th116th117th118thElected in 2010.Re-elected in 2012.Re-elected in 2014.Re-elected in 2016.Re-elected in 2018.Re-elected in 2020.Re-elected in 2022.Retired.
Mark Messmer(Jasper)RepublicanJanuary 3, 2025–present 119thElected in 2024.

Election results

2002

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election (2002)
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanJohn Hostettler* 98,952 51.31
DemocraticBryan Hartke 88,763 46.02
LibertarianPam Williams 5,150 2.67
Total votes192,865 100.00
Turnout 
Republicanhold

2004

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election (2004)
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanJohn Hostettler* 145,576 53.37
DemocraticJon Jennings121,522 44.55
LibertarianMark Garvin 5,680 2.08
Total votes272,778 100.00
Turnout 
Republicanhold

2006

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election (2006)
Party Candidate Votes %
DemocraticBrad Ellsworth131,019 61.02
RepublicanJohn Hostettler* 83,704 38.98
Total votes214,723 100.00
Turnout 
Democraticgain from Republican

2008

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election (2008)
Party Candidate Votes %
DemocraticBrad Ellsworth* 189,109 64.75
RepublicanGreg Goode 102,940 35.25
Total votes292,049 100.00
Turnout 
Democratichold

2010

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election (2010)
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon117,259 57.55
DemocraticTrent Van Haaften 76,265 37.43
LibertarianJohn Cunningham 10,240 5.03
Total votes203,764 100.00
Turnout 
Republicangain from Democratic

2012

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election (2012)
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon* 151,533 53.36
DemocraticDave Crooks122,325 43.07
LibertarianBart Gadau 10,134 3.57
Total votes283,992 100.00
Turnout 
Republicanhold

2014

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election, 2014
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon (Incumbent) 103,344 60.32
DemocraticTom Spangler 61,384 35.83
LibertarianAndrew Horning 6,587 3.84
Total votes171,315 100
Republicanhold

2016

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election, 2016
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon (Incumbent) 187,702 63.69
DemocraticRonald L. Drake 93,356 31.68
LibertarianAndrew Horning 13,655 4.63
Total votes294,713 100
Republicanhold

2018

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon (Incumbent) 157,396 64.4
DemocraticWilliam Tanoos 86,895 35.6
Total votes244,291 100
Republicanhold

2020

Indiana's 8th congressional district, 2020[8]
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon (incumbent) 214,643 66.9
DemocraticThomasina Marsili 95,691 29.8
LibertarianJames D. Rodenberger 10,283 3.2
Total votes320,617 100.0
Republicanhold

2022

2022 Indiana's 8th congressional district election[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanLarry Bucshon (incumbent) 141,995 65.7
DemocraticRay McCormick 68,109 31.5
LibertarianAndrew Horning 5,936 2.7
Total votes216,040 100.0
Republicanhold

2024

Indiana's 8th Congressional District election, 2024
Party Candidate Votes %
RepublicanMark Messmer219,941 68.0
DemocraticErik Hurt 95,311 29.5
LibertarianRichard Fitzlaff 8,381 2.6
Total votes323,633 100
Republicanhold

Historical district boundaries

2003 – 2013
2013 – 2023

See also

References

  1. ^"Congressional District 8, IN – Profile data". Census Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2025.
  2. ^ ab"2025 Cook PVI℠: District Map and List (119th Congress)". Cook Political Report. April 3, 2025. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
  3. ^"Dra 2020".
  4. ^Brush, Silla (January 8, 2006). "And They're Off And Running!". U.S. News & World Report. Archived from the original on April 6, 2012. Retrieved October 28, 2019.
  5. ^Risen, James (October 29, 1986). "Reagan to Join Bloody House Battle : Indiana District Race, Won by 4 Votes in '84, Turns Into Rematch". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on November 22, 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
  6. ^"Democrats pick up key House seat in Indiana". CNN.com. Retrieved January 7, 2007.
  7. ^Dirk Johnson, "The 2000 Campaign: An Indiana Race; Conservatives Face Off in Quirky Populist District", New York Times, October 10, 2000
  8. ^"Indiana Election Results November 3, 2020". Indiana Election Division. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
  9. ^"Indiana Election Results November 8, 2022". Indiana Elections Division. Retrieved November 17, 2022.