Akashic
1892–2024
Akashic
Addison-5 State House District
presidential margin
2008D+39.22012D+39.42016D+31.12020D+39.42024D+34.5
full record · 18922024
D+34.5
2024
median income$80,586U.S. $80,734 · VT $81,203
median age47.1U.S. 39.1 · VT 43.4
poverty rate10.0%U.S. 12.5% · VT 10.0%
bachelor’s+ (25+)43.6%U.S. 35.6% · VT 44.1%
non-english6.4%U.S. 22.3% · VT 5.5%
race · ethnicity · ancestry
English20.7%
Irish16.1%
German10.7%
Mexican1.1%
Puerto Rican0.5%
Cuban0.2%
religion

Religious adherence is published only at the county level (U.S. Religion Census). See Addison County.

American Community Survey 2024 5-year (income, age, poverty, education, language, race, ancestry) · presidential returns from MIT Election Lab through 2024.

Addison-5 State House District

Akashic
Addison-5 State House DistrictHarrisD+34.5
2024
2024 presidential margin for Addison-5 State House DistrictThe boundary of Addison-5 State House District, filled by its 2024 presidential margin (D+34.5), over faint outlines of the counties it is drawn from.Addison-5 State House District · D+34.5
How it voted
Share of the 2024 vote
Kamala HarrisDemocratic64.8%1,734
Donald TrumpRepublican30.4%812
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.Other4.8%128
D+60
R+60
District boundary, filled by its own 2024 D-vs-R margin — precinct detail where available, over the 1 county it's drawn from (shown faint).
The precinct map shows the 2024 presidential vote; the timeline scrubs the district’s overall result across 1892–2024, on its current boundaries.
County-level results (1 county) — table
2024 presidential result by county for Addison-5 State House District — winner and D-vs-R margin.
CountyWinnerMargin
Addison County, VTDemocraticD+34.5
Third column names the leading third-party or independent finisher. Source · MIT Election Lab · ICPSR · VEST (precinct-level 2024). † 2012 sub-county results are estimated: the source's block-level detail for this cycle was unreliable — either county/municipality-level consolidated reporting (COVID-era) or a precinct-to-block allocation that misplaced votes — so the figures are allocated from the constituent county totals in proportion to the place and scaled to certified totals.
YearWonDemocraticRepublicanOtherMarginTotal
D
64.8%Harris1,734
30.4%Trump812
4.8%Kennedy128
+34.5%
2,674
D
68.0%Biden1,718
28.6%Trump722
3.5%Jorgensen88
+39.4%
2,528
D
58.9%Clinton1,288
27.8%Trump608
13.2%Johnson289
+31.1%
2,185
D
68.4%Obama1,407
29.0%Romney597
2.5%Johnson52
+39.4%
2,056
D
68.7%Obama1,516
29.5%McCain651
1.9%Nader41
+39.2%
2,208
D
60.0%Kerry1,280
38.1%Bush812
1.9%Nader41
+21.9%
2,133
D
51.3%Gore1,026
39.9%Bush798
8.8%Nader177
+11.4%
2,001
D
52.8%Clinton937
31.1%Dole551
16.1%Perot286
+21.8%
1,774
D
47.5%Clinton929
29.6%Bush578
22.9%Perot447
+18.0%
1,954
D
49.2%Dukakis780
49.1%Bush778
1.6%Scattering26
+0.1%
1,584
R
40.7%Mondale608
58.3%Reagan871
1.1%Bergland16
−17.6%
1,495
R
37.4%Carter499
44.9%Reagan599
17.8%Anderson237
−7.5%
1,335
R
41.1%Carter478
56.5%Ford657
2.4%McCarthy28
−15.4%
1,163
R
33.2%McGovern374
66.0%Nixon742
0.8%Schmitz9
−32.7%
1,125
R
35.4%Humphrey335
60.8%Nixon575
3.7%Wallace35
−25.4%
945
D
57.6%Johnson546
42.4%Goldwater402
0.0%
+15.2%
948
R
35.0%Kennedy341
65.1%Nixon634
0.0%
−30.1%
974
R
21.7%Stevenson191
78.3%Eisenhower688
0.0%
−56.5%
879
R
21.5%Stevenson191
78.2%Eisenhower695
0.3%Hallinan3
−56.7%
889
R
27.4%Truman185
70.6%Dewey476
1.9%Thurmond13
−43.2%
674
R
33.7%Roosevelt239
66.2%Dewey470
0.1%Thomas1
−32.5%
710
R
36.5%Roosevelt298
63.3%Willkie517
0.2%Thomas2
−26.8%
817
R
33.8%Roosevelt304
65.9%Landon592
0.3%Lemke3
−32.0%
899
R
36.0%Roosevelt348
62.9%Hoover608
1.1%Thomas11
−26.9%
967
R
27.5%Smith230
72.1%Hoover602
0.4%Thomas3
−44.6%
835
R
9.9%Davis64
87.8%Coolidge566
2.3%La Follette15
−77.8%
645
R
9.9%Cox58
88.9%Harding518
1.2%Debs7
−78.9%
583
R
23.5%Wilson100
74.6%Hughes317
1.9%Benson8
−51.1%
425
R
15.3%Wilson71
45.4%Taft211
39.4%Roosevelt183
−30.1%
465
R
12.6%Bryan51
84.5%Taft343
3.0%Debs12
−71.9%
406
R
10.1%Parker42
87.2%Roosevelt361
2.7%Debs11
−77.1%
414
R
12.4%Bryan54
86.3%McKinley377
1.4%Woolley6
−73.9%
437
R
8.3%Bryan46
89.2%McKinley495
2.5%Palmer14
−80.9%
555
R
15.9%Cleveland71
80.8%Harrison361
3.4%Weaver15
−64.9%
447
No data
No data
No data
No data
presidential history
Presidential margin, 1892–2024
Democratic minus Republican, by election
Presidential margin over timeDemocratic-minus-Republican presidential margin from 1892 to 2024. Most recent: +34.5% in 2024.flipped D · 1988+34.5%DR18922024
Presidential margin over time
YearMargin (D minus R)
1892−64.9%
1896−80.9%
1900−73.9%
1904−77.1%
1908−71.9%
1912−30.1%
1916−51.1%
1920−78.9%
1924−77.8%
1928−44.6%
1932−26.9%
1936−32.0%
1940−26.8%
1944−32.5%
1948−43.2%
1952−56.7%
1956−56.5%
1960−30.1%
1964+15.2%
1968−25.4%
1972−32.7%
1976−15.4%
1980−7.5%
1984−17.6%
1988+0.1%
1992+18.0%
1996+21.8%
2000+11.4%
2004+21.9%
2008+39.2%
2012+39.4%
2016+31.1%
2020+39.4%
2024+34.5%
DemocraticRepublican
current representation
Current officeholders
DJubilee McGillState House · Addison-5

State legislative officeholder from OpenStates nightly current-legislator data.

With fewer than 4,200 residents spread across Addison County's hill towns, this small House district delivered a 33-point Democratic presidential margin in 2024, reflecting Vermont's broader rural-to-blue realignment over the past decade.

Across the recorded series it reached a Democratic high of 39.4 points in 2020 and a Republican high of 80.9 points in 1896. Between 2020 and 2024 the district moved 4.9 points toward the Republican candidate; the 2024 margin was 34.5 points.

A population of 4,147, a 92% non-Hispanic-white share, and a median household income of $80,586 describe the district. The district's voting pattern over the last decade is most similar to that of Addison-2 State House District and Addison-3 State House District.

The state-house districts whose fingerprint — 2000–2024 trajectory, demographics, ancestry, religion — sits closest to this one, and why.

Twin score (0–100) = weighted cosine between tier-standardized fingerprints: presidential margins 2000–2024 with 12-yr trend and elasticity, ACS income, age, education, population and race, top reported ancestries, and religious adherence — chips name the closest-shared dimensions and the widest gap. Re-weight the groups in the twins explorer.

Compare two places, side by side

Twelve curated comparisons line up election history, demographics, and the divergence story for two places at a glance. Browse all comparisons →

Cite this page
All citations released under CC BY 4.0. Attribution: Akashic Intelligence.
Addison-5 State House District, Vermont. Akashic. https://akashic.app/sld-lower/50A-5/. Accessed May 20, 2026. License: CC BY 4.0.
License: CC BY 4.0
Vermont at the ballot boxAll elections →

Places within Addison-5 State House District

counties it covers1

Frequently asked questions

How did Addison-5 State House District, Vermont vote in 2024?
In 2024, Addison-5 State House District, Vermont voted Democratic by 34.5 points (D+34.5), carried by the Democratic candidate. Out of 2,674 votes cast, 1,734 went Democratic and 812 went Republican.
When did Addison-5 State House District, Vermont last vote Republican?
The most recent presidential election in which Addison-5 State House District, Vermont voted Republican was 1984.
How many people live in Addison-5 State House District, Vermont?
Addison-5 State House District, Vermont has a population of 4,147 according to the 2024 American Community Survey 5-year estimates from the US Census Bureau.
What is the median household income in Addison-5 State House District, Vermont?
Median household income in Addison-5 State House District, Vermont is $80,586 — below the national median of $80,734. The Vermont state median is $81,203.
What is the political history of Addison-5 State House District, Vermont?
Akashic tracks 38 presidential elections in Addison-5 State House District, Vermont from 1876 to 2024. Of those, 11 went Democratic and 23 went Republican.