State: | Michigan |
District: | 77 |
Chamber: | House of Representatives |
Representative: | Emily Dievendorf |
Party: | Democratic |
Residence: | Lansing |
Percent White: | 70.6 |
Percent Black: | 6.3 |
Percent Hispanic: | 16.8 |
Percent Asian: | 2.8 |
Percent Other Race: | 0.4 |
Percent Remainder Of Multiracial: | 3.1[1] |
Population: | 97,412[2] |
Population Year: | 2010 |
Michigan's 77th House of Representatives district (also referred to as Michigan's 77th House district) is a legislative district within the Michigan House of Representatives located in parts of Clinton, Eaton, Ingham counties.[3] The district was created in 1965, when the Michigan House of Representatives district naming scheme changed from a county-based system to a numerical one.[4]
Representative | Party | Dates | Residence | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quincy P. Hoffman | bgcolor= | Republican | 1965–1980 | Applegate | [5] | ||
Keith Muxlow | bgcolor= | Republican | 1981–1982 | Brown City | [6] | ||
Richard D. Allen | bgcolor= | Republican | 1983–1992 | Fairgrove | Lived in Caro until around 1987.[7] | ||
Harold J. Voorhees Sr. | bgcolor= | Republican | 1993–1998 | Grand Rapids | Lived in Wyoming until around 1997.[8] | ||
Joanne Voorhees | bgcolor= | Republican | 1999–2004 | Wyoming | Lived in Grandville until around 2003.[9] | ||
Kevin Green | bgcolor= | Republican | 2005–2010 | Wyoming | [10] | ||
Thomas Hooker | bgcolor= | Republican | 2011–2016 | Byron Center | Lived in Wyoming from around 2013 to 2014.[11] | ||
Tommy Brann | bgcolor= | Republican | 2017–2022 | Byron Center | [12] | ||
Emily Dievendorf | bgcolor= | Democratic | 2023–present | Lansing | [13] |