U.S. House of Representatives (2013–2019)
Elections ;2012 After
Sue Myrick announced her retirement as the
Representative of
North Carolina's 9th congressional district in early 2012, Pittenger announced that he would run to replace her. He failed to win the primary outright on May 8, 2012, but finished first with 32% of the vote in the 11-candidate field. In the primary runoff election held on July 17, he defeated former
Mecklenburg County Sheriff Jim Pendergraph, 53%–47%. Pittenger won the general election on November 6, defeating Democratic Mecklenburg County Commission Chairwoman
Jennifer Roberts, 52%–47%. He lost the district's share of Mecklenburg County (47%), but ran up huge margins in the
Union (63%) and
Iredell (64%) portions of the district. It was the closest a Republican had come to losing the district since 1986. He took office in January 2013. On December 2, 2013, Pittenger introduced the
Kilah Davenport Child Protection Act of 2013, which became . The law broadens the coverage of current laws that address domestic assaults by certain repeat offenders. It also requires the
United States Department of Justice to write a report on
child abuse prevention laws in all U.S. states and territories, "with a particular focus on penalties for cases of severe child abuse." ;2014 Pittenger considered
running for the U.S. Senate but instead ran for reelection to the House. In the Republican primary, he defeated Michael Steinberg, a candidate for the seat
in 2012. No Democrat filed to run for the seat, making this district the only one in the state not contested by both major parties in 2014. There was an unsuccessful write-in campaign for candidate Shawn Eckles of Iredell County. ;2016 The 9th was significantly redrawn after a federal court threw out the previous map as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. It was pushed well to the east, stretching from southeast Charlotte all the way to
Fayetteville and the Sandhills. Baptist pastor
Mark Harris challenged Pittenger in the 2016 Republican congressional primary, losing that contest by 134 votes. with 48.5 percent of the vote to Pittenger's 46.2 percent, although allegations were later raised about illegal activities by the Harris campaign. Pittenger was the first congressional incumbent to lose his primary election in 2018; the second was
Mark Sanford. Harris was the apparent winner in the
November 2018 general election, but the result was not certified due to credible allegations of electoral fraud and he was never seated in Congress. As a result, a new
special election was called. Pittenger (and also Harris) declined to run in the special election.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Financial Services •
Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit •
Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade •
Republican Study Committee Caucus memberships •
United States Congressional International Conservation Caucus •
U.S.-Japan Caucus ==Political positions==