CHALLENGECD-9Held by RepublicanCD-9

Brad A. Meyer (D)Coalition Info Pack — Southern Indiana

Bartholomew · Brown · Clark · Dearborn · Decatur · Floyd · Franklin · Harrison · Jackson · Jefferson · Jennings · Lawrence · Monroe · Ohio · Ripley · Scott · Switzerland · Washington
IN-Index+27.2R
IncumbentErin Houchin (R)
TierCHALLENGE
Research DateMay 2026
District Identity

Southern Indiana's CD-9 stretches from Clark-Floyd's Louisville suburbs through Monroe's university economy to some of Indiana's most rural and economically distressed counties — Scott, Jackson, and Lawrence chief among them.

Strategy Note

Challenge race. Force Republican spending, build infrastructure, raise the floor for future cycles.

+27.2R
IN-Index — significant effort needed
+30.4R
2024 Pres margin in this district
+30.8R
2022 Result margin in this district
+20.5R
2020 Result margin in this district
+20.5R
2026 Primary margin in this district
↑ Trending R
2020→2024 partisan trend in this district
1
Opioid Crisis & Recovery Infrastructure
Scott, Jackson, and Lawrence counties have some of the highest opioid death rates in Indiana
StateLocal

Southern Indiana's opioid crisis has been documented, devastating, and insufficiently addressed. Scott County gained national attention in 2015 for an HIV outbreak driven by needle-sharing. Jackson, Lawrence, and other CD-9 counties continue to see high overdose mortality rates. Rural communities often lack inpatient treatment, recovery housing, and peer support programs.

Scott Co.
Scott County gained national attention for a 2015 HIV outbreak — a consequence of the opioid crisis that could have been prevented
Settlement
Indiana's opioid settlement funds provide hundreds of millions for recovery — but rural access is uneven
60+ mi
Drive time for many Southern Indiana rural residents to access inpatient addiction treatment
Candidate Talking Points
  • The opioid crisis in Southern Indiana is not an abstraction — it's families watching their children, siblings, and neighbors die of preventable overdoses. Indiana's settlement funds are a real opportunity to build recovery infrastructure.
  • Naloxone access, peer recovery support, and harm reduction programs save lives between active addiction and recovery. Southern Indiana communities need this infrastructure.
2
Rural Hospital Closures & Healthcare Desert
Southern Indiana's rural communities are losing hospital access faster than they can replace it
StateLocal

CD-9 encompasses counties where critical access hospital survival is uncertain. Washington, Scott, Lawrence, and Orange counties have hospitals operating on thin financial margins. Obstetric care deserts are expanding — Indiana's maternal mortality rate is highest in rural counties.

OB Deserts
Multiple CD-9 counties have no practicing OB/GYN — pregnant women must travel long distances for care
45–90 min
Emergency care drive time for residents of some CD-9 rural counties after local ER hours reduction
Maternal
Indiana rural maternal mortality rate significantly exceeds the urban rate
Candidate Talking Points
  • A county without an OB/GYN is a maternal health emergency. Pregnant women in Lawrence and Orange County deserve the same access to prenatal care as women in Indianapolis.
  • Rural hospital closures are a policy choice — the result of decades of underfunding and inadequate Medicaid reimbursement rates. They can be reversed.
3
Agricultural Economy & Trade
Southern Indiana farm country is watching commodity markets shift under tariff pressure
FederalLocal

Agricultural counties of CD-9 — Bartholomew, Decatur, Jennings, Jackson, and Dubois — are major grain and livestock producers. Dubois County is nationally significant for poultry production. Tariff disruptions to export markets affect commodity prices and farm operating margins across the district.

Dubois
Dubois County is one of Indiana's largest poultry producing counties — sensitive to trade and input cost disruptions
Top 5
Indiana's national ranking in soybean and corn production — CD-9's agricultural counties contribute significantly
Candidate Talking Points
  • Southern Indiana farm families are not insulated from trade war disruption. When export markets close and input costs rise simultaneously, operating margins disappear. That's what's happening right now.
4
Broadband Infrastructure
Southern Indiana has some of the state's most persistent rural internet deserts
StateFederal

CD-9's rural counties — Brown, Orange, Crawford, Switzerland, Ohio, Perry — have some of the worst broadband access in Indiana. Mountainous terrain in Brown and Crawford counties creates physical deployment challenges. Rural households without reliable internet face compounding disadvantages in education, healthcare access, and economic participation.

Brown Co.
Brown County's terrain creates significant broadband deployment challenges — one of Indiana's most connectivity-disadvantaged counties
BEAD
Federal broadband funding exists but Southern Indiana's terrain creates higher costs and longer timelines
Candidate Talking Points
  • Students in Brown County, Crawford County, and Orange County should not have to drive to a McDonald's parking lot for WiFi to do their homework. This is an infrastructure emergency.
5
Property Taxes & SEA 1
Southern Indiana families are watching tax bills change under SEA 1 with limited clarity on what it means
StateLocal

SEA 1's homestead deduction restructuring affects CD-9's communities in complex ways. Clark and Floyd counties — part of the Louisville metropolitan area — have seen significant property value appreciation. The more rural Southern Indiana counties have had more modest changes but depend heavily on property tax revenue for schools and local services.

SEA 1
2025 property tax reform — different implications for Louisville-suburb counties vs. rural Southern Indiana townships
Clark/Floyd
Clark and Floyd counties' property market is influenced by Louisville metro dynamics — distinct from the rest of CD-9
Candidate Talking Points
  • Southern Indiana families in Clark and Floyd counties are experiencing something very different from families in rural Washington or Crawford County. Property tax policy needs to honestly account for that.

How to Frame This Race

This is an OPPORTUNITY district — challenging but worth contesting hard. A strong, well-resourced campaign forces the Republican incumbent to spend time and money defensively, builds Democratic infrastructure for future cycles, and raises the coalition's vote ceiling.