By the Numbers: City District 6 has lost 1,600 Black voters since 2012

The News Journal’s analysis of the chaotic Fricker Center town hall prompted me to examine the City of Pensacola’s voter registration statistics. In our archives, I found the voter demographics as of July 31, 2012.

The City had 36,159 registered voters on that date—74% White, 19% Black and 7% Other. As of June 30, 2025, Pensacola has added 4,543 voters and has seen its demographics shift.

City of Pensacola 7/31/12 6/30/25
White 25558 70.7%               29,787 73.2%
Black 8605 23.8%                  7,503 18.4%
Other 1,996 5.5%                  3,412 8.4%
Total 36159               40,702

 

The most significant loss of Black voters has been in District 6, which covers downtown Pensacola — down 1,582 Black voters since July 2012.

Percentage Black Voters
7/31/12 6/30/25 Black Voters Lost
District 1 6.7% 6.0%  (21)
District 2 19.0% 17.4% 192
District 3 3.0% 3.4% 41
District 4 2.9% 3.5% 49
District 5 51.3% 45.6% 33
District 6 46.8% 12.2% (1,582)
District 7 52.0% 44.1% 186

Meanwhile, Escambia County has added nearly 36K voters – White 19,768, Black 5,585 and Other 10,667.  The percentage of Black voters decreased by less than 1%, while the percentage of Other voters jumped by 3.7%. The percentage of White voters dropped 3.1%.

Of Escambia County’s voter growth since July 2012, only 12.6% has been inside the city limits. About one of every five new White voters has moved into the City of Pensacola – 21.4%

Escambia County 7/31/12 6/30/25 Total Voters % Change
White          138,856          158,602             19,746 -3.1%
Black             36,052             41,637                5,585 -0.6%
Other             12,957             23,624             10,667 3.7%
Total          187,865          223,863             35,998 0.0%

 

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Author: Rick Outzen

Rick Outzen is the publisher/owner of Pensacola Inweekly. He has been profiled in The New York Times and featured in several True Crime documentaries. Rick also is the author of the award-winning Walker Holmes thrillers. His latest nonfiction book is “Right Idea, Right Time: The Fight for Pensacola’s Maritime Park.”