Portland's 4th City Council district (Oregon)

Portland's 4th City Council district
The four districts electing members to Portland City Council. District 4 is shown in teal.
Government
 • TypeMayor-council government
 • BodyPortland City Council (Oregon)
Population
 (2023)
 • Total
164,647
Demographics
 • White74.8%
 • Hispanic7.4%
 • Asian6.6%
 • Black2.6%
 • American Indian0.6%
 • Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander0.2%
 • Other0.7%
 • Two or more races7.1%
Registration
 • Democratic57%
 • Republican8%
 • Non-affiliated voters (NAVs)29%
 • Other party5%

Portland's 4th City Council district is one of four multi-member districts electing three people to Portland City Council in Portland, Oregon. The district contains all of Portland west of the Willamette River (Northwest, Southwest, and South sextants) as well as a small area on the east side consisting of the three neighborhoods of Eastmoreland, Reed, and Sellwood-Moreland.

The district contains the neighborhoods of Arlington Heights, Arnold Creek, Ashcreek, Bridlemile (including Glencullen), Collins View, Crestwood, Downtown, Eastmoreland, Far Southwest, Forest Park, Goose Hollow, Hayhurst (including Vermont Hills), Hillsdale, Hillside, Homestead, Linnton, Maplewood, Markham, Marshall Park, Multnomah (including Multnomah Village), Northwest District (including Uptown, Nob Hill, and the Alphabet Historic District), Northwest Heights, Northwest Industrial, Old Town Chinatown, Pearl District, Reed, Sellwood-Moreland, South Burlingame, South Portland (including Corbett, Fulton, Lair Hill, Terwilliger, and the Johns Landing and South Waterfront developments), Southwest Hills, Sylvan-Highlands, and West Portland Park (including Capitol Hill).

District 4 is currently represented on Portland City Council by Olivia Clark, Mitch Green, and Eric Zimmerman. They were elected to two-year terms in 2024; after the 2026 election, all future terms will be four years.

Clark was the only member of City Council to have reached the 25% threshold for election in the first round of voting. Zimmerman is the only member of City Council to not place in the top 3 in the first round of ranked-choice voting tabulation in the 2024 election, placing 4th and only winning after the votes were fully tabulated.