Baltimore Sun Sunday

Record 42 women look to seize Senate mandate

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MADISON, Wis. — A record number of women are running for the U.S. Senate this year, and their challenge is winning enough seats to dramatical­ly diversify a chamber long dominated by men.

Many face uphill campaigns and two Democratic incumbents among the 23 women in the Senate are seen as vulnerable in seeking re-election in November.

When GOP state Sen. Leah Vukmir of Wisconsin filed petitions Wednesday, it meant 41 Republican and Democratic women had qualified to run for the Senate — the most ever, topping the 40 in 2016. That’s according to an Associated Press analysis of data collected by the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University and candidate qualifying informatio­n released by states.

Vukmir hopes to be her party’s nominee in the November race against Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin. The incumbent became No. 42 when she filed her paperwork later Wednesday to seek re-election to her seat, one of 19 that women are vying for this year.

“I understand it’s a historic number, so I’m excited about that,” Vukmir told reporters. “But I’ve always said, I’ve never looked at that as an issue as I’ve been an elected official.”

While that total is expected to climb in coming weeks as other states reach filing deadlines, the overall impact at the ballot box could prove limited.

“It’s not going to be a huge gain,” said Dianne Bystrom, director of the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics at Iowa State University. But, she said, the Senate “is a body more open to incrementa­l changes.”

For more than two centuries, men have dominated the Senate, which has seated only 52 female members in its history. Adding women or even holding the line can mean maintainin­g pressure on the Senate to act on issues important to female voters, such as health care and family economic policies.

A potent force behind the surge in female participat­ion is the #MeToo movement, ignited by allegation­s of sexual misconduct by men in entertainm­ent, politics, journalism and other sectors. There’s also the criticism of President Donald Trump’s policies and his alleged conduct toward women.

“All of these sparks are working in different ways, and one of the giant sparks has been the #MeToo movement,” said former Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer of California, among four women elected in 1992. That tripled their Senate ranks, due in part, she said, to a backlash by female voters against the confirmati­on of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. He had been accused of sexual harassment.

In Arizona, odds are a woman will succeed retiring Republican Sen. Jeff Flake. Six women are running in the August primaries.

In Wisconsin, Baldwin could face Vukmir, who faces a competitiv­e primary in August.

In Nebraska, Republican Sen. Deb Fischer is the heavy favorite against Democratic challenger Jane Raybould.

In states that have held primaries, five women have lost.

The biggest hurdle for female candidates is the electoral map. Of the 13 Democratic women seeking re-election, four are in states that Trump won in 2016 and where he is expected to weigh in heavily.

Seen as most vulnerable are first-term Sen. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, which Trump carried by almost 36 percentage points in 2016, and second-term Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri, which Trump won by more than 18 percentage points.

In April, the Senate took a noteworthy step that reflects the changes that women in the Senate have achieved.

Senators voted to allow babies of members on the Senate floor. That change was inspired by Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., who gave birth in April. The move, she said at the time, helps “bring the Senate into the 21st century.”

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