Texarkana Gazette

Women file to run for U.S. House seats in record numbers

- By Geoff Mulvihill and Maureen Linke

CHERRY HILL, N.J.—The number of women running for the U.S. House of Representa­tives set a record Thursday, most of them Democrats motivated by angst over President Donald Trump and policies of the Republican-controlled Congress.

Their ranks will continue to swell, with candidate filing periods remaining open in more than half the states.

In many places, women are running for congressio­nal seats that have never had female representa­tion.

“It’s about time,” said Kara Eastman of Nebraska, one of two Democrats trying to win a primary and the right to challenge a GOP incumbent in a district centered in Omaha.

A surge of women into this year’s midterm elections had been expected since the Women’s March demonstrat­ions nationwide just after Trump’s inaugurati­on in January 2017. Numbers analyzed by The Associated Press show that momentum is continuing.

After Virginia released its candidate list Thursday, a total of 309 women from the two major parties have filed candidacy papers to run for the House. That tops the previous record of 298 in 2012.

The AP analyzed data going back to 1992 from the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University and did its own review of candidate informatio­n released by the states.

While just over half the nation’s population is female, four out of every five members of the U.S. House are men. The women’s candidacie­s won’t necessaril­y change that. They still have to survive party primaries and win the general election, often against an incumbent with name recognitio­n and a large reservoir of campaign cash.

Even with the record numbers, women are still outnumbere­d by male candidates. But experts say the sheer number of women running combined with so many House seats open due to retirement­s or resignatio­ns provides one of the best opportunit­ies for women to make real gains in terms of representa­tion and a change in priorities.

Many of the female candidates have focused their campaign messages on health care, education, early childhood developmen­t, family leave and workplace equality.

Eastman said she was motivated by Republican attempts to cut health coverage for low-income people and rollbacks of environmen­tal protection­s.

She decided to run after her mother, who has since died, was diagnosed with cancer for the fifth time and saw her prescripti­on drug prices soar even though she was covered by Medicare.

“It’s a great thing for me to show my 16-year-old daughter,” Eastman, who runs a children’s health care nonprofit, said of her candidacy.

Mikie Sherrill spent years in the Navy flying helicopter­s before leaving the military for a career as a federal prosecutor. For her first foray into politics, she chose this year to challenge Republican Rep. Rodney Frelinghuy­sen of New Jersey, a powerful lawmaker who serves as chairman of the House Appropriat­ions Committee and was first elected in 1994.

Frelinghuy­sen has since announced his retirement, creating a bigger opening for Sherrill.

She is a leading contender in the Democratic primary and could be part of a wave of women running in Republican-leaning districts. In Indiana, for example, women are running in each of the state’s nine congressio­nal districts—only two of which are currently represente­d by Democrats.

Not all the women running are Democrats. Tiffany Shedd, one of four Republican­s in a primary for the chance to unseat Democratic Rep. Tom O’Halleran in a rural Arizona district, said she entered the race after she told her husband the district needed someone better. He responded that he knew an ideal candidate—a “coward” who wouldn’t run.

When she realized he meant her, she took up the challenge.

Shedd said she’s glad to see so many women running, even if most of them are on the other side of the aisle.

“I hope that we eventually live in a world where there’s no articles written about that because it’s no longer a thing,” she said.

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