WASHINGTON ā Voters for the first time elected two Black women to serve simultaneously in the Senate and sent an openly transgender lawmaker to Congress on Tuesday. Theyāre among historic choices in nearly a dozen races showing Americans opting for more diverse representation, even as Vice President Kamala Harris lost her own historic bid for the White House.
Delawareās Lisa Blunt Rochester and Marylandās Angela Alsobrooks prevailed in their races, doubling the number of Black women ever elected to the Senate ā from two to four. And Delaware voters elected Sarah McBride in an at-large House race, making her the first openly transgender person elevated to Congress.
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The victories come in an election year defined in part by historic firsts, even with issues such as affirmative action and LGBTQ inclusion driving deeper divisions.
āMarking these milestones does two things: One, it celebrates the increasing diversity that we are seeing in womenās political representation, whether it be in a state or nationally,ā said Kelly Dittmar, director of research at Rutgers Universityās Center for American Women and Politics.
āBut at the same time, it reminds us that we have more work to do,ā said Dittmar, noting that U.S. women overall arenāt represented equitably in elected offices and that Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans, as well as Native Americans, lag behind their share of the population.
Other historic firsts in the Senate on Tuesday include New Jerseyās Andy Kim, who became the first Asian American elected to represent the Garden State in the Senate and also the first Korean-American elected in the Senate. Republican Bernie Moreno of Ohio became the first Latino to represent the state.
Black women make history in the U.S. Senate
Never in the Senate have two Black women served at the same time. Harris was only the second Black woman and first South Asian woman to serve in the Senate, before she was elected vice president. From 2021 to 2023, the chamber was without Black female representation until California Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Laphonza Butler to a vacancy created by the death of Sen. Dianne Feinstein.
Blunt Rochester, a Democrat who currently represents the at-large congressional district of Delaware, becomes the first woman and first Black person to represent Delaware in the Senate. Alsobrooks, a Democrat and former executive of Prince Georgeās County, Maryland, is also the first Black woman to represent her state in the Senate.
āIt's remarkable to think that in two years, America will celebrate its 250th birthday,ā Alsobrooks said during a victory speech Tuesday evening. āAnd in all those years, there have been more than 2,000 people who have served in the United States Senate. Only three have looked like me.ā
āAnd so I want to salute all those who came before me, who made it possible for me to stand on this stage tonight, whose sacrifices and stories I will continue to carry with me,ā she added to cheers from supporters.
Their victories raise the number of Black members of the Senate to five, the most to serve together in history. Still, the Senateās 100 members have historically been, and continue to be, mostly white men.
āWe increased our representation of Black women in the Senate by 100%,ā said Aimee Allison, founder and president of She the People, a national organizing hub for recruiting and electing women of color in politics.
āIāve been in electoral politics for 30 years and, for the vast majority of that time, Black women have played an outsized role as voters and organizers, but had been defeated, often by fellow Democrats in primaries, because we were dismissed as being unelectable,ā Allison said.
āItās a testament to the evolution of Black women as political players in this country,ā Allison added. āSome of the things that stumped us are kind of baked into a system that have kept Black women out of the Senate. We have figured out additional paths to be successful.ā
House to get first transgender member
McBride, a Democratic state senator in Delaware, already made history in 2020 when she was elected the only openly transgender state senator in the country. That followed a rise in national recognition for McBride, who became the first transgender speaker to address a major party convention during the 2016 Democratic National Convention.
Her elevation to Congress comes as transgender issues have proven divisive in American politics. From bans on biological males playing in womenās and girlsā sports and bans on books with LGBTQ themes, to debates over gender-affirming pronouns and gender-neutral bathrooms, visibility of transgender people in politics could keep those issues at the forefront of debates about acceptance and tolerance.
After winning her primary in September, McBride said she was not running for Congress to make history, but instead āto make historic progress for Delawareans.ā
Advocates welcome progress, but note the work ahead for representation
In the 50 years since the Center for American Women and Politics began tracking gender equality and racial diversity in politics, progress often comes when Democrats do better in the election cycle.
āWe have not seen those same levels of gains in the Republican Party,ā said Kelly, the centerās research director. āItās very clear that itās kind of a one-sided story. And if we want to get to gender parity in elected office, itās going to be hard to do that on one side of the aisle, just numerically.ā
Allison said the youngest generation of future American voters may not always see racial and gender diversity as a crucial, if longstanding problems of social and economic inequality go unaddressed by their parentsā generation.
āYou canāt make an argument about representation only,ā she said. āItās hard to do that because itās not enough. The first step in creating this multiracial democracy is creating an American government that serves all people.ā