Come January, fewer women will be seated in the House and Senate, the first decrease in their numbers in Congress since 1978. Most, possibly all, of those losses will be Democrats. At the same time, Blue Dog Democrats may see their coalition in the House cut by a third, or deeper, with possibly more than two dozen of them defeated. How this will influence the Congressional dynamic can only be imagined. Some liberals will no doubt say "good riddance."
Without benefit of a time machine, it's easy to make a fool of oneself delivering hard-and-fast predictions. Especially so when one of the most-read analysts suggests that overall Republican gains this year could be as low as 20 or as high as 80. As he says: "[F]airly subtle shifts in the political environment between now and Nov. 2 could have relatively profound implications for the seat count."
So what follows – distilled from the wisdom and calculations of professional and amateur analysts whose perspectives I've grown to trust over the years - should be taken with all the appropriate caveats. Every election contains surprises. Honest opinions expressed to pollsters today can change by the time votes are cast. What appear to be coming defeats should therefore never be viewed as inevitable, as an excuse to give up on this or that candidate. A last-minute get-out-the-vote push has often been known to turn the tide. As we told our 140-plus precinct workers here in northeast Los Angeles Saturday, we're rapidly approaching the last minute in this cycle. All the more so with early voting under way.
First up, the Blue Dogs. If things go the way it looks right now, as few as 28 of the 54 members of the Blue Dog Coalition might be seated in the 112th Congress.
Five are leaving at the end of this term:
Marion Berry (AR-01), Bart Gordon (TN-06) and John Tanner (TN-08) aren't running. Brad Ellsworth (IN-08) and Charlie Melancon (LA-03) are running steep uphill campaigns for the Senate.
There are eight toss-up races:
Mike Arcuri (NY-24), Leonard Boswell (IA-03), Ben Chandler (KY-06), Lincoln Davis (TN-04), Gabrielle Giffords (AZ-08), Baron Hill (IN-09), Jim Marshall (GA-08) and John Salazar (CO-03) are vulnerable.
Thirteen seem headed for defeat:
Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin (SD-at-Large), Allen Boyd (FL-02), Bobby Bright (AL-02), Christopher Carney (PA-10), Travis Childers (MS-01), Kathy Dahlkemper (PA-03), Frank Kratovil (MD-01), Betsy Markey (CO-04), Walt Minnick (ID-01), Harry Mitchell (AZ-05), Dennis Moore (KS-03), Patrick J. Murphy (PA-08), Earl Pomeroy (ND-at-large).
Worst case: Minus 26.
Best case: Minus 18.
Democratic Congresswomen face far fewer losses from their ranks. They now hold 56 seats in the House. Together with the 17 Republican Congresswomen, they total 73 (excluding non-voting members from the territories and the District of Columbia). That makes for a 17 percent slice of the House (the same percentage of women as in the Senate). Unimpressive is about the most charitable description that can be offered for this state of affairs a half-century after modern feminism began and 90 years after the Constitution was amended to give women the vote. Indeed, add up all the women who have ever served in the House since Jeannette Rankin was first elected in 1916 and it amounts to slightly more than enough to fill half the chamber, a total of 222. Thirty-eight women have been Senators.
![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/http/web.archive.org/web/20101018142412im_/http:/=2fi887.photobucket.com/albums/ac74/JacksonBrown/robertson-nolan-mason.jpg) |
Left to right: Alice Robertson of Oklahoma, Mae Ella Nolan of California, and Winnifred Mason Huck of Illinois pose on the House entrance steps of the U.S. Capitol, Feb. 15, 1923.
Credit: Women in Congress
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Pitiful. The United States now
ranks 73rd, tied with Turkmenistan, for the percentage of women serving in national legislative bodies. Among the nations that can be more or less considered democracies, we're 56th. And yet 2009 was a record year for numbers of women in the Senate and House.
Women have set records in 2010 as well. In the two major political parties, 36 women (19 Democrats, 17 Republicans), filed for the Senate, beating the previous record of 29 in 1992. Fifteen (9 Democrats, 6 Republicans, including write-in candidate Lisa Murkowski of Alaska) are currently candidates in 14 states.
For the House, 262 women filed, and when the winnowing of state conventions and primaries was completed, 138 women candidates for the House emerged - 91 Democrats, 47 Republicans. Sixty-nine of them are incumbents – 54 Democrats, 15 Republicans.
That's the end of the good news for Democratic women as a whole. In a worst case scenario, they could see their numbers in the House drop by eight, in the Senate by three, a loss of 11. Best case? A net loss of five, four in the House and one in the Senate.
Contests that could go either way include Gabrielle Giffords (AZ-08) and Dina Titus (NV-03).
At greater risk are Kathy Dahlkemper (PA-03), Debbie Halvorson (IL-11), Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin (SD-at-large), Ann Kirkpatrick (AZ-01), Mary Jo Kilroy (OH-15), Suzanne Kosmas (FL-24) Betsy Markey (CO-04) and Carolyn Shea-Porter (NH-01).
Already out after losing her primary is Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (MI-13). The Democrats will keep that seat, but with a man in it. Diane Watson (CA-33) is retiring, but Karen Bass has that contest well in hand.
A defeat in all the at-risk races would run the total losses of women Democrats in the House to 11. Countering these, however, are definite pickups by Terri Sewell (AL-07) and Frederica Wilson (FL-18), a possible win by Ann Kuster (NH-02) and a probable win by Colleen Hanabusa (HI-1). So, a net loss of seven or eight at worst. If you split the difference between best and worst cases, it comes in at six losses.
As for the Senate, there's no hope for Arkansas' Blanche Lincoln. Some risk still exists for Barbara Boxer of California and Patty Murray of Washington, but both those seats seem far more secure than they did a couple of months ago.
Republican women might also see their numbers dwindle. But perhaps not. They are starting out behind in the House, having lost Mary Fallin (OK-5) to the Oklahoma governor's race and Ginny Brown-Waite (FL-5) to retirement. But Kristi Noem is poised to replace Herseth-Sandlin in South Dakota and, if Kosmas loses in Florida, it will be Sandra Adams who replaces her, a wash. In the Senate, Lisa Murkowski's fate has no certain path.
Worst case for women of both parties in the House: Minus 8. Best case: Minus 4.
Worst case for women of both parties in the Senate: Minus 3. Best case: Minus 1.
If the base numbers weren't so pathetically low, no way could either of those scenarios be called disastrous. But because we're already at 17 percent, come Nov. 3, we could very well clock in 80th on the worldwide gauge of women serving in parliaments, just below Zimbabwe.