Historic Number of Women in the 113Th Congress

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Historic Number of Women in the 113Th Congress America Turns the Page: Historic Number of Women in the 113th Congress While we are very sad to let go of some true allies like Senators Olympia Snowe and Kay Bailey Hutchison, we are also thrilled to welcome the history-making women of the 113th Congress. The next Congress will have 102 female Members, including 20 female Senators, the most ever in the history of America. Joining the Senate will be Republican Deb Fischer (NE) and Democrats Tammy Baldwin (WI), Heidi Heitkamp (ND), Mazie Hirono (HI) and Elizabeth Warren (MA). All six Democratic incumbents- Senators Maria Cantwell (WA), Dianne Feinstein (CA), Kirsten Gillibrand (NY), Amy Klobuchar (MN), Claire McCaskill (MO) and Debbie Stabenow (MI) won their races. This was also an historic election for women of color. More than half of Asian Americans elected to the 113th Congress are women - including Mazie Hirono (D-HI), who is only the second woman of color and the only Asian American woman ever elected to the Senate. In the House, Grace Meng (D) will become New York’s first Asian American member of Congress, and Iraq War veteran Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) the first American Samoan elected as a voting member of Congress. They will both join Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), a Thai-born, double amputee war hero. Among Latinas, Congresswoman-elect Michele Lujan Grisham became the first Hispanic woman elected representative from New Mexico. Click here http://www.nationaljournal.com/congress-legacy/the-new-faces-of-the-113th-congress- 20121105 to see the new faces of the 113th Congress. th Below is a list of all women elected to the 113 Congress in the U.S. House Representatives Alabama ▪ Judy Chu (D) ▪ Martha Roby (R) ▪ Grace Napolitano (D) ▪ Terri Sewell (D) ▪ Gloria Negrete McLeod (D) ▪ Karen Bass (D) Arizona ▪ Linda Sanchez (D) ▪ Ann Kirkpatrick (D) ▪ Lucille Roybal-Allard (D) ▪ Martha McSally (R) ▪ Maxine Waters (D) ▪ Kyrsten Sinema (D) ▪ Janice Hahn (D) ▪ Loretta Sanchez (D) California ▪ Susan Davis (D) ▪ Doris Matsui (D) ▪ Nancy Pelosi (D) Colorado ▪ Barbara Lee (D) ▪ Diana DeGette (D) ▪ Jackie Speier (D) ▪ Anna Eshoo (D) Connecticut ▪ Zoe Lofgren (D) ▪ Rosa DeLauro (D) ▪ Lois Capps (D) ▪ Elizabeth Esty (D) ▪ Julia Brownley (D) Florida New York ▪ Corrine Brown (D) ▪ Carolyn McCarthy (D) ▪ Kathy Castor (D) ▪ Nydia Velazquez (D) ▪ Lois Frankel (D) ▪ Yvette Clarke (D) ▪ Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D) ▪ Nita Lowey (D) ▪ Frederica Wilson (D) ▪ Louise Slaughter (D) ▪ Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R) North Carolina Hawaii ▪ Renee Ellmers (R) ▪ Colleen Hanabusa (D) ▪ Virginia Foxx (R) ▪ Tulsi Gabbard (D) Ohio Illinois ▪ Joyce Beatty (D) ▪ Tammy Duckworth (D) ▪ Marcy Kaptur (D) ▪ Jan Schakowsky (D) ▪ Marcia Fudge (D) ▪ Cheri Bustos (D) Oregon Indiana ▪ Suzanne Bonamici (D) ▪ Jackie Walorski (R) ▪ Susan Brooks (R) Pennsylvania ▪ Bob Brady (D) Kansas ▪ Chaka Fattah (D) ▪ Lynn Jenkins (R) ▪ Mike Kelly (R) ▪ Scott Perry (R) Maine ▪ Allyson Schwartz (D) ▪ Chellie Pingree (D) South Dakota Maryland ▪ Kristi Noem (R) ▪ Donna Edwards (D) Tennessee Massachusetts ▪ Diane Black (R) ▪ Niki Tsongas (D) ▪ Marsha Blackburn (R) Michigan Texas ▪ Candice Miller (R) ▪ Kay Granger (R) ▪ Kerry Bentivolio (R) ▪ Sheila Jackson Lee (D) Minnesota Washington ▪ Betty McCollum (D) ▪ Suzan DelBene (D) ▪ Michele Bachmann (R) ▪ Jamie Herrera Beutler (R) ▪ Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R) Missouri ▪ Lacy Clay (D) West Virginia ▪ Ann Wagner (R) ▪ Shelley Moore Capito (R) ▪ Vicky Hartzler (R) ▪ Jo Ann Emerson (R) Wisconsin ▪ Gwen Moore (D) Nevada ▪ Dina Titus (D) Wyoming ▪ Cynthia Lummis (R) New Hampshire ▪ Carol Shea-Porter (D) ▪ Ann McLane Kuster (D) New Mexico ▪ Michelle Lujan Grisham (D) .
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