City
Epaper

Record number of women to serve in the next US Congress

By ANI | Updated: November 6, 2020 05:10 IST

A record number of women are slated to serve in the next Congress, as enough female candidates have secured victories this week, while the vote counting for many congressional races continues.

Open in App

A record number of women are slated to serve in the next Congress, as enough female candidates have secured victories this week, while the vote counting for many congressional races continues.

According to figures released on Thursday afternoon by Rutgers University's Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP), which tracks women's political participation in the US, at least 131 women, made up of 100 Democrats and 31 Republicans, will serve in the 117th Congress, reported The Hill.

The number is a small jump from the record set by the current Congress, which began with 127 women at the start of 2019.

So far 106 female candidates, including 83 Democrats and 23 Republicans have won their races in the House of Representatives, which surpassed the record of 102 women who were elected to the House for the current Congress, according to CAWP. However, this number could change soon, since 29 races have been not yet been called.

According to The Hill, this year witnessed a record of 583 women running for the House, which is more than 20 per cent from the high set in 2018, which saw 476 women running. Although the record in 2018 was largely due to Democratic women, the spike this year was partly driven by Republican women, while the Democratic women maintained their high numbers from two years back.

Meanwhile, for the Senate, CAWP stated that only 25 women are set to serve in the chamber next year as of Thursday afternoon, which includes 17 Democrats and eight Republicans. However, that number could also drop, pending Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris's and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden's outcome in the election.

The record for women to serve in the Senate was set during the current Congress, with 26 women, according to CAWP.

"Advances for women must come from both sides of the aisle if women are to achieve equal representation in Congress," The Hill quoted Debbie Walsh, director of the political unit.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsIPL 2025: Sunil Narine’s brilliant all-round show helps KKR edge DC by 14 runs

International‘Pahalgam incident deeply disturbing & tragic’: Former Pakistan PM Imran Khan

CricketCricket, MMA confirmed for Asian Games 2026 in Japan

CricketPBKS' Prabhsimran reveals perspective-changing advice from Sachin during his initial IPL years

CricketIPL 2025: Sunil Narine, Varun Chakravarthy Guide KKR to 14-Run Win Over Delhi Capitals, End Losing Streak (Watch Video)

International Realted Stories

InternationalSweden Mass Shooting: 3 Killed, Multiple Injured in Uppsala Attack

InternationalGuterres calls EAM Jaishankar, Pak PM Sharif; stresses pursuing justice in Pahalgam terror attack

InternationalBob Blackman condemns Pahalgam attack, urges UK govt to support India in its steps to eliminate terrorism

International"Only way to solve Kashmir problem is for India to go and take PoK": Indian-origin UK politician

InternationalWHO reinforces commitment to protect children from vaccine-preventable diseases