With Election Day right around the corner, the future for women in politics is brighter than ever before.
In fact, 583 women ran as candidates for the U.S. House in 2020, a 22.5 percent increase from the record set two years ago. And as of now, 300 women (206 Democrats and 94 Republicans) are still in the running for the U.S. House. These races span 253 districts in 44 states.
And in the U.S. Senate, 60 women ran as candidates in 2020, a 13.2 percent increase from the record set in the last election. Some 27 women candidates are still in the running for a total of 17 seats. Of the 27 candidates, 16 are Democratic for a total of 13 seats, and 11 are Republicans running for a total of nine seats.
While experts touted 2018 as “the Year of the Woman,” 2020 clearly is as well. Notably, there has been a substantial increase of Republican women throwing their hats into congressional races.
“This trend of an increase in women candidates is continuing beyond 2018,” said Kelly Dittmar, director of Rutgers’ Center for American Women and Politics. “We’ll find out after Election Day if this also holds true when it comes to their success.”
This election cycle’s increase in women on the Republican side is great news for the future, said Dittmar. “We knew coming out of 2018 that we’d be limited in gender parity if increases happen on only one side of the aisle,” she said.
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There are also a record number of women of color running. At least 248 women of color – including women who identify as Asian or Pacific Islander (API), Black, Latina, Middle Eastern or North African (MENA), Native American, and/or multiracial – ran for the U.S. House in 2020. This number is higher than any other election year, noted Rutgers’ Center for American Women and Politics.









