Looking back over his three decades in the Senate, retiring Minority Leader Harry Reid chose to highlight one major change he witnessed.
“This place is so much better because of women,” he said in a New York Times interview announcing his departure. “Men and women are different, and they have changed the dynamic of the Senate.”
Though it’s ridiculously early to make any calls on the 2016 Senate races, the candidates that have so far declared are striking for how they too might “change the dynamic” of the Senate in at least two ways: Several women are already running or are rumored favorites, and several of them are women of color. And with Hillary Clinton all but certain to run for president in 2016, Democrats could have a chance to capitalize on the excitement around the prospect of a first female president — maybe bolstered by a reclaimed Democratic Senate with fresh female faces.
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“The Senate map could rest on the shoulders of Democratic women,” said Marcy Stech, press secretary for EMILY’s List, which works to elect Democratic women who support abortion rights. “There will be ballots across the country that will have more women on them than ever before.”
When Reid was elected in 1974, there were zero women in the Senate. Now there are 20. In 2016, their ranks could include former Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto, who is said to be looking at a run for Reid’s seat and would be the first Latina in the Senate, though the seat is by no means guaranteed to stay Democratic. (Masto, who already has a relationship with EMILY’s List, did not return msnbc’s request for comment.)
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But for all the relative progress women have made in the Senate, there is only one woman of color currently serving: Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, who is of Asian descent. The first and last black woman senator was Illinois’ Carol Moseley Braun, whose term ended in 1999. Now, another barrier breaker is expected to step forward to run in Illinois.
Rep. Tammy Duckworth, an Asian-American Iraq war veteran who lost her legs in combat, recently gave birth and has returned to the Capitol while breastfeeding, she told the Chicago Sun-Times. Duckworth is reportedly raising money to challenge sitting Republican Sen. Mark Kirk and may announce her bid soon.








