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Number of Women in the US House of Representatives

Number of Women in the US House of Representatives

At the beginning of the 111th Congress in 2009, there were 75 women who were representatives in the US House and three women who are non-voting delegates representing Washington, DC, Guam and the Virgin Islands.  There are now 73 women who are representatives as a result of Kirsten Gillibrand becoming a US Senator representing New York State and Ellen O. Tauscher becoming undersecretary of state for arms control and international security.

Click on the links for additional information on African-American women, Latinas, and women of Asian / Pacific Islander descent.  Click here for a complete listing of all women who ever served in the US House of Representatives.

US House - 73 Women Representatives from 28 States:

56 Democrats, 17 Republicans

State

  District

Representative

Arizona

001Ann Kirkpatrick (Dem)

008Gabrielle Giffords (Dem)

California

005

Doris Matsui (Dem)

006

Lynn Woolsey (Dem)

008

Nancy Pelosi (Dem)

009

Barbara Lee (Dem)

012Jackie Speier (Dem)

014

Anna Eshoo (Dem)

016

Zoe Lofgren (Dem)

023

Lois Capps (Dem)

032Judy Chu (Dem)

033

Diane Watson (Dem)

034

Lucille Roybal-Allard (Dem)

035

Maxine Waters (Dem)

036

Jane Harman (Dem)

037Laura Richardson (Dem)

038

Grace Napolitano (Dem)

039

Linda Sanchez (Dem)

045

Mary Bono Mack (Rep)

047

Loretta Sanchez (Dem)

053

Susan Davis (Dem)

Colorado

001 

Diana DeGette (Dem)

004

Betsy Markey (Dem)

Connecticut

003

Rosa DeLauro (Dem)

Florida

003

Corrine Brown (Dem)

005

Virginia (Ginny) Brown-Waite (Rep)

011Kathy Castor (Dem)

018

Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (Rep)

020

Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Dem)

024Suzanne Kosmas (Dem)

Hawaii

002Mazie Hirono (Dem)

Illinois

008

Melissa Bean (Dem)

009

Jan Schakowsky (Dem)

011Debbie Halvorson (Dem)

013

Judy Biggert (Rep)

Kansas

002Lynn Jenkins (Rep)

Maine

001Chellie Pingree (Dem)

Maryland

004Donna Edwards (Dem)

Massachusetts

005Niki Tsongas (Dem)

Michigan

010

Candice Miller (Rep)

013

Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Dem)

Minnesota

004

Betty McCollum (Dem)

006Michele Bachmann (Rep)

Missouri

008

Jo Ann Emerson (Rep)

Nevada

001

Shelley Berkley (Dem)

003Dina Titus (Dem)

New Hampshire

001Carol Shea-Porter (Dem)

New York

004

Carolyn McCarthy (Dem)

011Yvette Clarke (Dem)

012

Nydia Velazquez (Dem)

014

Carolyn Maloney (Dem)

018

Nita Lowey (Dem)

028

Louise Slaughter (Dem)

North Carolina

005

Virginia Foxx (Rep)

009

Sue Myrick (Rep)

Ohio

002

Jean Schmidt (Rep)

009

Marcy Kaptur (Dem)

011Marcia Fudge (Dem)
013Betty Sutton (Dem)

015

Mary Jo Kilroy (Dem)

Oklahoma

005Mary Fallin (Rep)

Pennsylvania

003Kathy Dahlkemper (Dem)

013

Allyson Schwartz (Dem)

South Dakota

at large

Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (Dem)

Tennessee

007

Marsha Blackburn (Rep)

Texas

012

Kay Granger (Rep)

018

Sheila Jackson Lee (Dem)

030

Eddie Bernice Johnson (Dem)

Washington

005

Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Rep)

West Virginia

002

Shelley Moore Capito (Rep)

Wisconsin

002

Tammy Baldwin (Dem)

004

Gwen Moore (Dem)

Wyoming

at large

Cynthia Lummis (Rep)

Sources: Center for American Women in Politics (CAWP), Rutgers University, Women in the 111th Congress, www.house.gov, Women in the US Congress report

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in Government and Democracy

 

Equal Representation –The Essence of Democracy                       Updated 2010-03-14