Preliminary Results: Women Candidates in the 2020 Elections
- At least 101 (79D, 22R) women will serve in the U.S. House (current record: 102 set in 2019), including 43 (42D, 1R) women of color. Women will be at least 23.2% of all members of the U.S. House. Women are currently 23.2% of House members in 2020.
- 25 (17D, 8R) women will serve in the U.S. Senate (current record: 26 set in 2020), including 4 (4D) women of color. Women will at least be 25% of all members of the Senate. Women are currently 26% of all members of the Senate. If Biden wins the presidency and Kamala Harris leaves the Senate, 24 (16D, 8R) women will serve in the Senate, making up 24% of all members. Senator Kelly Loeffler has advanced to a runoff in the special election for the seat she was previously appointed to that will take place after the new Congress is sworn in.
- At least 43 (42D, 1R) women of color will serve in the U.S. House (current record: 44 set in 2019).
At least 87 (48D, 37R, 2NP) women will serve in statewide elected executive office, including governor, in 2021. This includes 15 (13D, 2R) women of color. Women will be at least 28.1% of all statewide elected executive officials. Women currently hold 28.9% of these positions in 2020. As of now, there are 12 undecided races for statewide elected executive office that feature women candidates.
In 2020, 7 (2D, 5R) women have won races for the U.S. Senate. With the presidential race still undecided, and the status of Kamala Harris's seat thus unclear, there will either be 17 or 18 incumbent senators that did not face re-election in 2020 in the 117th Congress. When combined with those 17 or 18 incumbent women senators, 24 or 25 women, including 16 or 17 Democrats and 8 Republicans, will serve in the Senate in the 117th Congress. The current record for women serving in the U.S. Senate is 26, set in 2019. Senator Kelly Loeffler has advanced to a runoff in the special election for the seat she was previously appointed to that will take place after the new Congress is sworn in.
- 6 (2D, 4R) incumbent women Senators won re-election this year. One (1R) incumbent woman Senator has been defeated: Martha McSally (R-AZ).
- 1 (1R) non-incumbent woman was elected to the U.S. Senate, Cynthia Lummis, R-WY. No women unseated Senate incumbents this year.
- At least 81 (71D, 10R) women House incumbents won re-election this year; 5 (5D) women House incumbents were defeated: Abby Finkenauer, Kendra Horn, Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, Donna Shalala, and Xochitl Torres Small. All five are freshman legislators who flipped party control of their districts from Republican to Democrat in the 2018 midterms.
- Of the 20 (8D,12R) non-incumbent women House winners thus far, 14 (8D, 6R) won open seats and 6 (6R) defeated incumbents. In 2021, at least 12 Republican women will join the incoming class of new House members in the 117th Congress, surpassing the previous record of 9, set in 2010, and greatly improving over 2018, in which a lone Republican non-incumbent joined the House.
- Missouri will send its first woman of color and first Black woman to the U.S. Congress (Bush).
- Washington state will send its first Black woman to the U.S. Congress (Strickland).
- At least two states will send their first Republican women to the House: Iowa (Hinson) and South Carolina (Mace).
No women were elected to gubernatorial offices in 2020. In 2021, nine states will be led by women governors, as 9 (6D, 3R) current incumbent women governors were not up for re-election this year. Twenty states remain that have never had a woman governor.