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Carol Moseley Braun, Alan Page, and Bobby Rush win their election races.
1992 (Nov 3)
Carol Moseley Braun, age forty-five, became the nation's first Black female senator when she defeated Republican Richard Williamson, a Chicago lawyer. She became the first Black American in the U.S. Senate since Republican Edward Brooke of Massachusetts lost his seat in 1979. She was the third Black to serve in the Senate and the second to come from Illinois. (Hiram R. Revels, also from Illinois, was elected in 1870 to fill the seat once occupied by Confederate president Jefferson Davis and was the first Black American in the Senate.) Braun won with 55 percent of the vote. Prior to her primary victory over incumbent Alan J. Dixon, Braun was not considered a serious threat. Her upset victory, however, set her on the path to an easy win over the Republican candidate. Braun drew support from an interracial majority. She appealed to a significant number of young voters and those who strongly believed that Clarence Thomas should not have been confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court. She even drew some Republican defectors, surveys revealed. Alan Page, a National Football League Hall of Fame defensive lineman, was elected to a six-year term on the Minnesota Supreme Court, becoming the first Black American to hold an elective statewide office in that state. Page won with 62 percent of the vote after fighting to get on the ballot following a dispute with state officials. Bobby Rush, a former Black Panther party leader who later served as deputy chairman of the Illinois Democratic Party and as a Chicago alderman, was elected to Congress. Reports by the Senate Historian, House Historian, Congressional Black Caucus, Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and Congressional Quarterly revealed that there were now more minorities in Congress. A record number of minorities ran for Congress in 1992 and won, making the House and the Senate more reflective of the nation's population than ever before in history. Early campaign returns revealed that sixty-seven of ninety-seven minority candidates claimed victory; that the twenty-six-member Black Caucus would add seventeen members; and that the fourteen-member Hispanic Caucus would add seven members. Because several minorities retired, the result would be forty Blacks in both houses and nineteen Hispanics in the House. At least one Asian American would go to the House, raising the total to six in both houses. The lone Native American, Colorado's Ben Nighthorse Campbell, won a seat in the Senate.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.