Special Desk
Sarah McBride is going to make history to become the first transgender state senator in the US after she won in Delaware. She has beaten Republican Steve Washington to take over the seat from Democrat Harris McDowell.
McBride, 30, was a trainee in President Obama’s White House and has the experience by working as the press secretary of LGBTQ advocacy group the Human Rights Campaign. She is one of a handful of candidates who has made history in a nail-biting night across the country.
“I hope tonight shows an LGBTQ kid that our democracy is big enough for them, too,” McBride tweeted after her win. McBride is not the only transgender candidate to make history during the election. Vermont’s Taylor Small, 26, was elected to the House of Representatives, while Stephanie Byers made history in Kansas as the first trans person of colour to ever be elected to a state legislature.
In Oklahoma, Mauree Turner became the first ever non-binary candidate to win a seat in a state legislature. And in New York, Mondaire Jones and Ritchie Torres won their seats and became the first black openly LGBTQ people ever elected to Congress.
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“Mondaire and Ritchie have shattered a rainbow ceiling and will bring unique perspectives based on lived experiences never before represented in the US Congress,” Annise Parker, of the LGBTQ Victory Fund, told Pink News.
Republican Madison Cawthorn won in North Carolina to become the first member of Congress born in the 1990s. Cawthorn turned 25 – the qualifying age for Congress – in August. He faced controversy over sexual misconduct allegations during the campaign.