Delaware state Sen. Sarah McBride won the state’s only House seat Tuesday, NBC News projects, making her the first openly transgender person elected to Congress.

McBride, a Democrat, defeated Republican John Whalen III, taking 57.8% of the vote with 95% of the vote in.

“Tonight is a testament to Delawareans that here in our state of neighbors, we judge candidates based on their ideas and not their identities,” McBride said at Delaware’s Democratic election night celebration Tuesday night.


Advertisement


She thanked her friends and family and her late husband, Andy Cray, who died of cancer in 2014, just days after their wedding.

“My time with Andy reinforced for me a simple truth, that hope as an emotion, hope as a phenomenon, only makes sense in the face of hardship,” she said. “While at this moment in America’s history, hope sometimes feels hard to come by, we must never forget that we are the beneficiaries of seemingly impossible change.”

McBride’s key priorities for her congressional run were expanding access to affordable health care, protecting reproductive rights and increasing the minimum wage.

She told NBC News in September that her goal in Congress was to work with colleagues to break through the partisan gridlock and actually pass legislation — which she became known for during her time in Delaware’s Senate. During her first term, she helped pass universal paid family and medical leave across the state.

Jake Carpenter, 42, works in finance for a college near Lincoln, Delaware, and said he met McBride at a meet and greet in August, when he asked her, “What have you promised, and how have you done it?” She walked him through the policies she worked on in the state Senate, and “she won me over,” he said.

“I knew that she was trans, and being gay myself, I wanted to see someone like me, someone part of my community, be successful,” Carpenter said. “She’s like a hero to me.”

He knocked on dozens of doors in Sussex County, the only majority Republican county in the state, to talk to people about McBride’s platform. He said he persuaded six Republicans to vote for McBride.

He added that he’s an adviser to an LGBTQ club at the college he works for and that “for my trans students, this is a really big deal.”

Kelley Robinson, the president of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ advocacy organization, described McBride’s win as “a landmark achievement on the march toward equality.”

“This historic victory reflects not only increasing acceptance of transgender people in our society, ushered in by the courage of visible leaders like Sarah, but also her dogged work in demonstrating that she is an effective lawmaker who will deliver real results,” Robinson said in a statement, adding that HRC is proud to see McBride, who previously was the organization’s national press secretary, “reshaping the halls of Congress.”

McBride is no stranger to making history. She initially made headlines in April 2012 when she came out as trans in American University’s student newspaper at the end of her term as the student body president.

The same year, she became the first out trans woman to work in the White House when she interned with the Obama administration, according to her 2018 memoir, “Tomorrow Will Be Different: Love, Loss, and the Fight for Trans Equality.”

 

Author

  • End Time Headlines

    End Time Headlines is a Ministry that provides News and Headlines from a "Prophetic Perspective" as well as weekly podcasts to inform and equip believers of the Signs and Seasons that we are living in today.

    View all posts