New Democrat Coalition
The New Democrat Coalition is a congressional caucus within the United States Congress made up of centrist Democrats who support an agenda that it describes as "pro-economic growth," "pro-innovation," and "fiscally responsible."[7]
New Democrat Coalition | |
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Chair | Derek Kilmer (WA) |
Vice Chairs | Ann Kuster (NH) Scott Peters (CA) Terri Sewell (AL) Suzan DelBene (WA) |
Founded | 1997 |
Ideology | Third Way[1] |
Political position | Center[2][3][4] to center-left[5][6] |
National affiliation | Democratic Party |
International affiliation | Alliance of Democrats (until 2012) |
Colors | Blue |
Seats in House Democratic Caucus | 103 / 233
|
Seats in the House | 103 / 435
|
Website | |
newdemocratcoalition | |
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Part of a series on |
New Democrats |
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Ideology |
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Entering the 116th Congress, the New Democrat Coalition had 103 members, making it the largest ideological caucus in the Democratic Party and the second largest ideological caucus overall (after the Republican Study Committee).
Overview
The New Democrat Coalition was founded in 1997 by Representatives Cal Dooley (CA), Jim Moran (VA), and Tim Roemer (IN) as a congressional affiliate of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council.[8]
As of 2020, the caucus's issue priorities include addressing climate change, making college more affordable, bipartisanship on deficits and debt, lowering healthcare costs, passing comprehensive immigration reform, modernizing the nation's infrastructure, ensuring access to affordable housing, promoting innovation, and enacting tax reform for the middle class.[9]
In the 116th Congress, the New Democrat Coalition hosts eight task forces: Climate Change, Future of Work, Health Care, Housing, Infrastructure, National Security, Technology, and Trade.[10]
Electoral results
House of Representatives
Election year | No. of overall seats won | No. of Democratic seats | ± |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | 74 / 435 |
74 / 212 |
|
2002 | 73 / 435 |
73 / 205 |
-1 |
2004 | 74 / 435 |
74 / 202 |
+1 |
2006 | 63 / 435 |
63 / 233 |
-11 |
2008 | 59 / 435 |
59 / 257 |
-4 |
2010 | 42 / 435 |
42 / 193 |
-17 |
2012 | 53 / 435 |
53 / 201 |
+11 |
2014 | 46 / 435 |
46 / 188 |
-7 |
2016 | 61 / 435 |
61 / 194 |
+15 |
2018 | 103 / 435 |
103 / 233 |
+42 |
Chairs
- 1997–2001: Cal Dooley (CA-20), Jim Moran (VA-8), Tim Roemer (IN-3)
- 2001–2005: Jim Davis (FL-11), Ron Kind (WI-3), Adam Smith (WA-9)
- 2005–2009: Ellen Tauscher (CA-10)
- 2009–2013: Joe Crowley (NY-7)
- 2013–2017: Ron Kind (WI-3)
- 2017–2019: Jim Himes (CT-4)
- 2019–present: Derek Kilmer (WA-6)
Members
In the 116th Congress, 103 Representatives and 1 non-voting delegate of the House of Representatives currently belong to the New Democrat Coalition:[11]
Alabama
- Terri Sewell (AL-7), Vice Chair for Outreach
Arizona
- Tom O'Halleran (AZ-1)
- Ann Kirkpatrick (AZ-2)
- Greg Stanton (AZ-9)
California
- Ami Bera (CA-7), Leadership Member
- Josh Harder (CA-10)
- Jim Costa (CA-16)
- Jimmy Panetta (CA-20)
- TJ Cox (CA-21)
- Salud Carbajal (CA-24)
- Julia Brownley (CA-26)
- Adam Schiff (CA-28)
- Tony Cárdenas (CA-29)
- Pete Aguilar (CA-31), Whip
- Norma Torres (CA-35)
- Raul Ruiz (CA-36)
- Gil Cisneros (CA-39)
- Lou Correa (CA-46)
- Harley Rouda (CA-48)
- Juan Vargas (CA-51)
- Scott H. Peters (CA-52)
- Susan Davis (CA-53)
Colorado
- Jason Crow (CO-6)
- Ed Perlmutter (CO-7)
Connecticut
- Jim Himes (CT-4), Chair Emeritus
Delaware
- Lisa Blunt Rochester (DE-AL)
Florida
- Al Lawson (FL-5)
- Stephanie Murphy (FL-7)
- Darren Soto (FL-9)
- Val Demings (FL-10)
- Charlie Crist (FL-13)
- Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-23)
- Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (FL-26)
- Donna Shalala (FL-27)
Georgia
- Lucy McBath (GA-6)
- David Scott (GA-13)
Hawaii
- Ed Case (HI-1)
Illinois
- Mike Quigley (IL-05)
- Sean Casten (IL-06)
- Raja Krishnamoorthi (IL-08)
- Brad Schneider (IL-10)
- Cheri Bustos (IL-17)
- Bill Foster (IL-11)
Indiana
- André Carson (IN-7)
Iowa
- Cindy Axne (IA-3)
Kansas
- Sharice Davids (KS-3)
Louisiana
- Cedric Richmond (LA-2)
Maryland
- Anthony G. Brown (MD-4)
- David Trone (MD-6)
Massachusetts
- Lori Trahan (MA-3)
- Seth Moulton (MA-6)
- Bill Keating (MA-9)
Michigan
- Elissa Slotkin (MI-8)
- Haley Stevens (MI-11)
- Brenda Lawrence (MI-14)
Minnesota
- Angie Craig (MN-2)
- Dean Phillips (MN-3)
Nevada
- Susie Lee (NV-3)
- Steven Horsford (NV-4)
New Hampshire
- Chris Pappas (NH-1)
- Ann McLane Kuster (NH-2), Vice Chair for Communications
New Jersey
- Donald Norcross (NJ-1)
- Josh Gottheimer (NJ-5)
- Tom Malinowski (NJ-7)
- Mikie Sherrill (NJ-11), Freshman Whip
New Mexico
- Xochitl Torres Small (NM-2)
New York
- Tom Suozzi (NY-3)
- Kathleen Rice (NY-4),
- Gregory Meeks (NY-5)
- Max Rose (NY-11)
- Eliot Engel (NY-16)
- Sean Patrick Maloney (NY-18)
- Anthony Brindisi (NY-22)
- Joe Morelle (NY-25)
Oklahoma
- Kendra Horn (OK-5)
Oregon
- Kurt Schrader (OR-5)
Pennsylvania
- Brendan Boyle (PA-2)
- Madeleine Dean (PA-4)
- Chrissy Houlahan (PA-6), Freshman Leadership Representative
- Susan Wild (PA-7)
South Carolina
- Joe Cunningham (SC-1)
Tennessee
- Jim Cooper (TN-5)
Texas
- Lizzie Fletcher (TX-7)
- Vicente Gonzalez (TX-15)
- Veronica Escobar (TX-16)
- Joaquin Castro (TX-20)
- Henry Cuellar (TX-28)
- Colin Allred (TX-32)
- Marc Veasey (TX-33)
Utah
- Ben McAdams (UT-4)
Virginia
- Elaine Luria (VA-2)
- Donald McEachin (VA-4)
- Abigail Spanberger (VA-7)
- Don Beyer (VA-08)
- Jennifer Wexton (VA-10)
- Gerry Connolly (VA-11)
Washington
- Suzan DelBene (WA-01), Vice Chair for Policy Cordination
- Rick Larsen (WA-2)
- Derek Kilmer (WA-06), Chair
- Kim Schrier (WA-8)
- Adam Smith (WA-9)
- Denny Heck (WA-10)
Wisconsin
- Ron Kind (WI-3)
Former Senate New Democrat Coalition
The following Senators previously belonged to the defunct Senate New Democrat Coalition, founded in 2000.[12][13][14]
- Dianne Feinstein (CA, by 2001)
- Tom Carper (DE, by 2001)
- Bill Nelson (FL, by 2001; defeated in 2018)
- Debbie Stabenow (MI, by 2001)
- Maria Cantwell (WA, by 2001)
- Blanche Lincoln (AR, founder; defeated in 2010)
- Evan Bayh (IN, founder; retired in 2011)
- Hillary Clinton (NY, from 2001; resigned in 2009 to become Secretary of State)[15]
- Bob Graham (FL, founder; retired in 2003)
- Max Cleland (GA, from 2000; defeated in 2002)
- Zell Miller (GA, from 2001; retired in 2004)
- John Breaux (LA, from 2000; retired in 2004)
- Jean Carnahan (MO, from 2001; defeated in 2002)
- John Edwards (NC, from 2000; retired in 2004)
- Bob Kerrey (NE, from 2000; retired in 2000)
- Richard Bryan (NV, from 2000; retired in 2000)
- Chuck Robb (VA, from 2000; defeated in 2000)
- Jon Corzine (NJ, from 2004; retired in 2005)
- John Kerry (MA, from 2000; resigned in 2013 to become Secretary of State)
- Tim Johnson (SD; retired in 2014)
- Mary Landrieu (LA; defeated in 2014)
See also
References
- "What Third Way?". Retrieved October 27, 2014.
- "Meet the New House Centrists". National Review.
- Stanage, Niall (2 March 2015). "Centrist Dems ready strike against Warren wing". The Hill.
- "United House Democrats Return to Squabbling Ways". National Journal. Retrieved October 14, 2018.
- Kim, Sueng Min (March 24, 2014). "House Democrats press for immigration vote". Politico. Retrieved July 23, 2014.
- https://www.minnpost.com/national/2018/12/will-the-congressional-progressive-caucus-become-the-freedom-caucus-of-the-left/
- "About Us". New Democrat Coalition. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
- "New Democrat Coalition: More than One Fourth of the Democratic Caucus".
- "Issues". New Democrat Coalition. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
- "About Us". New Democrat Coalition. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
- "Members". New Democrat Coalition. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
- "Senate New Democrat Coalition Members" (August 2000).
- "Senate New Democrat Coalition Members" (July 2001).
- "Senate New Democrat Coalition Members" (August 2002).
- Harwood, John (July 16, 2001). "Democratic Centrists Declare Cease-Fire with Liberals to Establish United Front". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 14, 2018.
External links
- Congressional New Democrats homepage
- New Democrat Coalition Political Action Committee homepage
- DLC New Democrat Coalition page
- DLC: New Democrats Form House Coalition (March 11, 1997)
- NDC: New Democrat Coalition Adds 10 Freshmen Members To Its Ranks (January 31, 2003)
- House New Democrat Coalition Announces New Leaders, Membership for 109th (February 9, 2005)
- NDC government page