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- <text id=92TT2134>
- <title>
- Sep. 28, 1992: Revenge of the Angry Voter
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 28, 1992 The Economy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WEEK, Page 18
- NATION
- Revenge of the Angry Voter
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The latest primaries send home some more House incumbents
- </p>
- <p> Incumbancy used to provide a comfortable cushion for elected
- officials, especially members of the U.S. Congress. In the past
- four elections, House members had a re-election rate of over
- 95%. But the cushion has got rather lumpy in 1992, leaving a lot
- of sitting solons squirming in--and sometimes out of--their
- seats. Primaries in seven states around the country last Tuesday
- dumped a few more tenants of the House. The numbers were not
- sensational: two Congressmen lost their seats. But that brings
- the total of incumbents rejected in primaries so far to 19, one
- more than the previous record, set in 1946. The pattern is
- unrelenting and the message clear: If you've been in Washington
- lately, you've got a problem.
- </p>
- <p> Circumstances varied. Nine-term Democratic Representative
- Stephen Solarz of New York, a senior member of the House
- Foreign Affairs Committee, lost to Nydia Velazquez, former
- secretary of the Department of Puerto Rican Community Affairs
- in the U.S. Solarz was partly the victim of a post-Census
- reapportionment that intentionally redrew his district to
- encourage Latino representation, which it did. But Solarz was
- surely hurt by his 743 overdrafts at the House bank. In
- Massachusetts, 127 bad checks helped do in Democrat Chester
- Atkins, who lost to a former county prosecutor.
- </p>
- <p> Though 1992 was supposed to be the Year of the Woman, it
- was not to be for former vice-presidential candidate Geraldine
- Ferraro or for city comptroller Elizabeth Holtzman in New York.
- Repelled by a vicious campaign in which Holtzman accused
- Ferraro's husband of ties to organized crime and questionable
- business dealings, voters put up a man, state attorney general
- Robert Abrams, instead.
- </p>
- <p> But more often than not this year, women have been
- outsiders. And outsiders have fared well. In Washington State,
- 41-year-old Patty Murray, whose previous political experience
- amounts to one term in the state senate, cast herself as "just
- a mom in tennis shoes" and beat former seven-term Congressman
- Don Bonker for the opportunity to run against another Beltway
- insider, five-term Republican Congressman Rod Chandler, for the
- Senate seat vacated by retiring Democrat Brock Adams. Murray
- becomes the 11th woman this year to make it onto a major party
- ticket for the Senate--another record.
- </p>
- <p> Last week's winnowing brings the total number of
- Representatives who will not be returning next January to 86.
- Many more who managed to survive primary fights are still in
- jeopardy as they go into the general elections. In all, the
- House could have as many as 126 freshmen in January. How well
- these newcomers handle the complex problems bequeathed them by
- their departing predecessors is a question even more serious
- than the outcome of the vote in November.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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