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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>