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Massachusetts: Tenth District
Rep. Bill Delahunt (D)
Last Updated June 22, 2005

Rep. Bill Delahunt (D)
Elected 1996,
5th term
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| Born: |
July 18, 1941,
Quincy
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| Home: |
Quincy
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| Education: |
Middlebury Col., B.A. 1963, Boston Col., J.D. 1967
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| Religion: |
Catholic
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| Marital Status: |
divorced
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Elected
Office: |
Quincy City Cncl., 1971; MA House of Reps., 1972-75.
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| Military Career: |
Coast Guard, 1963; Coast Guard Reserves, 1963-71.
|
| Professional Career: |
Practicing atty., 1967-75; Asst. Clerk, Norfolk Superior Court, 1969-71; Norfolk Cnty. Dist. Atty., 1975-96.
|
| DC Office |
2454 RHOB20515,
202-225-3111; Fax: 202-225-5658; Web site: www.house.gov/delahunt |
| State Offices |
Hyannis,
508-771-0666; Quincy, 617-770-3700. |
| Additional Info |
Committees ·
Ratings ·
Key Votes ·
Election Results
District Demographics
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| More On Massachusetts |
At A Glance ·
State Profile
District Map
Redistricting ·
Almanac Home
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| Recent News Coverage |
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Search the CongressDaily, Hotline, House Race Hotline, National Journal and Technology Daily archives using the form above:
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The South Shore of Massachusetts Bay, from Boston southward to Plymouth and then down Cape Cod (there is a lot of dispute about which way is up and down on the Cape), is Massachusetts's oldest-settled territory. The Pilgrims landed here at Plymouth Rock in 1620; this stony land was farmed by John Adams's father, who was anything but the aristocrat some later members of the Adams family would have had you believe. Daniel Webster lived in the South Shore town of Marshfield, today a high-income suburb of Boston far out on the usually clogged Southeast Expressway. Joseph P. Kennedy used to summer with his young family on Nantasket Beach in Hull, before moving out of Massachusetts when the Yankees wouldn't let them into their beach club in Cohasset in the 1920s; but the Kennedys continue to summer at their Hyannis Port compound on the Cape. Provincetown, at the tip of the Cape, is still a fishing port, one of the major gay vacation areas in the country, and increasingly a year-round mecca; the islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, rich whaling ports in the early 19th century, are now favored summer resorts for the trendy liberal rich of Boston, New York and Washington. Half the nation's cranberry growers are clustered among the bogs along Cape Cod Bay. But the Cape is also filled with retirees and, to the dismay of some, is the fastest-growing part of Massachusetts; the Cape's Barnstable County grew 19% in the 1990s.
The 10th Congressional District of Massachusetts follows the South Shore from Quincy (pronounced quinzee) to the Cape. It juts inland almost, but not quite to Brockton, and includes Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, where the glitterati have generated a "not in my backyard" fury over a proposed windmill farm in the nearby channel waters. The South Shore and the Cape were once exclusively Protestant and Yankee, but in the Massachusetts way they have changed over the years, with Irish and Italian surnames as common as Yankee ones (this is the nation's most heavily Irish congressional district), and the descendants of Portuguese-Azorean fishermen have fanned out into the countryside. Liberal politics, well established on the Vineyard and Nantucket, have spread inland as well. The South Shore is generally Democratic territory, but in 2002 Republican Mitt Romney carried the area; in 2004 George W. Bush fell well short of John Kerry there.
The congressman from the 10th District is Bill Delahunt, a Democrat first elected in 1996. Delahunt is a lifelong resident of Quincy at the northern tip of the district; he graduated from Middlebury College and Boston College Law School and served in the Coast Guard. He practiced law and served on the Quincy Council. In 1972, he was elected to the state House; Governor Michael Dukakis in 1975 appointed him district attorney of Norfolk County, a job that Delahunt held for two decades. He ran for the House in 1996 when 24-year incumbent Gerry Studds retired and faced serious primary competition from former state Representative Philip Johnston and self-financed environmentalist Ian Bowles. The initial results showed 38% each for Delahunt and Johnston, with Johnston ahead by 266 votes; a recount declared Johnston still ahead by 175 votes. But Delahunt sued, and on October 4, a judge ruled that more than 900 punch card votes in Weymouth had not been properly tabulated. In shades of another election challenge four years later, the judge ordered a recount of every ballot with an indentation, dimple or other mark: Only in this district and in 14 counties in Texas had dimpled chads ever been counted as votes in the U.S. until the Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade County canvassing boards started counting them in November 2000. On October 10, Delahunt was declared the winner by 108 votes, even as Johnston was being hailed at a Quincy rally by Ted Kennedy and Hillary Rodham Clinton. (Subsequently, Massachusetts eliminated punch card voting, and Delahunt voiced support for hand recounts of punch cards elsewhere). Johnston called the result a "travesty," and Delahunt had less than a month to campaign for the general against conservative state House Minority Leader Edward Teague. Both ran million-dollar campaigns, but Teague had been running ads against Johnston. Eight years earlier, George H. W. Bush carried this district over Michael Dukakis, but reaction here to the new Republican majority in the House was hostile; Delahunt won 54%-42%.
Delahunt has been an active legislator, and has kept a pledge to wear Cape Cod ties in the House and hand them out to colleagues of both parties. As the father of an adopted daughter who escaped Vietnam in the 1975 Operation Babylift, he has written laws to ease international adoptions. His positions on abortion are part of Massachusetts's move to the left: In 1974 as a state legislator he called Roe v. Wade "a tragic decision," but he switched to a pro-abortion rights position before running for the House and voted against the partial-birth abortion ban. His experience with contested elections made him an enthusiast for abolishing the Electoral College. On the Judiciary Committee during the Clinton impeachment, he was one of the few members who sat down in bipartisan breakfasts to discuss procedures. But he ended up siding completely with impeachment opponents. He took the lead in framing a Democratic motion to censure Bill Clinton and protested bitterly when Judiciary Chairman Henry Hyde would not allow it to be heard. With Illinois Republican Ray LaHood, he filed the Innocence Protection Act, which includes federal funding to the states for DNA testing of the accused; the House passed the measure, 393-14, in October 2004, and it became law. He also won enactment in 2004 of a pilot project to distribute commercial fishing gear, which would reduce expenses for fishermen plus the risk of injury to endangered whales. Delahunt also served on the four-member bipartisan ethics subcommittee that investigated claims by Republican Nick Smith of Michigan that efforts were made to bribe him to gain his support for Medicare reform in November 2003.
Delahunt has worked on local projects, including the Cape Cod land bank, the Salt Pond visitors' center at the National Seashore entry in Eastham, and conversion of the former Camp Edwards National Guard training site to a federal wildlife refuge.
Delahunt has easily won his re-election bids, with no need to count dimpled chads; he won 66%-34% in 2004. On Capitol Hill, he is the fourth tenant in a long-running apartment rental shared by Senators Chuck Schumer and Richard Durbin and Representative George Miller. He shares the living room with Schumer in conditions best described as ramshackle.
Committees
- International Relations (11th of 23 D): Oversight & Investigations (RMM); Western Hemisphere.
- Judiciary (11th of 17 D): Commercial & Administrative Law; Crime, Terrorism & Homeland Security.
| Group Ratings (More Info) |
|
ADA |
ACLU |
AFS |
LCV |
ITIC |
NTU |
COC |
ACU |
NTLC |
CHC |
|
| 2004 |
95
| 95
| 100
| 100
| 40
| 8
| 33
| 0
| 0
| 7
| --
|
| 2003 |
95
| --
| 100
| 90
| --
| 24
| 14
| 8
| --
| --
| --
|
| National Journal Ratings
(More Info) |
|
2003 LIB |
-- |
2003 CONS |
|
2004 LIB |
-- |
2004 CONS |
| Economic |
92% |
-- |
0% |
|
93% |
-- |
6% |
| Social |
88% |
-- |
11% |
|
82% |
-- |
17% |
| Foreign |
94% |
-- |
0% |
|
96% |
-- |
4% |
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For National Journal's complete 2004 Vote Ratings, as well as previous ratings dating back to 1995, please click here. |
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Key Votes Of The 108th Congress
(More Info)
|
| 1. Drilling in ANWR |
* |
| 2. Approve Bush Tax Cuts |
N |
| 3. Medicare/Rx Bill |
N |
| 4. Bar Overtime Pay Regs. |
Y |
| 5. DC School Vouchers |
N |
| 6. Ban Human Cloning |
N |
| |
| 7. Restrict Gun Liability |
N |
| 8. Ban Partial-Birth Abortion |
N |
| 9. Ban Same-Sex Marriage |
N |
| 10. Fund Iraq War |
N |
| 11. Bar Cuba Embargo Funds |
Y |
| 12. Intelligence Reorg. |
N |
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Election Results
(More Info)
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|
Candidate |
Total Votes |
Percent |
Expenditures |
| 2004 general |
Bill Delahunt (D) |
222,013 |
66% |
$843,755 |
| Michael Jones (R) |
114,879 |
34% |
$262,798 |
| 2004 primary |
Bill Delahunt (D) |
unopposed | |
| 2002 general |
Bill Delahunt (D) |
179,238 |
69% |
$266,025 |
| Luiz Gonzaga (R) |
79,624 |
31% |
$55,428 |
|
Prior winning percentages:
2000 (74%); 1998 (70%); 1996 (54%)
|
| 2004 Presidential Vote |
|
Kerry (D)
| 194,092
| (56%)
|
|
Bush (R)
| 151,209
| (43%)
|
|
| 2000 Presidential Vote |
|
Gore (D)
| 175,426
| (54%)
|
|
Bush (R)
| 124,956
| (39%)
|
|
|
|
For 1992 and 1996 presidential results in the Tenth District, please see the Almanac 2000 online. Please note that these older returns reflect district lines as they existed prior to 2002 redistricting.
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District Demographics
(More Info)
- Cook Partisan Voting Index: D + 9
- District Size: 2,969 square miles
- Population in 2000: 635,901; 92.2% urban; 7.8% rural
- Median Household Income: $51,928; 5.9% are below the poverty line
- Occupation: 18.1% blue collar; 66.7% white collar; 15.2% gray collar; 15.1% military veterans
- Race/Ethnic Origin:
92.2% White,
1.5% Black,
2.7% Asian,
0.3% Amer. Indian,
0.0% Hawaiian,
1.3% Two+ races,
0.6% Other,
1.3% Hispanic origin
- Ancestry:
23.9% Irish,
11.9% English,
9.9% Italian
- Click here for statewide demographic data.
Thursday, Sept. 1, 2005
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