BALTIMORE — Democrat April McClain Delaney narrowly won a U.S. House seat in Maryland's most competitive congressional races that came to focus on reproductive rights and the economy.
The state's sprawling 6th Congressional District covers a wide swath of rural Maryland as well as more affluent liberal suburbs of Washington, D.C. The close race wasn't called until Saturday, four days after Election Day.
McClain Delaney, who declared victory Friday, said in a statement that she is ''deeply honored and humbled'' by the trust the voters have placed in her.
''Since the beginning of this campaign, our message has been clear: it's time for common sense, common ground leadership that puts people over politics, defends our freedoms and values, and builds a future centered on unity,'' she said.
A mother of four daughters whose husband previously represented the district, McClain Delaney campaigned heavily on issues impacting women. She pledged to protect reproductive freedoms in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 decision to end the constitutional right to an abortion and leave those decisions to individual states.
McClain Delaney, 60, previously worked in the Biden administration's Department of Commerce and has focused much of her career on protecting children's online safety.
She painted her opponent, Republican Neil Parrott, as an extreme conservative. The daughter of an Idaho potato farmer, she said she can get Washington politicians to address the needs of working families.
''I think that we've just got to turn the page on this divisive, toxic partisanship, which is ripping across our country,'' she told AP in a recent interview.