In battle for the House, many Dems start from scratch
NAPERVILLE, Ill. — When the Democratic Party told Lauren Underwood she needed to raise $100,000 in six weeks to get her campaign for Congress off the ground, she wasn’t sure what to do. The nurse from suburban Chicago had never run for office, and her fundraising experience was mostly limited to selling Girl Scout cookies for $4 a box.
“Why would I know how to do this?” recalls the 31-year-old, who missed that target but went on to defeat six men in her Democratic primary and become one of the party’s top prospects in November. “We were figuring it out, the whole way through.”
As the party tries to recapture the House this year by winning 23 more seats, they’re counting on an unusual crop of candidates: people who have never done anything like this before. People who’ve never run for school board or city council, much less a high-stakes race like Congress in a year when Democrats are desperate to win more leverage against President Donald Trump.
Of the more than 50 candidates running in GOP-held districts given the best chance for flipping, almost two-thirds are seeking office for the first time. That’s a significant increase over 2016, when less than half of those running in targeted districts were first-timers.

