Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 219, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1982 Page: 11 of 20
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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c a
dent," said House Speak- r
er Thomas P. O'Neill Jr.
But White House Chief
of Staff James A Baker
UI claimed, "We still
think that we're going to
be able to pull that coali-
tion together to support
the president's pro-
grams on selected is-
sues. . . r
Tuesday's mid-term
balloting allowed Demo-
crats to tighten their
hold on the chamber
they have controlled for
28 years, regaining most
of the 33 seats they lost
in the 1980 Reagan land-
slide
Early today. Demo-
crats had won or were
leading in 266 districts;
Republicans in 167. The
current House’ lineup is
241 Democrats, 192 Re-
publicans with two va-
cancies in seats previ-
ously held by Demo-
crats.
Thus, Democrats ap-
peared likely to gain at
least 23 seats.
At least 21 Republican
incumbents were turned
out of office, and four
were trailing. Only three
Democratic incumbents
lost.
But even beyond the
numbers. Democrats did
well in districts where
Reagan's economic pro-
gram was the focus of
the campaign.
House Republican
Leader Robert H Michel
of Illinois, who shep-
herded the administra-
tion's budget and tax
legislation through the
House, faced the
toughest challenge since-
he first won election in
1956
Michel’s Democratic
opponent, G. Douglas
Stephens, a virtual un-
known in the district,
hammered at the eco-
• • nomic issue and gave
Michel such a strong
challenge that Reagan
devoted a full day to
campaigning for Michel
After a neck-and-neck
race for most of the eve-
ning. Michel pulled to a
thin lead and appeared
headed for victory.
In another race where
Reagan personally ap-
peared, North Carolina
Democrat Ike Andreus
wen histre-election fight
against Republican
challenger William Co-
bey Jr. with 52 percent
of the vote.
In a bruising Massa-
chusetts battle pitting
one incumbent against
another because of
redistricting, liberal
Democratic freshman
. Rep Barney Frank won
a landslide 60 percent
victory over eight term
Republican Rep Marga-
ret Heckler
This year's redistrict-
Ing also threw 10 other
incumbents into races
against each other in
five districts
in those contests:
— Rep. Ike Skelton, a
Democrat, defeated Re-
publican Rep. Wendell
Bailey in Missouri's 4th
District.
- Republican Rep
Guy V. Molinari defeat-
ed Democratic Rep Leo
Zeferetti in New York's
14th District.
— Republican Rep.
Benjamin Gilman de-
feated Democratic Rep
Peter Peyser in New
York’s 22nd District
- Democratic Rep.
Thomas Daschle defeat-
ed Republican Rep. Clint
Roberts in South Dako-
ta’s only congressional
district.
— Democratic Rep.
Matthew Martinez de-
feated Republican Rep
John Rousselot in Cali-
fornia's 30th District.
Here are some other
key races:
— in a rematch that
centered on the adminis-
tration's economic
course, Democrat Peter
Kostmayer reclaimed
the suburban Philadel-
phia seat he lost in 1980
WASHINGTON (AP) to incumbent Republi- Carr two years ago. nent of the president s
— Democrats, harvest can Jim Coyne, with 51 - in a northern New policies, lost to Demo-
ing votes on the unem percent of the vote Jersey suburban distict, cratic challenger Robert
ployment and Social Se- - In another heated Democrat Robert Torri- J Mrazek.
curity issues swelled repeat battle, Democrat celli, a former aide to - In Delaware, in-
their House majority by Bob Carr held a 51 per- former Vice President cumbent Thomas B. Ev-
about two dozen seats, a cent edge over Incum- Walter F. Mondale, de- ans, Jr., a former Repub-
gain that could stymie bent Rep Jim Dunn with feated Republican in- lican National Commit-
’ President Reagan's 53 percent of the vote in cumbent Rep. Harold C. tee co-chairman and
pledge to stay his eco- returns from high-unem- Hollenbeck. once a top Reagan lieu-
nomic course ployment district in the — in New York, in- tenant in the House, lost
"It was a disastrous Detroit suburbs. Dunn cumbent John LeBoutil- his re-election battle.
defeat for the presi- wrested the seat from Her. an outspoken propo- _ one former Demo-
kign
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 219, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1982, newspaper, November 3, 1982; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848667/m1/11/: accessed November 17, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.