We never thought we could elect anybody from humble roots. Every other congressman had come from wealth going way back…. This was a real giant step.

Marcy Kaptur's story

CTY dems02pMarcy Kaptur was born in Toledo on June 17, 1946. With her 2022 re-election to the U.S. House of Representatives, Kaptur made history as the longest-serving woman in the U.S. Congress. Redrawn over the years, Kaptur’s district encompasses parts of Toledo and Northwest Ohio.

Kaptur’s parents were children of Polish immigrants. Her mother, Anastasia, served on the original organizing committee of U.A.W. Local 12 at Champion Spark Plug in Toledo. Her father, Stephen, was a produce dealer. Together they opened Supreme Market in Rossford, where Kaptur worked stocking shelves and cleaning the meat block.

Kaptur was the first member of her family to graduate high school and college. She recalls a photo taken in front of the U.S. Capitol during a trip to Washington, D.C. organized by the sisters at St. Ursula Academy, her all-girls high school. “I never, ever thought that some day I would be in Congress,” Kaptur reflects.

After being denied admission to Notre Dame and the U.S. Air Force Academy based on her sex, Kaptur attended the University of Wisconsin on a scholarship, majoring in history. She recounts tear gas being deployed during anti-war student protests there. Kaptur graduated in 1968 and took a job with the Toledo Lucas County Plan Commission. In 1974 she earned her Master of Urban Planning degree from the University of Michigan and was subsequently hired by the National Center of Urban Ethnic Affairs. As Director of Planning, Kaptur worked to redevelop neighborhoods in cities including Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco.

In 1977 Kaptur became Assistant Director of Urban Affairs in the Carter White House, where she worked closely with Monsignor Geno Baroni, an Assistant Secretary in the Department of Housing and Urban Development. She worked to develop a program to strengthen neighborhood development organizations. After leaving the Carter White House in 1979, Kaptur began a Ph.D. in urban planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.).

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Though thriving as a doctoral student, Kaptur’s time at M.I.T. was short-lived. In 1981 she was encouraged by Msgr. Baroni to run for Congress against first-term Republican Representative Ed Weber. The Washington Post described Kaptur as “a fiery campaigner who was given only an outside chance” against Weber. Outspent three to one, Kaptur raised $10,000 at a bake sale, won the race, and became the longest-serving woman in the U.S. Congress.

Kaptur is known as a champion of the working class and veterans. A strong opponent of NAFTA, she opposed the 2008 bailout of the financial services industry. Kaptur wrote legislation to reform the veterans’ housing loan program and reduce its cost to taxpayers. A 17-year legislative quest led by Kaptur resulted in construction of the World War II Memorial in Washington.

Kaptur’s many awards include the Ellis Island Honor Society’s Medal of Honor, the University of Michigan’s Taubman College Distinguished Alumna award, the National Mental Health Association’s Legislator of the Year Award, and the Director’s Award from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University.

The Team Behind Trailblazing Women in Ohio Politics

Trailblazing Women in Ohio Politics is a collaboration between WBGU-PBS and Dr. Melissa K. Miller, Professor of Political Science at Bowling Green State University. Narrative profile compiled and written by Nathan Englehart and Melissa K. Miller.

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Sound Bites

Mom held me up to mark the "X"

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Outspent three to one

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Barred from the plant floor

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A 17-year fight for WWII memorial

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1982

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Edward Silvio’ Emery – 8.8%
Marcy Kaptur – 77.8
John G. Rust – 13.4
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 57.9%
David Muir (Libertarian) – 0.7%
Susan Skinner (Independent) – 1.1%
James Somers (Independent) – 1.0%
Ed Weber (R) – 39.3%

1984

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 93.0%
Carol R. Winters – 7.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 54.9%
Elizabeth Lariscy – 0.7%
Michael R. Nunn – 1.0%
Frank Venner (R) – 43.4%

1986

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 77.5%
Mike Shufeldt (R) – 22.5%

1988

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Albert R. Cartier (Write-in) – 0.0%
Al Hawkins (R) – 18.6%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 81.3%

1990

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 77.7%
Jerry Lammers (R) – 22.3%

1992

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Ken Brown (R) – 21.8%
Mary Ann Haupricht (Write-in) – 0.0%
Edward Howard (Independent) – 4.6%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 73.6%

1994

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 75.3%
R. Randy Whitman (R) – 24.7%

1996

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 77.1%
Elizabeth Slotnick (Natural Law) – 2.1%
Randy Whitman (R) – 20.8%

1998

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Edward S. Emery (R) – 18.8%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 81.2%

2000

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Dwight E. Bryan (R) – 21.9%
Galen Fries (Libertarian) – 1.9%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 74.8%
Dennis Slotnick (Natural Law) – 1.4%

2002

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Ed Emery (R) – 26.0%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 74.0%

2004

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Larry A. Kaczala (R) – 31.9%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 68.1%

2006

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 73.6%
Bradley S. Leavitt (R) – 26.4%

2008

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 74.4%
Bradley S. Leavitt (R) – 25.6%

2010

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 86.5%
Dale Terry – 13.5%
General Election
Rich Iott (R) – 40.7%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 59.3%

2012

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 56.2%
Dennis J. Kucinich – 40.0%
Graham Vesysey – 3.8%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 73.0%
Sean Stipe (R) – 3.9%
Samuel Wurzelbacher (R) – 23.0%

2014

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Cory Hoffman (Write-in) – 0.1%
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 67.7%
Richard May (R) – 32.2%
George A. Skalsky (Write-in) – 0.0%

2016

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 68.7%
Donald Philip Larson (R) – 31.3%
George Skalsky (Write-in) – 0.0%

2018

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Joshua Garcia – 14.5%
Marcy Kaptur – 85.5%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 67.8%
Steven W. Kraus (R) – 32.2%
McKenzie Levindofske (Write-in) – 0.0%

2020

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 90.7%
Peter Rosewicz – 9.3%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 63.1%
McKenzie Levindofske (Write-in) – 0.0%
Ron Weber (R) – 36.9%

2022

U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

OHIO 9TH DISTRICT
Democratic Primary
Marcy Kaptur – 100.0%
General Election
Marcy Kaptur (D) – 56.6%
J.R. Majewski (R) – 43.4%

In her own voice

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Kaptur’s complete interview is archived in the Trailblazing Women in Ohio Politics Oral History Collection at Bowling Green State University’s Center for Archival Collections.

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Journaling prompts for 7th through 12th graders

PDF Instructor Guides for high school and college educators also available

Marcy Kaptur recalls her mother taking her to the polls on Election Day. Her mother would lift her up so she could mark “X” on the ballot. She calls it a “happy memory.” What is your earliest political memory? Reflect on whether it is positive or negative. How might your earliest political memories influence your likelihood of becoming politically engaged as an adult?


When Marcy Kaptur first ran for Congress in 1982, she struggled to raise money. Her suggestion to hold a bake sale was criticized in Washington, yet the event raised $10,000 – a large sum for a campaign in the early 1980s. Despite her underdog status, Kaptur went on to win the race. Think about a time when you were underestimated. How did you respond?


A Democrat, Marcy Kaptur worked with Republicans to establish a World War II Memorial in Washington. The project took 17 years after she first introduced the legislation. Why do you think such bipartisan cooperation seems rare today? Why was the World War II Memorial an exception? What other issues could or should prompt bipartisan cooperation?


Instructor Guide for:

PHOTO CREDITS: Republished with permission of The Blade

Updated: 07/06/2023 03:55PM