U.S. House of Representatives
Elections 2012 On November 6, 2012, Lowenthal was elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives from the newly created
47th district after defeating Republican
Gary DeLong. DeLong carried the
Orange County portion of the district with 54% of the vote, but Lowenthal swamped him in the
Los Angeles County portion by over 38,000 votes, more than the overall margin of 30,100. He took office on January 3, 2013. Lowenthal is the first non-Hispanic Democrat to represent a significant portion of traditionally heavily Republican Orange County in Congress since
Jerry M. Patterson, who served from 1975 to 1985. He was reelected in 2014, 2016 and 2018 by similar margins. Until the Democrats swept every seat in Orange County at the 2018 elections, Lowenthal was the only elected white Democrat above the county level in much of the Orange County portion of the district. But the Los Angeles County portion has more than double the population of the Orange County portion; the district's share of Long Beach alone accounts for over half of its population. Lowenthal is a member of the
Congressional Progressive Caucus.
Tenure Lowenthal is a strong supporter of
Israel. He said that the "historical denial about the right of Jewish people to have their own homeland" and the
Palestinian "refusal to acknowledge Israel as a Jewish state, that is a critical issue that needs to be addressed." Lowenthal has been critical of
Brazil's president
Jair Bolsonaro. In March 2019 he and 29 other Democratic lawmakers wrote Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo a letter that read in part, "Since the election of far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro as president, we have been particularly alarmed by the threat Bolsonaro’s agenda poses to the LGBTQ+ community and other minority communities, women, labor activists, and political dissidents in Brazil."
Committee assignments •
United States House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure •
Subcommittee on Highways and Transit •
Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment •
Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation •
Committee on Natural Resources •
Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources •
Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife, Oceans and Insular Affairs •
Subcommittee on Water and Power Caucus memberships •
Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus •
House Baltic Caucus •
Congressional Arts Caucus •
United States Congressional International Conservation Caucus •
Climate Solutions Caucus •
Congressional Progressive Caucus.
Retirement On December 16, 2021, Lowenthal announced that he would retire from the U.S. House at the end of his term on January 3, 2023. ==Political positions==