U.S. House of Representatives
Donna Christian-Christensen ran unsuccessfully for the position of USVI delegate in 1994, losing in the primary to former judge Eileen Petersen. She won a three-way race beating
Victor Frazer, an Independent. That race also included future Governor
Kenneth Mapp, who would defeat Christensen in 2014 during the Governor race. However, she was elected as a
Democrat to the House in a 1996 runoff with Frazer and served from January 3, 1997, to January 3, 2015. Christian-Christensen has supported Obama's
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Shortly before the Supreme Court affirmed the legislation, she said "For 99 years, presidents have been trying to do this. Finally, our president has made it possible for each and every American." Donna Christian-Christensen is a member of the
Congressional Black Caucus and the
Congressional Progressive Caucus. She was featured on
The Colbert Report's
Better Know a Protectorate segment. She is also the first female physician to win a congressional election.
Elections ;2008 During the 2008 electoral campaign, she appeared in a TV advertisement endorsing the reelection of neighboring
Puerto Rico Governor
Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, who went to trial after the November 2008 elections for a twenty-four-count federal Grand Jury indictment for corruption. The jury found him not guilty, though he did lose his bid for re-election. ;2010 Christian-Christensen won her 2010 reelection campaign with 71.22% of the vote. ;2012 Christian-Christensen received substantial donations, at least $37,000, for her re-election from sources that are connected to Jeffrey Thompson, the chartered health services chairman. However, since he had recently come under fire for a scandal, this money may have been considered to be "pecunia non grata" (unwanted money). Soon after, Thompson's firm was awarded a $6.3 million government contract in the Virgin Islands, Christensen's home district. Nonetheless, Christian-Christensen won her 2012 re-election bid with 60.05% of the vote. ;2014 Christian-Christensen did not seek re-election to her congressional seat. Instead, she ran for
Governor of the United States Virgin Islands, ultimately losing to
Kenneth Mapp in a
runoff.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Energy and Commerce •
Subcommittee on Communications and Technology •
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations Caucus memberships • Congressional Black Caucus • Congressional Caucus on Women's Issues • Congressional Progressive Caucus • Congressional Travel and Tourism Caucus •
International Conservation Caucus • Congressional Arts Caucus ==Honors and recognitions==