Becca Balint
Becca Balint (born Rebecca A. Balint; May 4, 1968) is an American politician serving as the U.S. Representative for Vermont's at-large congressional district since January 2023.[1] A Democrat, she previously represented Windham County in the Vermont Senate from 2011 to 2023, including as president pro tempore from 2017 onward, during which she facilitated bipartisan negotiations on issues like education funding and opioid crisis response.[1][2] Balint is the first woman and first openly lesbian member of Congress from Vermont, elected in 2022 after winning the Democratic primary following the retirement of longtime Representative Peter Welch.[3][1] Born in Heidelberg, Germany, to U.S. military parents and raised in upstate New York, she earned a B.A. from the University of Vermont in 1990 and an M.Ed. from Antioch University New England in 2002, working as a public school teacher before entering politics.[1][3] In Congress, Balint serves on the House Judiciary and Oversight and Accountability Committees, focusing on progressive priorities such as expanding access to mental health care, addressing climate change through renewable energy incentives, and protecting reproductive rights, while drawing attention for her early call as a Jewish member for a Gaza ceasefire amid the Israel-Hamas conflict.[4][5][6]
Personal Background
Early Life and Family
Becca Balint was born on May 4, 1968, in a U.S. Army hospital in Heidelberg, Germany, where her father was stationed as a serviceman.[1] Her father was a Hungarian immigrant and Holocaust survivor whose experiences with persecution shaped family discussions on rights and democracy.[7] Her mother came from a working-class background, and the couple raised Balint along with two siblings primarily in Peekskill, New York.[8] [9] Balint's upbringing emphasized the fragility of democratic freedoms, influenced by her parents' appreciation for opportunities unavailable in her father's native country and amid observations of anti-Semitism in their community.[10] She attended Walter Panas High School in nearby Cortlandt Manor, New York, graduating in 1986.[1] These early experiences, including family stories of survival and displacement, later informed her political motivations, though she did not enter public office until adulthood.[7]Education and Pre-Political Career
Balint graduated from Walter Panas High School in Cortlandt Manor, New York, in 1986.[1] She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, graduating magna cum laude and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa.[3] Balint subsequently obtained a Master of Education from Harvard University in 1995 and a Master of Arts in history from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2001.[3] In 1994, Balint relocated to Vermont to serve as a rock-climbing instructor at Farm & Wilderness camps in Plymouth, where she held various leadership positions for nearly a decade.[11] She settled permanently in Brattleboro in 1997.[10] Balint then worked as a middle school educator in Windham County public schools for 14 years, teaching in multiple districts including Brattleboro.[3] Prior to her entry into elected office, she also participated in local activism focused on education and community issues.[3]Vermont State Senate Career
Elections
Balint was first elected to the Vermont State Senate from the two-member Windham district on November 8, 2016.[12] She was reelected on November 6, 2018, alongside fellow Democrat Jeanette White, defeating Republican challengers. Balint received 11,660 votes, equivalent to 39.1 percent of the total cast in the district.[13] In the November 3, 2020 general election, Balint again topped the ballot in the Windham district, securing 14,520 votes or 37.9 percent, once more pairing with White to hold both seats against Republicans Marcus Parish (4,359 votes, 11.4 percent) and John Lyddy (4,265 votes, 11.1 percent).[14] Vermont's multi-member districts allocate seats to the top vote recipients regardless of party, and Windham County has consistently favored Democratic candidates in state senate races due to its progressive-leaning electorate. Balint faced no significant primary opposition in these cycles.[15]Legislative Record
Balint served in the Vermont State Senate from 2015 to 2023, representing Windham County as a Democrat. During this period, she sponsored multiple bills addressing economic, environmental, and consumer issues, with several enacting into law. In the 2015-2016 session, she introduced S.73, which strengthened consumer protection laws and became Act 55.[12] She also sponsored S.105, pertaining to home improvement contracts, though it did not advance to enactment.[12] In the 2019-2020 session, Balint sponsored S.23, establishing phased increases to Vermont's minimum wage from $10.78 to $15 per hour by 2024 for thousands of low-wage workers, which passed as Act 86.[16][17] Additionally, she introduced S.29, prohibiting trade in covered animal parts or products such as elephant ivory and rhino horn to combat wildlife trafficking.[16] As Senate Majority Leader from 2017 to 2021 and President Pro Tempore from 2021 to 2023, Balint secured passage of broader initiatives aligned with Democratic priorities. These included the state's largest housing bond in decades, funding affordable units for hundreds of Vermonters amid rising costs.[17] She led efforts to enact Vermont's first comprehensive gun safety measures in 2018, incorporating universal background checks for firearm sales and extreme risk protection orders to temporarily restrict access for individuals deemed a danger to themselves or others.[17] Balint also advanced the Global Warming Solutions Act in 2021, mandating net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 through enforceable targets and climate justice provisions prioritizing vulnerable communities.[17] On reproductive rights, Balint helped drive legislative momentum for a 2022 constitutional amendment (Article 22), ratified by voters, explicitly safeguarding abortion access as the first such state-level protection post-Roe v. Wade.[17] Her record emphasized progressive reforms, including opioid prescription regulations requiring monitoring for chronic pain treatments and expansions in workforce training and renter protections, though specific sponsorship details for these vary by session.[17] Voting alignments as a party leader consistently supported these measures, reflecting Vermont's left-leaning legislative environment.[16]Leadership Positions
Balint was elected to the Vermont State Senate in 2014, representing Windham County, and advanced to leadership roles within the Democratic caucus. In 2016, she was selected as Senate Majority Leader, a position she held through the 2020 session, overseeing the chamber's Democratic agenda during a period of unified Democratic control of state government.[17][3] On January 6, 2021, Balint was sworn in as President pro tempore of the Vermont Senate, becoming the first woman and the first openly gay individual to hold the role; she presided over sessions in the absence of Lieutenant Governor Molly Gray and focused on priorities including reproductive rights protections and gun safety measures.[18][8] This position marked the culmination of her state senate tenure, which ended in 2022 upon her election to the U.S. House of Representatives.[10] In addition to partisan leadership, Balint chaired the Senate Sexual Harassment Prevention Panel starting in 2016, contributing to internal governance reforms amid national discussions on workplace conduct in legislatures.[17] Her roles emphasized procedural oversight and policy steering within a small, unicameral-like senate structure where leadership influences both debate and committee assignments.U.S. House of Representatives Service
2022 Election
Balint announced her candidacy for Vermont's at-large U.S. House seat on February 10, 2022, following incumbent Democrat Peter Welch's decision to run for the U.S. Senate, leaving the position open. As a progressive state senator and president pro tempore, Balint positioned her campaign on issues including climate action, affordable housing, and gun violence prevention, emphasizing her legislative experience.[19] In the Democratic primary on August 9, 2022, Balint secured 60.5% of the vote (22,509 votes), defeating Lieutenant Governor Molly Gray, who received 36.9% (13,767 votes), and former state representative Louis Meyers with 1.6% (601 votes); turnout was approximately 37,000 voters.[20] Balint's victory was aided by endorsements from U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders and progressive groups, as well as nearly $1 million in independent expenditures from the LGBTQ Victory Fund for advertising, funded in part by a $1.1 million donation from Silicon Valley investor Reid Hoffman.[21][22] Critics, including Gray supporters, questioned the influence of such outside spending, though Balint maintained her campaign did not coordinate with the group.[23] The Republican primary on the same date was won by Liam Madden, a U.S. Marine veteran and renewable energy worker, with 40.0% of the vote against Ericka Redic (30.8%) and Anya Tynio (29.2%).[24] Madden, who identified as an independent and pledged not to caucus with House Republicans if elected, was subsequently disavowed by the Vermont Republican Party, which cited his positions as incompatible with the party's platform.[25] In the general election on November 8, 2022, Balint defeated Madden, capturing 64.8% of the vote (153,945 votes) to Madden's 32.1% (76,265 votes), with minor candidates and write-ins accounting for the remainder; voter turnout exceeded 240,000. Her win made her the first woman and first openly lesbian person to represent Vermont in Congress.[26] The district's strong Democratic lean, demonstrated by Welch's 66.5% margin in 2020, contributed to Balint's decisive victory despite limited Republican support for Madden.2024 Election
Balint sought reelection to Vermont's at-large congressional district in the 2024 United States House of Representatives elections.[27] In the Democratic primary on August 13, 2024, she faced no opponents and advanced unopposed.[28] The general election occurred on November 5, 2024, pitting Balint against Republican nominee Mark Coester, a financial advisor, as well as independent candidates Adam Ortiz and any others on the ballot.[29] [30] Balint secured victory with 62.3% of the vote, while Coester received 29.8% and Ortiz garnered 5.5%.[31] The Associated Press called the race for Balint shortly after polls closed, reflecting Vermont's strong Democratic lean in federal contests.[32] This win marked her election to a second term in the House, continuing representation in the 119th Congress starting January 3, 2025.[33]Committee Assignments
Balint was assigned to the House Committee on the Budget and the House Committee on the Judiciary at the start of the 118th Congress in January 2023.[34][35] These assignments positioned her to address fiscal policy oversight through the Budget Committee, which develops the annual congressional budget resolution and examines federal spending priorities, and judicial matters via the Judiciary Committee, responsible for legislation on civil and criminal justice, constitutional issues, and federal courts. Within the Judiciary Committee, Balint serves on the Subcommittee on the Administrative State, Regulatory Reform, and Antitrust, focusing on executive branch oversight, regulatory reductions, and competition policy enforcement.[36] She retained these committee seats for the 119th Congress beginning in January 2025, reflecting continuity in her service amid Republican control of the House.[35][18] Balint has participated in Budget Committee hearings on topics such as debt ceiling negotiations and entitlement program reforms, while her Judiciary role has involved scrutiny of antitrust actions against major technology firms and regulatory challenges to administrative agencies. No additional standing committee assignments were reported for her second term as of October 2025.[37]Key Votes and Initiatives
Balint sponsored the PEER Mental Health Act (H.R. 2642) in the 118th Congress, establishing grants for school-based programs to train teachers, personnel, students, parents, and caregivers in recognizing and addressing childhood and adolescent mental health issues.[38] She also introduced the Mental Health in Schools Act (H.R. 8444), directing the Secretary of Education to award competitive grants for comprehensive mental health services in schools, including counseling and crisis intervention. In October 2023, Balint led H. Res. 805, expressing support for local farm and food systems to enhance community resilience and mental well-being through agriculture. By October 2024, she had introduced or led six bills targeting the mental health crisis, emphasizing stigma reduction and access expansion.[39] On reproductive rights, Balint reintroduced the Stop Comstock Act in 2024 to repeal sections of the 1873 Comstock Act that prohibit mailing abortion-related materials, arguing the law could be weaponized post-Dobbs to restrict access nationwide. In December 2024, she co-introduced the Combating Loneliness Act (H.R. 10448) with Rep. Paul Tonko, creating programs to promote mental health interventions against epidemic-level isolation, including workforce expansion for community health support.[40][41] In key votes, Balint supported the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (H.R. 3746) on June 1, 2023, raising the debt ceiling by $4 trillion while imposing spending caps and clawbacks, though she criticized the cuts as insufficiently progressive and called for abolishing the debt limit mechanism.[42][43] She opposed H.R. 815 on February 6, 2024, a Republican-led supplemental providing $17.6 billion primarily for Israel without aid for Ukraine or Taiwan, prioritizing comprehensive packages over isolated military funding.[44][45] Balint voted against the Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act (H.R. 8035) on April 20, 2024, rejecting $26.4 billion in aid including offensive weapons, while affirming support for Israel's security and a two-state solution but conditioning further arms on Gaza humanitarian improvements.[46][47]Political Positions and Ideology
Economic and Fiscal Policies
Balint has consistently opposed Republican-led tax and spending legislation that reduces funding for social safety net programs. In July 2025, she voted against a Republican bill projected to cut $900 billion from Medicaid and reduce food assistance for nearly 40 million Americans, while providing an average tax cut of $309,000 for the top 0.1% of earners and just $247 for those making under $50,000 annually.[48] She described the measure as "devastating" to rural areas like Vermont, where Medicaid and SNAP networks are already strained.[49] On taxation, Balint supports measures targeting corporate excess and high executive compensation. As a co-sponsor of the Tax Excessive CEO Pay Act of 2025 (H.R. 5298), introduced in September 2025, she backed provisions to impose graduated higher corporate tax rates—starting at 1% above the statutory rate and rising to 6% for ratios exceeding 100:1—on firms where CEO or top executive pay surpasses 50 times the median worker's compensation.[50] This aligns with her role chairing the Congressional Progressive Caucus Task Force to End Corporate Greed, launched in July 2025, which prioritizes raising the federal minimum wage, curbing monopolies to lower consumer costs, and reforming campaign finance to reduce corporate influence.[51] [52] In fiscal spending priorities, Balint has advocated for substantial investments in housing and infrastructure. During her first congressional term, she introduced the Community Housing Act, proposing over $500 billion in federal funding for affordable housing development to address shortages in Vermont and nationwide.[19] As Vermont Senate Majority Leader prior to Congress, she helped secure passage of the state's largest housing bond in decades, funding low-income and senior housing projects.[17] She has also warned against the expiration of Affordable Care Act premium tax credits, estimating they save thousands of Vermonters hundreds annually on health insurance, and voted to preserve such subsidies in budget negotiations.[53] Balint's budget votes reflect a preference for deficit-financed expansions in social programs over cuts, including opposition to Republican proposals for $7 trillion in tax reductions offset by entitlement reductions, which she criticized as prioritizing high earners over working families.[54] Her positions emphasize empirical needs in rural economies, such as Vermont's reliance on federal aid for health and agriculture, while critiquing fiscal policies that exacerbate inequality without addressing root causes like wage stagnation.[55]Social and Identity Issues
Balint identifies as lesbian and has emphasized her personal experiences in advocating for protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. As co-chair of the Congressional Equality Caucus, she has prioritized legislation to safeguard LGBTQ+ individuals from employment, housing, and public accommodations discrimination.[56] She serves as an original cosponsor of the Equality Act, which would amend federal civil rights laws to explicitly include sexual orientation and gender identity as protected classes.[19] On transgender-related matters, Balint introduced the Transgender Health Care Access Act on March 31, 2025, to broaden access to medical services for transgender individuals, including funding for provider training and integration into federal health programs like Medicaid and Medicare.[57] [58] The bill frames these interventions as evidence-based and essential for addressing mental health outcomes among transgender populations.[57] Balint has opposed state-level restrictions on medical treatments for transgender youth, arguing in July 2025 that such decisions belong to families rather than politicians.[59] [60] Balint supports unrestricted access to abortion services, having worked in the Vermont State Senate to amend the state constitution in 2019 to enshrine reproductive autonomy protections.[61] In Congress, she reintroduced the Stop Comstock Act on March 12, 2025, to nullify 19th-century provisions of the Comstock Act that abortion opponents have invoked to challenge mailing of abortion-related materials, aiming to prevent their use in enforcing a national ban.[62] She backed the Women's Health Protection Act in April 2023, which sought to federalize abortion access by prohibiting undue restrictions on providers.[63] Her voting record aligns with organizations rating lawmakers on abortion access, reflecting consistent opposition to funding limitations or procedural barriers.[64][65]Foreign Policy Stances
Balint has expressed strong criticism of Israel's military actions in Gaza following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, describing them as a "genocide" in an op-ed published on September 17, 2025, citing over 60,000 Palestinian deaths and humanitarian crises including famine and disease.[66] Initially, on October 10, 2023, she co-sponsored a resolution reaffirming U.S. support for Israel in response to the attacks.[67] By November 21, 2023, as the first Jewish member of Congress to do so, she called for a ceasefire.[68] On April 19, 2024, Balint voted against a supplemental aid package providing offensive weapons to Israel, while affirming her long-term support for a secure Israel and a two-state solution.[46] Regarding the Russia-Ukraine war, Balint has consistently supported Ukraine's defense against Russian aggression. On April 22, 2024, she voted for a $60 billion aid package to Ukraine, emphasizing NATO allies' reliance on U.S. leadership.[69] In February 2025 floor remarks, she condemned Russian President Vladimir Putin as the aggressor and criticized efforts to rewrite the invasion's history, stating Russia's actions violated Ukraine's sovereignty.[70] Her vocal support led to her inclusion on Russia's sanctions list in May 2023.[71] On February 24, 2025, she co-sponsored H.Res.155 reaffirming U.S. commitment to Ukraine's territorial integrity.[72] Balint's positions on China and Taiwan are less prominently documented, though she voted in favor of the China Exchange Rate Transparency Act on February 10, 2025, aimed at addressing currency manipulation concerns.[73] She has not been assigned to the House Foreign Affairs Committee, limiting her direct involvement in related legislation.[37]Controversies and Criticisms
Campaign Finance Issues
During Becca Balint's 2022 Democratic primary campaign for Vermont's U.S. House seat, the super PAC Protect Our Future spent approximately $1 million on advertising in her support, making it the largest outside expenditure in the race.[74] This funding originated from cryptocurrency executives associated with FTX, including Sam Bankman-Fried, who in November 2022 directed associates to donate to candidates aligned with "effective altruism" priorities such as pandemic prevention.[75] Bankman-Fried later pleaded guilty in November 2023 to multiple federal charges, including conspiracy to commit campaign finance fraud, after evidence emerged that FTX customer funds—totaling over $8 billion—were misused to facilitate undisclosed political contributions via straw donors to super PACs like Protect Our Future.[76] Balint's campaign received no direct contributions from the PAC or its donors, as super PAC expenditures are independent under Federal Election Commission rules prohibiting coordination with candidates; no public evidence has surfaced of wrongdoing or knowledge by Balint regarding the funds' illicit origins.[76] Balint cooperated with federal prosecutors investigating the matter in early 2023.[77] Critics, including Balint's 2024 Republican challenger Mark Coester, have argued that she "directly benefited" from these tainted funds, framing the super PAC support as part of broader "dark money" influence tied to the FTX collapse, which exposed fraudulent practices affecting political giving nationwide.[78] Coester highlighted text messages from Bankman-Fried's trial revealing strategic donations to Balint over rivals, suggesting undue external sway in Vermont's congressional race despite the state's small scale.[78] Balint has maintained that she does not accept corporate PAC contributions directly to her campaign committee, emphasizing grassroots funding, though Federal Election Commission data shows her 2023-2024 cycle receipts included support from non-corporate PACs and indirect super PAC activity.[79] OpenSecrets records indicate total outside spending favoring Balint exceeded $1.5 million in 2022, with cryptocurrency-linked groups prominent among undisclosed donors to such entities.[80] Additional scrutiny arose over Balint's handling of super PAC disclosures during the 2022 primary, where opaque funding trails fueled perceptions of evading transparency norms inherent in post-Citizens United campaign finance structures.[23] Reports noted her campaign's use of "red-boxing"—bundling small individual donations to amplify the appearance of grassroots support—drawing criticism as a loophole-exploiting tactic, though not deemed illegal by regulators.[81] No Federal Election Commission enforcement actions or fines have been issued against Balint's campaigns as of October 2025, distinguishing her case from direct donor prosecutions like Bankman-Fried's.[80]Public Remarks and Partisan Statements
In June 2025, during a town hall meeting with constituents in Vermont, Balint remarked that restrictive immigration policies under the Trump administration would result in a labor shortage so severe that "we're not going to have anybody around to wipe our asses," framing increased immigration as essential for essential services like elder care.[82][83] The comment, captured on video and shared widely, prompted immediate criticism from the Vermont Republican Party and conservative commentators for its crude phrasing and implication that immigrants were primarily suited for menial tasks, which they described as dehumanizing and reflective of partisan advocacy for open borders over domestic workforce development.[84] Balint subsequently apologized, characterizing her language as "sloppy and insensitive" while defending the underlying point about labor needs in an aging population.[85] In September 2025, Balint published an op-ed asserting that "Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza," citing over 60,000 Palestinian deaths since October 2023 and criticizing Israel's military offensive as disproportionate and aimed at collective punishment rather than solely targeting Hamas.[66] This statement, issued amid ongoing congressional debates over U.S. aid to Israel, aligned her with progressive critics like Senator Bernie Sanders but drew rebukes from pro-Israel groups and bipartisan lawmakers who argued it minimized Hamas's role in initiating the conflict via the October 7, 2023, attacks and echoed rhetoric that could fuel antisemitism.[86][87] Balint, who identifies as Jewish and has previously expressed support for Israel's right to self-defense, maintained that her position stemmed from humanitarian concerns and a commitment to a two-state solution, though she voted against additional offensive weapons transfers to Israel in April 2024.[46] Balint has repeatedly used House floor speeches to denounce Republican-led initiatives as "hateful" or "craven," including in March 2024 when she accused GOP members of promoting anti-trans legislation that invaded children's privacy and endangered LGBTQ+ individuals.[88] Similar partisan rhetoric appeared in January 2025, condemning a bill as an assault on trans Americans, and in critiques of Republican foreign policy stances, such as on Ukraine aid, where she described GOP obstructionism as "revolting."[89][90] These remarks, often framed as defenses of marginalized groups, have been cited by critics as examples of inflammatory partisanship that prioritizes identity-based advocacy over bipartisan consensus on national security and fiscal issues.[91]Policy and Voting Critiques
Balint has faced criticism from conservative commentators and organizations for her voting record on immigration and border security, which they argue prioritizes leniency over enforcement amid record migrant encounters exceeding 2.4 million in fiscal year 2023. She voted against H.R. 2, the Secure the Border Act of 2023, which proposed resuming border wall construction, hiring additional Border Patrol and ICE agents, and imposing asylum restrictions during high encounter periods; opponents of her position, including the Heritage Foundation, contend this stance exacerbates humanitarian and security risks by failing to address root causes like cartel exploitation and fentanyl trafficking, with over 100,000 overdose deaths annually linked to border flows.[92] In September 2024, Balint voted no on a measure to mandate deportation of undocumented immigrants convicted of domestic violence or sex offenses, breaking with some Democratic colleagues but drawing rebuke from Vermont conservatives who viewed it as undermining public safety priorities.[93] Additionally, her February 2024 vote against impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas was cited by critics as defending administrative failures that permitted parole programs expanding entries to over 1 million in 2023, per Department of Homeland Security data.[94] On fiscal policy, Balint's support for major Democratic spending initiatives has been critiqued by fiscal conservatives for contributing to post-2021 inflation spikes, with the Consumer Price Index rising 21.6% cumulatively from January 2021 to mid-2023 amid trillions in new deficits. She backed the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act ($1.9 trillion) and the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act ($740 billion in spending offset by revenues but adding to long-term liabilities), measures Heritage Action scored negatively for expanding government without corresponding cuts, arguing they fueled demand-pull inflation through unchecked borrowing when supply chains were constrained.[92] Her 26% score on the Heritage Action scorecard for the 118th Congress reflects consistent opposition to Republican-led restraint efforts, such as votes against rescinding unspent funds or limiting continuing resolutions, which critics link to sustained federal debt surpassing $34 trillion by 2023 and persistent 3-4% annual inflation into 2025.[92] In a June 2025 town hall, Balint remarked that without migrant labor, "we're not going to have anyone around to wipe our asses," a statement decried by the Vermont Republican Party and national outlets as crudely endorsing open borders to subsidize low-wage sectors rather than addressing domestic workforce participation rates hovering below 63% nationally.[83][84] Critics, including local outlets like the Vermont Daily Chronicle, have also faulted Balint's broader policy alignment for ideological rigidity, such as introducing the Transgender Health Care Access Act in 2023 to expand federal protections and funding for interventions like puberty blockers and surgeries, which opponents argue lacks robust long-term empirical support given studies showing elevated regret and mental health risks post-treatment, particularly for minors.[95][96] Her votes against Republican amendments curbing such expansions in appropriations bills have been portrayed as advancing unproven social engineering over evidence-based caution, amid rising detransition reports documented in peer-reviewed analyses. While progressive scorecards like the League of Conservation Voters award her near-perfect marks for environmental votes, conservative analyses emphasize opportunity costs, such as her opposition to domestic energy permitting reforms that could lower costs, with U.S. gasoline prices averaging $3.50 per gallon in 2024 partly due to regulatory hurdles.[97][92] These positions, per Heritage evaluations, reflect a pattern of favoring expansive federal intervention, potentially at the expense of economic realism in a state like Vermont facing out-migration and median household incomes lagging national averages.Electoral History
State Senate Elections
Balint was first elected to the Vermont State Senate from the two-member Windham District in the November 6, 2018, general election, defeating Republican challengers and securing the second-highest vote total behind incumbent Democrat Jeanette White.[98] In the August 14, 2018, Democratic primary, Balint received 2,165 votes (46.5%) to White's 1,983 (42.6%), advancing both to the general election where voters select the top two candidates regardless of party.[99] Balint garnered 11,464 votes (39.4%) in the general, ahead of White's 10,917 (37.6%), Republican Tyler Colford's 4,007 (13.8%), and other candidates including Republican Mark Shepard (4.1%) and independents.[98] [18] She was reelected on November 3, 2020, again from Windham District, with White, amid a competitive Democratic primary where Balint edged White with 2,998 votes (51.5%) to 2,827 (48.5%).[100] In the general election, Balint received 14,520 votes (37.8%), followed closely by White's 13,683 (35.6%), with Republicans Marcus Parish (4,359 votes, 11.4%) and John Lyddy (4,265 votes, 11.1%) trailing.[101] Balint did not seek reelection in 2022, instead pursuing the U.S. House seat.[18]| Election | Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 General (Windham District) | Becca Balint | Democratic | 11,464 | 39.4%[98] |
| Jeanette White | Democratic | 10,917 | 37.6% | |
| Tyler Colford | Republican | 4,007 | 13.8% | |
| Others | Various | ~3,000 | 9.2% | |
| 2020 General (Windham District) | Becca Balint | Democratic | 14,520 | 37.8%[101] |
| Jeanette White | Democratic | 13,683 | 35.6% | |
| Marcus Parish | Republican | 4,359 | 11.4% | |
| John Lyddy | Republican | 4,265 | 11.1% | |
| Others | Various | ~1,000 | 4.1% |
Federal Elections
Balint sought election to Vermont's at-large congressional district in 2022 following the retirement of incumbent Democrat Peter Welch, who pursued a U.S. Senate seat. She won the Democratic primary on August 9, 2022, defeating Lieutenant Governor Molly Gray and three other candidates.[102] In the general election held on November 8, 2022, Balint defeated Republican nominee Liam Madden, an Iraq War veteran and antiwar activist, along with independent and other minor candidates. Her victory marked her as the first woman and the first openly lesbian member of Congress from Vermont.[26] The 2022 general election results for Vermont's at-large congressional district were as follows:| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Becca Balint | Democratic | 176,494 | 62.58% |
| Liam Madden | Republican | 78,397 | 27.80% |
| Others | Various | ~40,000 | ~9.62% |
| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Becca Balint | Democratic | 218,398 | 62.29% |
| Mark Coester | Republican/Libertarian | 104,451 | 29.79% |
| Others | Various | ~40,000 | ~7.92% |