Kathy Manning

Politician

Birthday December 3, 1956

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Detroit, Michigan, U.S.

Age 67 years old

Nationality United States

#62366 Most Popular

1956

Kathy Ellen Manning (born December 3, 1956) is an American lawyer and politician from North Carolina, presently representing the state's North 6th congressional district.

A member of the Democratic Party, her district is in the heart of the Piedmont Triad and includes Greensboro and most of Winston-Salem.

Manning was born to a Jewish family in Detroit, Michigan, on December 3, 1956.

Her father worked for the Ford Motor Company for 40 years, and her mother was a public school teacher.

Manning attended Harvard University, where she sang a cappella with the Radcliffe Pitches.

She also attended the University of Michigan Law School, earning a Juris Doctor.

1987

After graduating from college, Manning moved to Greensboro, her husband's hometown, in 1987.

2009

She was the first woman to serve as board chair of the Jewish Federations of North America, from 2009 to 2012.

She also was the founding board chair of Prizmah: Center for Jewish Day Schools in New York.

2010

Manning voted with President Joe Biden's stated position 100% of the time in the 117th Congress, according to a FiveThirtyEight analysis.

In December 2023, she announced that she would not be running for reelection due to new "egregiously gerrymandered congressional districts" in North Carolina.

Manning and her husband, Randall Kaplan, have three children.

2016

Had it existed in 2016, Hillary Clinton would have won it with over 59% of the vote –a near-mirror image of Trump's 56% in the old 6th.

On paper, the new 6th was one of the most Democratic white-majority districts in the South.

With most observers believing the 6th was a likely Democratic pickup, Walker announced he would not run for a fourth term.

Manning won the Democratic primary, and in the general election, she defeated Republican nominee Lee Haywood with 62% of the vote.

Upon her swearing-in on January 3, 2021, she became the first Democrat to represent this district since 1985, and the first white Democrat to represent a Triad-based district since Steve Neal left office in 1995.

Manning has stated health care is one of her driving issues, motivated by the "labyrinthine process of getting insurance" to cover her daughter's medication.

2018

She was the nominee for North Carolina's 13th congressional district in the 2018 election, and ran for and won the neighboring 6th in the 2020 election after court-ordered redistricting.

In 2018, Manning ran against Republican incumbent Ted Budd for the United States House of Representatives in NC's 13th congressional district.

At the time, the district stretched from southwestern Greensboro to the northern exurbs of Charlotte.

On paper, the district tilted Republican; Donald Trump had carried the district two years earlier with 53% of the vote.

She lost to Budd, 51%–45%.

2019

After a court-ordered redistricting in 2019, Manning's home in Greensboro was drawn into the neighboring NC's 6th congressional district, represented by three-term Republican Mark Walker.

The new 6th included all of Guilford County and swept west to grab the more Democratic areas of neighboring Forsyth County, including almost all of Winston-Salem.

The old 6th included eastern Greensboro, as well as much of the eastern Triad and some outer suburbs of the Triangle.

On December 2, 2019, hours before the new map was issued, Manning announced she would run in the 6th.

The new district was significantly more compact and Democratic than its predecessor.