Sharice Davids

Attorney

Birthday May 22, 1980

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Frankfurt, West Germany

Age 43 years old

Nationality Germany

#36837 Most Popular

1963

She is also only the second Democrat to represent what is now the 3rd since 1963.

1980

Sharice Lynnette Davids (born May 22, 1980) is an American attorney, former mixed martial artist, and politician serving as the U.S. representative from KS's 3rd congressional district since 2019.

A member of the Democratic Party, she represents a district that includes most of the Kansas side of the Kansas City metropolitan area, including Kansas City, Overland Park, Prairie Village, Leawood, Lenexa, and Olathe.

Davids was born on May 22, 1980, in Frankfurt, West Germany.

She is a member of the Ho-Chunk people, and an enrolled member of the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin.

Her maternal grandfather, Fredrick J. Davids, a United States Army veteran, was born into the Mohican Nation Stockbridge-Munsee Band, in Oneida, Wisconsin.

Sharice was raised by her single mother, Crystal Herriage, who served in the U.S. Army.

2006

Davids began competing in mixed martial arts (MMA) as an amateur in 2006, and went professional in 2013.

She had a 5–1 win–loss record as an amateur and a 1–1 record as a professional.

She tried out for The Ultimate Fighter but did not make it onto the show, leading her to shift her focus away from MMA to travel the U.S. and live on Native American reservations to work with the communities on economic and community development programs.

Professional

Amateur

2007

Davids attended Leavenworth High School, Haskell Indian Nations University, Johnson County Community College, the University of Kansas, and the University of Missouri–Kansas City, graduating from the latter with a bachelor's degree in business administration in 2007.

2010

An attorney educated at the University of Missouri–Kansas City and Cornell Law School, Davids was a professional mixed martial artist in the 2010s.

She earned her Juris Doctor from Cornell Law School in 2010.

She lives in Roeland Park, Kansas and was endorsed for reelection by the Kansas City Star in 2022.

Davids began her legal career at SNR Denton in 2010.

She later directed community and economic development for the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

2016

In 2016, Davids worked as a White House Fellow in the Department of Transportation during the transition between the Obama and Trump administrations.

2018

Elected in 2018, Davids became the first Democrat elected to represent a Kansas congressional district in a decade.

She is the first openly LGBT Native American elected to the U.S. Congress, the first openly lesbian person elected to the U.S. Congress from Kansas, and one of the first two Native American women elected to Congress, along with Deb Haaland of New Mexico.

She defeated incumbent Kevin Yoder in the 2018 election.

She is also the second Native American to represent Kansas in Congress, after Charles Curtis, who was Herbert Hoover's vice president.

Davids is currently the only Democrat in Kansas's Republican-dominated congressional delegation.

In 2018, Davids ran for the United States House of Representatives in Kansas's 3rd congressional district.

In the August Democratic primary election, she defeated Brent Welder, who had been endorsed by Bernie Sanders, 37% to 34%.

During a July 2018 episode of the Millennial Politics Podcast, host Jordan Valerie Allen asked Davids whether she supported abolishing ICE, the agency that enforces immigration laws and falls within the oversight of the Department of Homeland Security, to which Davids responded, "you asked me about defunding, which I think is probably essentially the same thing. But yeah."

Despite denials by Davids through campaign statements and a television advertisement, the Associated Press fact checker ruled that she did in fact lend her support to ending the agency.

Kansas City NPR member station KCUR fact-checked the claims that incumbent Representative Kevin Yoder and Davids made in separate interviews on its station and gave Yoder an "F".

Yoder said that immigrants were making false asylum claims and would increase crime.

Davids said that she supported single-payer health care, but it could not be enacted with Republicans in the White House.

Meanwhile, she supports short-term goals like allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices and getting generics to market faster.

KCUR said that Davids's claim that teachers are not paid enough and can no longer take tax deductions for buying their own school supplies, was "partly true and partly false" since the tax deduction had been reinstated.

Davids defeated Yoder in the November 8 general election.

2019

Upon her swearing-in on January 3, 2019, she became the first Democrat to represent Kansas in the House since Dennis Moore left office in 2011.

In 2019, Davids and Deb Haaland of New Mexico, a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe, became the first Native American women to serve in Congress.

In March 2021, Haaland left Congress to become the Secretary of Interior in the Biden administration.

2020

In 2020, Davids was unopposed in the Democratic primary, winning 74,437 votes.

Davids faced the Republican nominee, Cerner Corporation executive and former Kansas Republican Party chairwoman Amanda Adkins, in the general election.

Davids was endorsed by the Kansas City Star.