Melissa Bean (née Luburich; born January 22, 1962) is an American politician who served as the U.S. representative for from 2005 to 2011. Bean is a member of the Democratic Party.
She is the nominee to regain her old seat in the 2026 U.S. House election.
Early life and education
Bean grew up in a Serbian-American family at the Chicago suburbs, where her adopted father was a machine belt factory owner. She attended Maine East High School before graduating from Oakton Community College with an associate degree in 1982 and from Roosevelt University in 2000 with a bachelor's degree.
Early career
Prior to her election to congress, Bean was president of a home-based business, Sales Resources Inc.
2002 U.S. House campaign
In 2002, Bean was defeated by 73-year-old 8th district Republican incumbent Phil Crane, who had held the seat for 33 years. However, Bean managed 43 percent of the vote, surprising observers from both parties, given that the national party offered almost no financial support to her campaign.
2004 U.S. House campaign
Bean rematched against Crane in 2004. This time, Bean raised almost as much money as Crane, mainly from small donors. In contrast, Crane received most of his donations from political action committees. Despite Republican efforts to help Crane, Bean defeated him with 52 percent of the vote, a margin of roughly four percentage points. George W. Bush carried the district in the concurrently-held presidential election by 12 points. When Bean took office on January 3, 2005, she became the first Democrat to represent the district since it was formed in 1935.
U.S. House of Representatives
thumb|Bean speaking in the Capitol, 2010.
Bean was a member of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition and the pro-business New Democrat Coalition. She served on the Small Business and Financial Services committees after being granted a waiver by Democratic leadership. Although Bean was heavily favored, she lost to Walsh by 291 votes. Bean was endorsed by the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun-Times, The Daily Herald, and the Lake County News-Sun.
Post-congressional career
In 2011, Bean became President and CEO of the Executives Club of Chicago. After serving as chair of Midwest operations for JPMorgan Chase, she became CEO of Mesirow Wealth Advisors, part of Mesirow Financial, in 2019.
2026 U.S. House campaign
In September 2025, Bean announced her intention to run for her old congressional seat after a 15-year absence. The incumbent, five-term fellow Democrat Raja Krishnamoorthi, was running for the U.S. Senate. On March 17, 2026, Bean won the Democratic nomination after defeating candidates such Junaid Ahmed- who was endorsed by prominent progressive lawmakers such as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)- and Dan Tully.
Political positions
Tax cuts and finance
In her first year in Congress in 2005, Bean was one of nine House Democrats to vote with Republicans to extend tax cuts on capital gains and dividends, a vote which House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi called "immoral". She also departed from the Democrats in 2006 to vote to extend about $70 billion in the Bush tax cuts (she was one of just 15 Democrats to back the legislation). She also voted to repeal the estate tax and voted in favor of a presidential line-item veto — votes that earned her the moniker "Tax Hero" from the anti-tax group Citizens Against Government Waste. Bean voted for the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
Free trade
Bean was one of only 15 Democrats to vote in favor of the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), a vote which lost her the endorsement of the AFL-CIO and other unions who viewed her vote as a betrayal, but gained her the support of — and awards from — the United States Chamber of Commerce., though it did not become law.
Environment
Bean supported the House Democratic cap-and-trade bill in 2009, which would have capped carbon emissions from major U.S. sources and provided economic incentives for industries that reduce their emissions.
Healthcare
Bean supports abortion rights and voted in support of the Affordable Care Act. Bean was one of four Democrats to vote against the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010, joining 155 of 159 Republicans in defeating the bill.
Electoral history
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:0.5em ; font-size:95%"
|+ : Results 2002–2008
!Year
!
!Democratic
!Votes
!Pct
!
!Republican
!Votes
!Pct
!
!3rd Party
!Party
!Votes
!|Pct
!
|-
|2002
|
||Melissa L. Bean
| align=right|70,626
||43%
|
||Philip M. Crane
| align=right|95,275
||57%
|
|
|
|
|
| |*
|-
|2004
|
||Melissa L. Bean
| align=right|139,792
||52%
|
||
| align=right|130,601
||48%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|2006
|
||
| align=right|93,355
||51%
|
||David McSweeney
| align=right|80,720
||44%
|
||Bill Scheurer
||Moderate
| align=right|8,502
| align=right|5%
| |*
|-
|2008
|
||Melissa L. Bean
| align=right|146,563
||60%
|
||Steve Greenberg
| align=right|97,931
||40%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|2010
|
||Melissa L. Bean
| align=right|97,824
||48.3%
|
||Joe Walsh
| align=right|98,115
||48.5%
|
||Bill Scheurer
||Green
| align=right|6,494
| align=right|3.2%
|
|-
|colspan=16|Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 2002, Chuck Kelecic received 25 votes. In 2006, minor candidates received 817 votes.
|}
Personal life
Bean lives in unincorporated Palatine Township with her husband and two girls. Their residence was in the 8th District when they moved there, but became part of the 10th District because of redistricting. Bean is Serbian Orthodox.
See also
- Women in the United States House of Representatives
References
External links
- <!--
Links formerly displayed via the CongLinks template:
- Congressional profile at GovTrack
- Congressional profile at OpenCongress
- Financial information (federal office) at OpenSecrets.org
- Staff salaries, trips and personal finance at LegiStorm.com
- Issue positions and quotes at On the Issues
- Appearances on C-SPAN programs
- -->
- Profile at SourceWatch
|-
