RC

Robert Crosser

Representative from OH · Served 1913–1955 (42 years)

HHouseDemocratOH
Birth countryScotland
Chamber

House

First elected

1913

Status

Left office 1955

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About Robert Crosser

Robert Crosser was born in Scotland and went on to serve in the US House of Representatives representing OH. Robert Crosser's career in Congress began in 1913, during the Progressive Era through the New Deal, and ran through 1955, a tenure of 42 years. As a Democrat, Robert sat in a chamber where most colleagues were born in the United States; naturalized citizens remain a small minority of Congress in every era.

Scotland is unusually open by global standards: certain categories of non-native-born residents can vote in national elections, and in some cases stand for office in its own parliament or legislative body. In practical terms: Scotland grants voting rights in Scottish Parliament and local elections to all foreign nationals with leave to remain, including non-EU citizens. One of the broadest frameworks globally. This is one of the rarer cases where the birth country broadly matches the American standard: Scotland extends substantive political rights to long-term residents who did not start life as its citizens.

Scotland has sent 9 naturalized citizens to Congress in total, of whom 2 also served as Democrats like Robert. OH has elected 4 foreign-born Congress members across its history, so Robert's path from naturalization to Capitol Hill is not unique to that state — but it remains exceptional nationally. Across the full history of the US Congress, Scotland ranks 5th of 38 tracked birth countries, accounting for 9 naturalized-citizen lawmakers.

Why does Scotland's own voting regime matter on an American member's profile? Because it frames a question the US Congress itself wrestles with whenever immigration and citizenship come up: which countries extend the same democratic trust to people who arrived later that the United States extended to Robert? Scotland is one of the handful of places that answers yes at meaningful scale.

Non-citizen voting in Scotland

Broad rights

Scotland grants voting rights in Scottish Parliament and local elections to all foreign nationals with leave to remain, including non-EU citizens. One of the broadest frameworks globally.

Broader rights granted

Robert Crosser was born in a country with broad non-citizen voting rights.

Election history & terms of service

21 terms in Congress · First elected 1913 · Left office 1955

19131915First elected
Term 1
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19151917Re-elected
Term 2
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19171919Re-elected
Term 3
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19191921Re-elected
Term 4
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19211923Re-elected
Term 5
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19231925Re-elected
Term 6
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19251927Re-elected
Term 7
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19271929Re-elected
Term 8
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19291931Re-elected
Term 9
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19311933Re-elected
Term 10
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19331935Re-elected
Term 11
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19351937Re-elected
Term 12
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19371939Re-elected
Term 13
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19391941Re-elected
Term 14
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19411943Re-elected
Term 15
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19431945Re-elected
Term 16
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19451947Re-elected
Term 17
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19471949Re-elected
Term 18
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19491951Re-elected
Term 19
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19511953Re-elected
Term 20
HHouse·Democrat· OH
19531955Re-elected
Term 21
HHouse·Democrat· OH

Other members born in Scotland(8)