Houston Chronicle

Next mission for women with service in military: Run for a seat in Congress

- By Laurie Kellman and Bill Barrow

WASHINGTON — A dragon winds around a cherry tree in the tattoo across MJ Hegar’s arm and back, over the shrapnel wounds she hadn’t wanted to see with her young children around.

But nine years after being shot down in Afghanista­n, then winning a lawsuit against the federal government, writing a book and now running for a Texas congressio­nal seat, Hegar isn’t hiding much anymore.

“I carry my service with me wherever I go,” Hegar said. “We don’t see my family and my childhood and my service as different chapters. It’s all a package deal.”

Hegar is part of a crop of female veterans running for Congress in this year’s midterm elections. Almost all Democrats and many of them mothers, they are shaped by the Sept. 11 attacks and overseas wars, including the longest war in American history. Many are retiring from the military and looking for another way to serve the country.

They’re part of a record number of women running for seats in Congress, but in certain ways, they are a class apart.

Antidote to partisan politics

The female veterans claim expertise in national security and veterans issues, with a track record of thriving in institutio­ns dominated by men. Regardless of party, they cast themselves as the antidote to bitterly partisan politics: “mission-driven” and trained by the military to work toward a common goal.

“I flew 89 combat missions as a U.S. Marine. My 90th mission is running for Congress to take on politician­s who put party over country,” said Kentucky Democratic candidate Amy McGrath, the first female Marine to fly an F/A-18 in combat.

Two Democrats — Massachuse­tts Rep. Seth Moulton, a retired Marine Corps captain and Bronze Star recipient, and Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who lost her legs and partial use of an arm when her helicopter was shot down in Iraq — have been instrument­al in recruiting veterans to run for office.

“It’s the year of the woman, but it’s also the year of yearning for bringing integrity and honor back to politics,” Moulton said. “We need Democrats with the credibilit­y to tell people what’s really going on.”

The women are hardly the first to use their military service to their political advantage — men have been doing it for decades. But their campaigns highlight a set of political concerns specific to female veterans.

The candidates acknowledg­e their extraordin­ary stories of trailblazi­ng military careers could make it difficult for some voters to relate to them. Will they come off as too tough or hawkish?

McGrath released a 30-second spot that mentioned the 89 combat missions — but focused on her taking her three children to the pediatrici­an.

Much of Hegar’s story was public by the time she decided to challenge Republican Rep. John Carter in the Austin-area district, so she went for the full reveal — tattoos and all.

Her video, “Doors,” features the door of the helicopter in which she was shot down on her third tour of Afghanista­n. Her medals, including a Purple Heart, play a role, as does Hegar’s 2012 lawsuit against the federal government that forced it to repeal the ban on women in combat.

Air Force veteran Gina Ortiz Jones, a Democratic nominee for Congress, hopes her active military duty and intelligen­ce work will “neutralize this perceived strength” of Republican­s as strong on security issues.

That could be important in the race for the San Antonio-area seat held by Republican Rep. Will Hurd, a former CIA operative. Ortiz Jones supports Medicare for all and singlepaye­r health insurance, positions that could be considered too liberal for the district.

“‘Liberal’ isn’t a word that is normally used to describe my work in national security,” she said.

In elite company

If these women win, they will join an exclusive club in Congress.

Just 19 percent of lawmakers are veterans — the same percentage that are women. Only four members are both: Sens. Duckworth and Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, and Reps. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., and Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii.

“It kind of reminds me of a fighter squadron, with so few women,” said McSally, a retired Air Force veteran who was the first woman to fly in combat and is now running for U.S. Senate.

New Jersey’s Mikie Sherrill, a Democrat running for Congress, is a former helicopter pilot and prosecutor whose time at the Naval Academy dovetailed with the Tailhook sexual assault scandal in the Navy and Marine Corps. In the 1990s, she said, speaking out when she felt sexually harassed “would really have impacted the way I was treated in the squadron.”

But these days, with a generation of women retiring from the military and a record number running for Congress, “it’s become a lot easier to talk about these things,” she said.

 ?? James Crisp / Associated Press ?? Amy McGrath is among the women with military experience — many of them, like McGrath, combat veterans — who are among the record number of female candidates running for office this year.
James Crisp / Associated Press Amy McGrath is among the women with military experience — many of them, like McGrath, combat veterans — who are among the record number of female candidates running for office this year.
 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press ?? MJ Hegar pulls up her sleeve to reveal part of a tattoo that winds around her arm and back to cover scars from a shrapnel wound.
Eric Gay / Associated Press MJ Hegar pulls up her sleeve to reveal part of a tattoo that winds around her arm and back to cover scars from a shrapnel wound.

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