Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Virginia is in line to have its first female speaker of the House of Delegates.

Dems’ dual triumph brings female speaker, majority leader

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RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia’s House of Delegates is expected to soon have its first female speaker in its 400-year history, as the chamber’s incoming Democrats chose a veteran legislator for the post Saturday.

Democratic delegates for the upcoming session picked Del. Eileen Filler-Corn of Fairfax County as their nominee.

Filler-Corn’s election as speaker on the session’s first day in January is expected because Democrats on Tuesday won a majority in the state House for the first time in two decades.

Republican­s lost their slim seat advantages in both the state House and Senate, giving Democrats led by Gov. Ralph Northam the ability to pass stricter gun laws and a higher minimum wage as well as change rules barring the removal of Confederat­e war memorials.

“This is a tremendous honor I don’t take lightly, and I’m ready to move forward,” Filler-Corn told the Richmond Times-Dispatch. “We had a historic night on Tuesday and we had a historic day today, so I’m looking forward to continuing to stand up for the issues and values that are so important to Virginians. And we’re thrilled to be in the majority.”

House Democratic Caucus members on Saturday also picked Del. Charniele Herring of Alexandria as the new majority leader, meaning she’ll be the first woman and first African-American to hold that job.

Tuesday was the third election in a row that Virginia Democrats have made significan­t gains since President Donald Trump was elected.

In a news release, Northam said he and the House Democratic leaders who were picked Saturday “share a commitment to serving Virginians and advancing a more progressiv­e and inclusive Commonweal­th.”

Filler-Corn, who joined the General Assembly in 2010, would also be the first Jewish speaker in state history. She’d succeed GOP House Speaker Kirk Cox.

Outgoing House Majority Leader Todd Gilbert congratula­ted Filler-Corn and other new Democratic leaders. He said Republican­s are concerned that they all are from “the deepest parts of northern Virginia” and want to ensure that people in other parts of the state get a fair hearing.

Filler-Corn said she would ensure geographic diversity in committee chairmansh­ips.

Filler-Corn, 55, works for a lobbying and consulting firm in northern Virginia. She doesn’t lobby Virginia state government and will continue to recuse herself from certain state legislativ­e matters that the firm works on, a spokeswoma­n has said.

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Eileen Filler-Corn

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