San Diego Union-Tribune

CITY MAKES HISTORY WITH ALL-FEMALE COUNCIL

Minn. capital said to be first large city to reach milestone

- BY TRISHA AHMED & STEVE KARNOWSKI Ahmed and Karnowski write for The Associated Press.

When St. Paul City Council President Mitra Jalali looked out at her fellow council members at their initial meeting this week, she saw all the members’ seats were occupied by women — a first for Minnesota’s capital city.

Experts who track women in politics said St. Paul, with a population of about 300,000 people, is the first large U.S. city they know of with an allfemale city council. But even as the council members celebrate the milestone, they are expressing more excitement about what the all-female council can accomplish in the coming year.

“We’re a multifaith, multicultu­ral group of women. Our profession­al experience­s are what people trusted as much as our personal ones. … And we have a clear policy vision that we got elected on,” Jalali said in an interview.

All seven women are under 40 years old, and six out of the seven are women of color. From civil engineerin­g to nonprofit directing, they have a wide range of profession­al experience­s, which Jalali said helps capture the city’s diversity.

“I think that our community is finally reflected by the City Council,” Jalali said, adding, “The median age of our community is 32.5. We are a majority person-of-color

city. We have many major racial and ethnic groups, many of which are now represente­d on this council.”

According to researcher­s with the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University, St. Paul is the largest U.S. city they are aware of to ever have an all-female city council.

The Rutgers data show that women continue to be underrepre­sented as municipal officials across the country. Jean Sinzdak, associate director of the center, said seven out of 10 municipal office holders across the country are male, and most of them are White.

“The fact that you have an all-female council and a majority of women of color, it has a long-term effect on young women and girls seeing them and saying, ‘I can do this, too,’ ” Sinzdak said.

Members held their first City Council meeting Wednesday after getting sworn in the day before.

Hwa Jeong Kim, the council’s vice president, and Jalali

said that their top priorities include a comprehens­ive housing policy, renter protection­s, climate action, public safety interventi­ons that use police officers less and mental health responders more, and economic developmen­t.

“I feel like women and women of color and queer and trans women have been grieving for a long time — not for things that they’ve lost, but for things that they’ve never had,” Kim said.

The council “lifts up the progressiv­e values of our community more than ever and is committed to doing that difficult work together — not just in a performati­ve way, but in a way that is sustainabl­e and will really make lasting change,” Jalali added.

The council is a nonpartisa­n office, but all seven members are Democrats, she said.

In Minnesota, women made up 35 percent of the municipal office holders in cities with over 10,000 people, tying the state with Michigan for 16th place

among the 50 states, according to the Rutgers data. Alaska and Arizona had the highest proportion­s of women in municipal office at 45 percent. North Dakota had the lowest at 20 percent.

Sindzak said left-leaning and Democratic communitie­s tend to have more female elected officials because Democratic women outnumber Republican women, so they are more likely to run for office.

“It’s not surprising to me that a city like this achieved this milestone first,” Sindzak said.

St. Paul is considered to be a Democratic stronghold.

Karen Kedrowski, director of the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics at Iowa State University, said the number of women elected to legislativ­e, congressio­nal and municipal offices seems to consistent­ly level off around 25 percent to 30 percent across the U.S.

 ?? TRISHA AHMED AP ?? Members of the City Council hold their first meeting on Wednesday in St. Paul, Minn. The council is composed of all women for the first time.
TRISHA AHMED AP Members of the City Council hold their first meeting on Wednesday in St. Paul, Minn. The council is composed of all women for the first time.

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