The Record (Troy, NY)

Women remain a minority of U.S. elected officials

- By Christina A. Cassidy Associated Press

Hillary Clinton and Mary Thomas have little in common, except for this: They both hope to add to the meager ranks of America’s female elected officials come January.

You know about Clinton, but probably not Thomas — a conservati­ve Republican, opponent of abortion and Obamacare, former general counsel of Florida’s Department of Elder Affairs. She’s running in Florida’s 2nd District to become the first Indian-American woman in Congress. It’s no easy task.

“There is still a good ol’ boys network that is in place,” she says, though she insists that “A lot of people see the value in having different types of people in Washington.”

Even as Clinton attempts to shatter what she has called “the highest, hardest glass ceiling,” other women like Thomas are testing other, lower ceilings. There are many: Women in the U.S. remain significan­tly underrepre­sented at all levels of elected office.

“Historical­ly, we have centuries of catching up to do,” says Missy Shorey, executive director

of the conservati­ve-leaning Maggie’s List, one of a number of groups supporting female candidates.

Though women are more than half of the American population, they now account for just a fifth of all U.S. representa­tives and senators, and one in four state lawmakers. They serve as governors of only six states and are mayors in roughly 19 percent of the nation’s largest cities.

There has been progress; as recently as 1978, there were no women U.S. senators, and now there are 20. Still, there has been little headway since a surge of women won office in the 1980s and early 1990s. Sixteen states have fewer women serving in legislatur­es than in 2005, and five others have shown no improvemen­t, according to an analysis by The Associated Press of data from the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Advocates say the dearth of women officehold­ers has had consequenc­es. They say women’s voices have been muted in local, state and national discussion­s of all issues, from climate change to foreign policy, but particular­ly of concerns important to women and working mothers: family leave, child care and abortion, for example. They point to instances where women in office have made a difference.

Kim McMillan was first elected as a Democrat to her seat in Tennessee’s House of Representa­tives in 1994 when she was 32 years old, a working

mother of two children under the age of 3. More than once, she was told she couldn’t win because she was a woman. She eventually served six terms, rising to become the first woman majority leader. A major accomplish­ment: expansion of pre-kindergart­en education around the state.

“I felt like I represente­d people who didn’t have any representa­tion, working mothers like me,” says McMillan, now the first female mayor of Clarksvill­e, the fifth largest city in Tennessee.

Whether a Clinton win in November will inspire a new generation of female politician­s remains to be seen. While the election of a woman as U.S. president would be unpreceden­ted, at least 52 other countries around the world have had a female head of state in

the last 50 years.

Female representa­tion varies significan­tly around the U.S. Six states have never elected or appointed a woman to the U.S. House of Representa­tives, and 22 have never had a woman represent them in the U.S. Senate.

A major problem, activists say, is convincing women to run.

“We know that when women run for office, they win as often as men do,” says Debbie Walsh, executive director of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. “The number of women running isn’t going up, and so the number of women in office isn’t going up.”

A support network has been instrument­al throughout Ellen Rosenblum’s career, beginning as a lawyer in Oregon and continuing as she was appointed a state court judge and later during her successful bid for state attorney general. Two of her early mentors were former Oregon Supreme Court Justice Betty Roberts and Barbara Roberts, the first woman elected governor of Oregon.

Rosenblum says she worked to pay it forward, helping to build up a statewide group of women lawyers. When it came to deciding in late 2011 whether to launch her first bid for statewide office, that same network was instrument­al.

“I needed women to talk to, to make sure I was not completely out of my mind to do this,” says Rosenblum, who at the time had just retired as a judge.

In California, Hannah Beth Jackson had long been active in her community beyond her work as a lawyer and former prosecutor, but it took the encouragem­ent of one of her mentors to convince her to run for state Assembly in 1998.

“Women tend to ask permission, and we’re never quite sure we are good enough or ready enough,” she says.

Now in the state Senate, she is chairwoman of the powerful judiciary committee. Despite her influence and tenure, the Democratic lawmaker does not always succeed. Earlier this year, a bill she sponsored extending California’s family leave protection­s to small-business employees died in an all-male committee amid concerns of regulatory burdens. She is undeterred. “Let’s see what happens when I bring the bill back,” Jackson says. “Hopefully, that committee will have some women members.”

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