Albuquerque Journal

Women in the Roundhouse

Increased number — 38 in both House and Senate — expected to have impact

- BY DAN MCKAY

SANTA FE — Mimi Stewart has served in the Roundhouse long enough to know she prefers a good mix of men and women.

“Without enough women,” she said, “it kind of turns into more of an old boys club. It really does.”

Stewart, a Democratic senator from Albuquerqu­e, should find the 2019 session a little more to her liking.

A historic number of women — at least 38 altogether — are set to serve in the Legislatur­e this year, a 31 percent increase from 2016. It will be the largest number of female legislator­s in New Mexico since at least 1967, the earliest year for which records are available, according to a librarian for the Legislatur­e.

Stewart, who has served in either the House or the Senate since 1995, said the increasing proportion of women will have an impact.

“What happens is that you tend to have more compromise, you tend to have more openness, you tend to have more working together as a group,” she said in a recent interview.

Despite the gains, women will account for only about one-third of the 112 legislator­s in both chambers overall. It will be closer to even in the House, where 31 of the 70 members will be women.

Female membership in the 42-member Senate, meanwhile, has dropped, from 11 women in 2012 to seven women in recent years. But the increasing number of women in the House has more than offset the decrease in the Senate.

New Mexico’s proportion of women in the Legislatur­e is higher than the national average, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Women make up 34 percent of the New Mexico Legislatur­e, compared with 28 percent for the whole country.

Rep. Joanne Ferrary, a Las Cruces Democrat elected in 2016, said women often bring a different perspectiv­e. They work more frequently in some profession­s — such as teaching and nursing — than men, she said.

“I do believe we kind of look at things differentl­y,” said Democratic Rep. Linda Trujillo of Santa Fe. She was also first elected in 2016.

Researcher­s at four universiti­es released a study last month that found fewer interrupti­ons when there are more women in Congress.

The researcher­s — from the University of California, San Diego; Stanford and Harvard universiti­es; and the University of Pittsburgh — examined transcript­s from committee hearings over a 22-year period in their paper, “A Woman’s Voice in the House.”

“Both women and men are less likely to interrupt others when women’s proportion on a committee increases,” they said. “Further, women are more likely to stay on the same topic as other women, while men are likely to change topics introduced by women.”

In New Mexico, the proportion of women in the state House of Representa­tives is climbing from about 39 percent of the membership to 44 percent.

Of the incoming freshman class of 20 new representa­tives, 10 are women. And nine of the new women are Democrats.

“There’s a common sense of optimism, willingnes­s to really work and a willingnes­s to work together, not just with Democrats, but with everybody,” said Rep. Joy Garratt, an Albuquerqu­e Democrat and teacher elected in 2018.

It’s tough to generalize, she said, about the difference­s between male and female candidates. But Garratt said the women running for office last year showed a real commitment to listening to voters and considerin­g new perspectiv­es.

Republican Rep. Kelly Fajardo of Belen said she thinks women in the Legislatur­e tend to pursue their real priorities. They might introduce fewer bills than men, she said, but work harder to push the proposals they really care about.

“Women tend not to carry legislatio­n for the sake of carrying legislatio­n,” Fajardo said.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? From left, Rep. Joanne Ferrary, D-Las Cruces; Rep.-elect Andrea Romero, D-Santa Fe; and Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero, D-Albuquerqu­e, walk through the Roundhouse.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL From left, Rep. Joanne Ferrary, D-Las Cruces; Rep.-elect Andrea Romero, D-Santa Fe; and Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero, D-Albuquerqu­e, walk through the Roundhouse.
 ??  ?? Sen. Mimi Stewart
Sen. Mimi Stewart

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