Imperial Valley Press

Record number of women win in state elections

- BY BEN CHRISTOPHE­R

On election night, Susannah Delano, executive director of Close the Gap CA, a group focused on increasing the share of women in the state Legislatur­e, made a prediction: “2018 will be the biggest single leap for women in state history.”

Now the numbers are in.

Sure enough, the 2018 midterm election in California was a high-water mark for women seeking elected o ce. But it was also a reminder of just how male-dominated our politics remain.

Though not every race has been called, it appears 53 women were elected at the state and federal level across California this year. That includes 28 members of the Legislatur­e and 19 members of Congress, as well as three statewide constituti­onal o cers: Lt. Gov.-elect Eleni Kounalakis, Treasurer-elect Fiona Ma and state Controller Betty Yee.

That’s a higher number than any other election this century. It’s also a record-high rate: One in three winning candidates this year were women. Or, to put it another way, men hit a record-low, winning a measly two-thirds of all state and federal races across the state.

Many saw this coming. Since our last federal election, we’ve seen the inaugurati­on of President Trump and two rounds of nation-spanning Woman’s Marches; we’ve seen the downfall and prosecutio­n of Hollywood titan Harvey Weinstein and the emergence of the #MeToo movement; we’ve seen the resignatio­n of lawmakers in Washington, D.C., and California in the face of sexual assault allegation­s, and the appointmen­t of a Supreme Court Justice despite them.

And while many have dubbed 2018 the second “Year of the Woman,” a redux of 1992 when a record number of women were elected to federal o ce including U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, it might be more accurate to call 2018 the “Year of the Democratic Woman.”

Just 6 percent of the female candidates who won this year in California were Republican­s — a total of three women. That isn’t simply because there are fewer Republican women candidates. Republican­s in a blue state like California are less likely to win than Democrats, but male GOP candidates were more than twice as likely to win as their female counterpar­ts.

And of all the candidates who ran, including those in the primary, only 7 percent of Republican women went on to win in this year’s general election (compared to 17 percent of Republican men). Meanwhile, 40 percent of Democratic women won their races (compared to 35 percent of male candidates).

In concrete terms, the 2018 election results mean that many more of the state’s residents will now be represente­d by women. Or, at least, by one.

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