The Capital

Four Md. officials, Pelosi inducted into state Women’s Hall of Fame

- By Dana Munro

Maryland House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, Secretary of State Susan Lee, Comptrolle­r Brooke Lierman, Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller and Baltimore-born and raised U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, of California, were inducted into the Maryland Women’s Hall of Fame on Thursday.

Since the hall was establishe­d in 1985, The Maryland Commission for Women has honored four to eight women every year in March, Women’s History Month. Hall of Fame inductees over the 39 years have ranged from lawmakers to abolitioni­sts to astronauts. This year, all five are government officials. The theme for 2024’s commemorat­ion is “Celebratin­g Women’s Leadership: Honoring Maryland’s Firsts and Rising Leaders.”

Each woman chosen this year is a government leader and the first of her gender or race to hold her position. Jones, a delegate from Baltimore County, became the state’s first Black and first female speaker in 2019. Lee is Maryland’s first

Asian-American secretary of state, and Lierman is its first female comptrolle­r. Miller is the first woman of color and first immigrant elected to statewide office in Maryland. Pelosi became the country’s first female speaker of the House of Representa­tives in 2007.

“In each of their respective fields, they have taken our state to greater heights, even in the face of adversity,” said Rafael López, secretary of the Department of Human Services,

which houses the Maryland Commission for Women, in a statement.

Jones has served in the Maryland House of Delegates since 1997 and was elected speaker in 2019. In her time in the role she has led the house in passing the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future, an education reform legislatio­n plan, mandating the biggest investment in education in Maryland history. She led Maryland to becoming the first state to repeal the Law Enforcemen­t Officers’ Bill of Rights and implemente­d a statewide policy agenda for racial and economic reform. Additional­ly, she led effort to solidify reproducti­ve rights in Maryland’s constituti­on.

Jones was born in Baltimore County, attended Baltimore County Public Schools and received her bachelor’s in psychology from the University of Maryland Baltimore County.

Lee was appointed secretary of state by Gov. Wes Moore in January 2023. One of her primary focuses in the position is helping Maryland become a global leader and interface with other internatio­nal leaders in life sciences, artificial intelligen­ce, higher education and climate resilience. She’s already met with representa­tives from 69 countries, she said.

Representi­ng Montgomery County, Lee was elected to the House of Delegates in 2002 and the Senate in 2014.

She is a graduate of the Montgomery County public school system, the University of Maryland and the University of San Francisco School of Law.

“The women they’ve inducted in are just trailblaze­rs and individual­s that have made significan­t contributi­ons to Maryland and to the world,” Lee said Thursday.

She added that the recognitio­n is especially sweet given that many members of the women’s commission helped her achieve the feats she’s being honored for, including women’s rights and gun control.

“I feel very honored to be recognized by them, those that helped me pass landmark bills to empower and uplift women, children, families and people of different background­s,” Lee said.

Lee worked on bills in the legislatur­e such as the Maryland Equal Pay for Equal Work Act, a law prohibitin­g gender-based discrimina­tion around wages; the True Freedom Act; the Anti-Exploitati­on Act, which relate to labor traffickin­g; and ghost gun regulation­s.

In November 2022, Lierman was elected comptrolle­r, a position that manages the state’s tax collection­s and offers her a seat on the three-person Board of Public Works, which approves appropriat­ions for nearly all state public works projects.

Prior to winning the comptrolle­r race, she served as a delegate from Baltimore city for eight years. She worked on legislatio­n bolstering public transit and public schools, funding for gun violence prevention programs, strengthen­ing affordable housing laws, and assisting victims of sex traffickin­g.

She is a Washington native and graduated high school in Montgomery County, going on to earn her bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College and a law degree from The University of Texas at Austin.

Lierman thanked the honorees who came before her and enabled her to be in a position to continue paving the way for women political leaders.

“Each of us builds on the work of those who come before us, and I am grateful for and inspired by the many women who helped make it possible for me to put more cracks into the world’s glass ceiling,” she wrote in a statement to Baltimore Sun Media.

Miller was elected lieutenant governor in November 2022 as Moore’s running mate. In this capacity, she is focusing on helping address statewide transporta­tion, mental health and STEM equity issues. She also chairs the Governor’s Work Zone Safety Work Group, which is designed to improve the safety of highway work zones. Miller also chairs Maryland’s first Council on Interfaith Outreach, which aims to improve communicat­ions across religious divides.

“It’s an honor to be part of a Hall of Fame class of trailblaze­rs, who are leading by example and showing the next generation of leaders that anything is possible,” Miller said in a statement. “I am proud to be working in partnershi­p with these women to make this Maryland’s decade.”

For seven years, she represente­d Montgomery County in the House of Delegates. During that time she worked on laws to invest more in STEM education, eliminate red tape for small businesses and assist survivors of domestic abuse.

She was born in India and has lived in Montgomery County for the past 30 years.

Pelosi held her position as speaker of the U.S. House of Representa­tives from 2007 to 2011 and again from 2019 to 2023.

She has served in Congress representi­ng the San Francisco area for 36 years. She led the design of the Affordable Care Act during the Obama Administra­tion, which expanded the availabili­ty of health care coverage; and the American Rescue Plan under the Biden Administra­tion, which led to support for front line workers during the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the facilitati­on of hundreds of millions of vaccines. To support the improvemen­t of roads, bridges, ports and broadband across the nation, she shepherded the passage of the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act.

During her tenure in office, she also led the House’s side of the bipartisan effort to establish the Select Committee to Investigat­e January 6th and impeach former president Donald Trump for violating his oath of office and headed the fight to repeal the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” regulation, protecting the rights of LGBTQ+ citizens to openly serve in the military.

A physical exhibit of the honorees is located on the campus of Notre Dame of Maryland University in Baltimore. The five will be honored in a ceremony Thursday night at the Government House in Annapolis.

 ?? KEN CEDENO/SIPA USA 2019 ?? Baltimore-born and raised U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, of California, was inducted into the Maryland Women’s Hall of Fame on Thursday.
KEN CEDENO/SIPA USA 2019 Baltimore-born and raised U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, of California, was inducted into the Maryland Women’s Hall of Fame on Thursday.

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