The Columbus Dispatch

Flood of women ready to run for office at every level

- By Michael Tackett

LEESBURG, Va. — For Wendy Gooditis, a northern Virginia real-estate agent, the crystalliz­ing moment in her decision to run for office was when she heard her state delegate suggest that he had fought gerrymande­ring in Virginia when his record said otherwise.

For Mai-Khanh Tran, a pediatrici­an in Southern California, it was the day after the presidenti­al election in 2016 and she looked into the eyes of a young patient with a brain tumor whose family had only recently obtained health insurance.

For Andrea Ramsey, the president of a nonprofit children’s health clinic in Kansas City, Kansas, it was in May when her local congressma­n voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

None of the women had seriously contemplat­ed entering politics before. They had no money or organizati­on. But they were dismayed with the direction of the country, they said, starting with the election of President Donald Trump, and finally decided to act.

They have been joined by hundreds of other women across the nation, with the number seeking elective office rising at every level, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers. They were angered by Trump’s election and energized by the Women’s March in Washington the day after his inaugurati­on, and are now even more

An organizati­on that works quietly on your behalf celebrated its 25th anniversar­y on Thursday with an event at the Statehouse.

The Ohio Coalition for Open Government has pushed for open government and access to public records in our state. It works to ensure that state and local government­s remain open, operate with transparen­cy and serve the people of Ohio.

To be clear: This organizati­on exists to ensure your access to public records, meetings and officials. Many news organizati­ons are involved. Making sure that government operates with transparen­cy helps journalist­s do their jobs on your behalf, but this is an organizati­on that stands watch for all residents of Ohio.

To that end, its website at www.ohioopengo­v.com includes informatio­n that you can use to arm yourself with knowledge of the law in case someone in government tries to keep you from public informatio­n — everything from minutes of a village council meeting to a police incident report. If that doesn’t work, the coalition stands ready to help Ohioans who run into public-access roadblocks.

Dispatch reporter Randy Ludlow has been part of the coalition for much of the past decade, having served on its board for a number of those years. In that capacity, and as one of many reporters who have worked to educate themselves on the law so that they can stand up to those who would keep us from public informatio­n, he has helped many people with access issues.

Most people don’t need to fight those fights on a daily basis, but when you need public informatio­n, you need it. That’s not the time to start studying the law. So the

driven to get involved after the flood of sexual harassment allegation­s against powerful men.

Stephanie Schriock, president of Emily’s List, the largest national organizati­on devoted to electing female candidates, said that in the 10 months before the election in 2016, about 1,000 women contacted her organizati­on about running for office or getting involved in other ways. Since the election, she said, the number has exploded to more than 22,000.

“We have never seen anything like what we have seen over the last 12 months,” Schriock said. “If you could underline that four times, that’s what I mean.”

Gooditis won her race for the Virginia House of Delegates in November, defeating three-term Republican incumbent Randy Minchew. She was one of 11 women who flipped seats in Virginia state legislativ­e races, and women across the country took notice of the wave.

Democrats are the overwhelmi­ng beneficiar­ies of the surge in women’s activism, and even hope it could lead to retaking the House if candidates such as Tran and Ramsey prevail over incumbent Republican­s.

Their optimism will be tested in primaries early next year and throughout the summer, but the early signs indicate that female candidates are raising significan­t sums and building strong organizati­ons.

The largest increase by far is in the number of female House candidates, 354 — 291 Democrats and 63 Republican­s — according to data from the Rutgers center. The The success of Wendy Gooditis in her run for a Virginia House seat has helped galvanize women across the country to run for other offices. They say they are motivated by the election of President Donald Trump, as well as the numerous sexual-harassment accusation­s against men.

number of women challengin­g incumbents is almost four times the number at the same period in 2015.

In the Senate, there are almost double the number of female candidates — 25 Democrats and 13 Republican­s — than there were at this point in 2015, and about 10 times the number in the 2012 and 2014 elections.

Celinda Lake, a pollster for Democratic candidates, said, “I think we will see more women running, more women voting for women, more women turning out to vote. It makes women change agents and a powerful part of the formula for 2018 races.”

Trump’s defeat of Hillary Clinton, the first woman to be a major-party candidate

for president, jolted women to become more active.

“It was Donald Trump and the way that he sort of embraced masculinit­y, but even more specifical­ly, misogyny, in his rhetoric and behavior,” said Kelly Dittmar, a scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics. “To make a statement against that and the policies he espoused sort of pushed them over the edge to not just think about running, but to put their names out there.”

The revelation­s about sexual assault and harassment have only added to the power of the moment.

“Look, these instances, by and large, almost entirely, are being perpetrate­d by

men, and there is something to say here about the value of having women in institutio­ns like Congress to challenge the dominance of masculinit­y,” Dittmar said.

“I don’t think that it is a partisan story,” she added. “Republican women as well as Democratic women equally know what it is like to be harassed.”

Many of the women are decided long shots, challengin­g Republican­s in some cases where no Democrat has run in a decade.

Hillary Shields’ activism had been limited to preparing scrapbooks of families who struggled to gain access to health care, and to work for the Kansas City, Missouri, chapter of Indivisibl­e. “I had never thought about running for office,” she said. But when she asked her county Democratic organizati­on who was running against the Republican incumbent for the state Senate, it told her that no one was, and that Democrats had not fielded a candidate for the seat since 2006.

The incumbent suddenly retired, forcing a special election. Shields lost, but is running again in 2018. “I just felt like I had to get more involved,” she said, adding, “If we feel like we are doing something positive and useful, people will show up.”

Samantha Fields felt a similar pull in Lubbock, Texas. After seeing her local state representa­tive introduce a bill allowing for the open carrying of swords, she had had enough, and decided to become a candidate. “Women tend to want things that they need, and I hear him for this bill for something that he just wants,” said Fields, a Democrat. “There’s such a lack of women in the Texas legislatur­e now.” Men hold 144 of the 181 seats.

The results in the House of Delegates in Virginia, which included the election of the first Latinas, the first Asian-American and the first transgende­r candidate, provide the most tangible indication that women are poised to make substantia­l gains next year.

“I have been experienci­ng this surge since the day after Election Day last year,” said Julie Copeland, executive director of Emerge Virginia, which is part of a national network of organizati­ons that helps train female candidates. “What I didn’t know is if it would stay. I can say that it has. The women are energized, and they are engaged, and they are looking for a place to go.”

 ?? [LEXEY SWALL/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? Wendy Gooditis, a real-estate agent who won her race for the Virginia House of Delegates, defeated a three-term Republican male incumbent. She was one of 11 women who flipped seats in Virginia state legislativ­e races.
[LEXEY SWALL/THE NEW YORK TIMES] Wendy Gooditis, a real-estate agent who won her race for the Virginia House of Delegates, defeated a three-term Republican male incumbent. She was one of 11 women who flipped seats in Virginia state legislativ­e races.
 ?? [JACQUELYN MARTIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, right, of New York, was one of dozens of Democratic legislator­s who called on fellow senator Al Franken, of Minnesota, to resign because of sexual-harassment accusation­s against him. With Gillibrand on Wednesday were, at far...
[JACQUELYN MARTIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, right, of New York, was one of dozens of Democratic legislator­s who called on fellow senator Al Franken, of Minnesota, to resign because of sexual-harassment accusation­s against him. With Gillibrand on Wednesday were, at far...
 ?? [LEXEY SWALL / THE NEW YORK TIMES] ??
[LEXEY SWALL / THE NEW YORK TIMES]

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