As more women run for office, U.S. state
legislatures are poised to change
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[August 15, 2018]
By Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As women line up to
run for U.S. political office at historic rates, state legislatures -
where some of America's most critical policy decisions get made - could
see a slew of new female lawmakers after November's vote, according to a
Reuters analysis of election data.
In Michigan, for example, a state that proved pivotal in electing
President Donald Trump in 2016, only 23 percent of state lawmakers are
women. But this year, a woman will appear on the Michigan ballot for
governor, attorney general, secretary of state and in 63 percent of the
state's Senate seats and 71 percent of its House seats.
Nationally, if women candidates are as successful as they have been for
the past two decades - their historic rate of victory is about 60
percent - the number of women in state legislatures could reach an
all-time high of about 40 percent, according to an analysis
https://tmsnrt.rs/2nBH90x by Reuters of state ballots and historic
campaigns.
More women in office could lead to policy changes in areas that women
traditionally feel strongly about and generate a new pipeline of
candidates for future higher offices, political observers, candidates
and fundraising organizations predicted.
For a graphic on more women expected in statehouses, click
https://tmsnrt.rs/2nBH90x
In the 1990s, the last time the number of women in office saw a large
increase, that led in many cases to eased abortion restrictions,
expanded health care access and increased bipartisan compromise.
This year, women have already broken the record for major party nominees
in governor's races and, with every primary completed, the number of
women candidates for state legislatures is reaching new highs, according
to totals tracked by the Center for American Women and Politics at
Rutgers University http://www.cawp.rutgers.edu.
Some think the numbers of women winning their races could be even higher
than historical records predict.
"In past years, a lot of political consultants, members of the media
have looked at being a woman as a potential disadvantage, something you
had to overcome," said Delaney Skinner, a Democratic strategist working
with women congressional candidates.
But she and others believe outrage over Trump's often offensive comments
about women will motivate voters. "It's a real advantage to running as a
woman this year," she said.
Gretchen Driskell, a Democratic member of the Michigan legislature who
is now running for Congress, said she has seen evidence in her time in
the legislature that women govern differently.
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Protesters demonstrate during the Women's March on Washington
outside the White House in Washington January 21, 2017.
REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan/File Photo
"Women were far more interested in solving problems that we talked
about instead of presenting problems as win versus lose," Driskell
said.
Because women candidates for state legislature seats skew toward the
Democratic party, Democrats may have a slightly better chance of
challenging Republican control of statehouses. If so, Democrats
could also take away Republican management of the redistricting
process that most states will undertake in 2021 after the nationwide
census.
And more women candidates in this election cycle could have a
long-term impact.
State legislatures are the pool from which national candidates are
generally drawn. With only 20 percent of the U.S. House seats held
by women and 23 percent of Senate seats, a surge on the state level
strongly foretells a radical change in the make-up of Congress in
years to come.
Emily's List – a liberal, Democratic group that helps women run for
office – said women are packing their candidate training sessions,
one-day workshops that help start the process to seek office.
At a recent training session in northern Virginia, most of the
roughly 50 women who spent the day in a hotel conference room were
trying to begin campaigns to run for county or city offices – which
Emily's List officials say was evidence that the pipeline will be
full of women for decades to come.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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