From the nation's leading source on all things women and politics.
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Reaching Higher: Black Women in American Politics 2021
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- A record number of Black women ran for and won congressional offices in 2020, but Black women’s congressional representation is not at a record high.
- Most acutely, no Black women currently serve in the U.S. Senate. Between 2020 and 2021, Black women’s state legislative representation increased, though not as much as it did after the 2018 election.
- Black women reached a record high in state legislative representation in 2021; 354 (351D, 3R) Black women serve as state legislators nationwide, making up 4.8% of all state legislators and 15.5% of all women state legislators.
- Despite being 7.8% of the population, Black women are less than 5% of officeholders elected to statewide executive offices, Congress, and state legislatures. They are 8 of the mayors in the nation’s 100 most populous cities.
- Black women remain severely underrepresented as officeholders at the statewide executive level, holding just 1.9% of these positions.
- Just 17 Black women have ever held statewide elected executive offices, and no Black woman has ever been elected governor despite the first-ever major party nomination of a Black woman for governor in election 2018.
In addition, Higher Heights and CAWP held a panel discussion on Friday to review the findings of the report and discuss the obstacles and opportunities for Black women’s representation in American politics. Panelists included Glynda C. Carr from Higher Heights; CAWP’s Kelly Dittmar; A'shanti Gholar, President of Emerge; Minyon Moore, Principal at Dewey Square Group; Sonya Ross, Founder & Editor in Chief, Black Women Unmuted; and the event was moderated by Nikole Killion, Congressional Correspondent, CBS News. The full event can be viewed here.
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On Tuesday, November 16th, CAWP will host a virtual panel discussion moderated by CAWP Senior Scholar Kira Sanbonmatsu in support of our Women, Money, and Politics series, Unequal Voice: A conversation about why men out-give women in state elections and why women should give more. The panel, featuring Kimberly Peeler-Allen (Co-Founder of Higher Heights and CAWP Visiting Practitioner), Stacy Schuster (Executive Director of Women for a Stronger New Jersey), and Ohio House of Representatives Minority Leader Emilia Strong Sykes, will discuss why women are underrepresented as contributors to state legislative and statewide executive elections, what can be done about it, and how unequal voice impacts the success of women candidates. Panelists will discuss the reports in the Women, Money, and Politics series, a collaboration between CAWP and OpenSecrets, including the forthcoming report, The Money Race for the State Legislature. Learn more and register here.
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Support the research and events that keep you informed on
women’s progress in American Politics
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Next week, voters will go to the polls for state government elections in New Jersey and Virginia, as well as special congressional elections in Florida and Ohio. Here’s a preview of what we’re watching:
New Jersey
- A record 84 (54D, 30R) women are running in the general election for seats in the New Jersey Legislature. The previous record was 77, set in 2017.
- 19 (13D, 6R) women are running for New Jersey Senate seats. This is not a record; that record was set in 2017 at 25.
- A record 65 (41D, 24R) women are running for New Jersey General Assembly seats. The previous record was 60, set in 2019.
- No Asian or Pacific Islander (API) woman has ever been elected to the New Jersey Legislature. At least six API women are running this year to become the first. More than 10% of the state identifies as Asian or Pacific Islander.
- New Jersey currently ranks 25th among the 50 states in CAWP’s state rankings of women’s representation in state legislatures.
Virginia
- Hala Ayala (D) and Winsome Sears (R) are competing in the general election to be Virginia’s lieutenant governor. Either one would become the first woman of color elected statewide in Virginia.
- A record 72 (49D, 23R) women are running in the general election for seats in the Virginia House of Delegates this year. The previous record was 62, set in 2019.
- Virginia currently ranks 28th among the 50 states in CAWP’s state rankings of women’s representation in state legislatures.
Florida Special Election
- Three women – Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, Barbara Sharief, and Priscilla Taylor – are running in next week’s special Democratic primary for Florida’s 20th congressional district. The general election for this heavily-Democratic district will be held on January 11, 2022.
Ohio Special Elections
- Two women, Shontel Brown (D) and Laverne Gore (R), are running in the special election for Ohio’s 11th congressional district. This seat was vacated by Marcia Fudge when she left Congress to join the Biden Cabinet as secretary of Housing and Urban Development; the district is solidly Democratic.
- One woman, Allison Russo (D), is running in the special election for Ohio’s 15th congressional district. The district leans Republican.
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Congratulations to NEW Leadership® Mississippi!
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Our NEW Leadership® partners at the Mississippi University of Women have been awarded a partner grant from the Ascend Fund! This grant is part of a pilot initiative seeking to find methods to create parity in state legislatures nationwide. The partnership with Ascend will connect NEW Leadership® Mississippi with twelve other phenomenal grant recipients and allow them to share ideas and combine their efforts. Chanley Rainey, director of NEW Leadership® Mississippi tells us, “The grant will enable us to expand the number of women, mentors, and faculty in residence participating in our 2022 summer institute. We also have plans to stay overnight in the state capitol and to host a large networking reception that includes program alumnae, women's nonprofit advocates in the state, political officials, party organizers, and campaign professionals. With the help of partner organizations, we hope to see NEW Leadership MS participants on the campaign trail very soon!” We are proud that one of our NEW Leadership® National Network partners is being recognized as an avenue for changing the face of political power and excited to see what happens next for NEW Leadership® Mississippi! Learn more about the Ascend Fund’s Partners in Parity, NEW Leadership® Mississippi, and CAWP’s NEW Leadership® National Network.
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