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Politics & Government

Women's History Month

Contributions of the Past and Hope for the Future

Left to right: Dr. Toni-Michelle Travis, Del. Charniele Herring, Del. Ken Plum,  Del. Eileen Filler-Corn, Former VA Secr
Left to right: Dr. Toni-Michelle Travis, Del. Charniele Herring, Del. Ken Plum, Del. Eileen Filler-Corn, Former VA Secr

March is Women's History Month. Before women had the whole month, the U.S. recognized Women's History Week; before that, a single International Women's Day. Dedicating the whole month of March in honor of women's achievements was seen "as a way to revise a written and social American history that had largely ignored women's contributions," according to an article in Time magazine. The first Women's Day took place on February 28, 1909 to honor the one-year anniversary of the garment worker's strikes in New York when thousands of women marched for economic rights and to honor an earlier 1857 march when garment workers rallied for equal rights and a 10-hour day, according to the article.

Recognizing the achievement of Virginia women goes beyond naming a month. A monument is under construction on Capitol Square, "Voices from the Garden," which will be the first monument of its kind in the nation. Representative of the state's regions, the monument recognizes the 400-year history and the diversity of achievement, ethnicity and thought that women have made to the Commonwealth.

Even more significant in recognizing women in Virginia is the fact that there is historic representation of women in the Virginia House of Delegates, including the election of 11 new women members in 2017, all of whom ousted male incumbents. The House Democratic Caucus is almost 45% women, including 11 women of color. The House Republican Caucus is less than 10% women. Caucus Chair Charniele Herring is the first woman to chair a caucus in the House of Delegates throughout its 400-year history. Leader Eileen Filler-Corn is the first woman to be elected leader of a caucus in the General Assembly.

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Recently I served on a panel, "Can Women Save Democracy? We're counting on it!" at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University along with Charniele Herring, Eileen Filler-Corn, and Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton. There was a clear consensus in the room that women will play a pivotal role in getting our country back on the right track. Witness this year's state and local elections when there are record-breaking numbers of women lining up to run in primaries and the general elections.

Not only are women running and winning races, but they are determining the outcome of elections with their tireless work in making calls, knocking on doors, and working on behalf of the candidates they support. Organizations like Indivisibles, with Herndon-Reston Indivisibles being a model organization, and Moms Demand Action among others are making their influence felt on policy issues like ending the epidemic of gun violence.

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The big disappointment in celebrating women in history is the refusal of the Virginia House of Delegates to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. Ratification failed on a tied vote on a procedural matter that makes it even more frustrating that the amendment was not allowed to be debated on the floor of the House of Delegates. There is more women's history to be written in Virginia, and I suspect the next step will be election of even more women this fall and ratification of the ERA next year!

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