Current:Home > Markets'Change doesn’t happen with the same voices': All-female St. Paul city council makes history -Keystone Wealth Vision
'Change doesn’t happen with the same voices': All-female St. Paul city council makes history
View
Date:2025-04-19 21:28:22
The city council in St. Paul, Minnesota is now made up entirely of women, a first not only in the city's history but also likely among major cities in the U.S.
The council, comprised mostly of women of color and all under 40 years old, was sworn in Tuesday and began the city's business at its first meeting on Wednesday, including approving mayoral appointments and appeals of abatement ordinances
"We’re a multifaith, multicultural group of women. Our professional experiences are what people trusted as much as our personal ones," St. Paul City Council President Mitra Jalali told the Associated Press. "We have a clear policy vision that we got elected on.”
Experts who spoke to the Associated Press said that the council is the first all-female council of a major American city.
"To have a 100% female city council in a major city in the United States is really significant," Karen Kedrowski, director of the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics at Iowa State University told the AP. "If it’s not the first one, it’s one of the first where this has happened – so it’s a big deal."
Minnesota lieutenant governor says this should be 'the way it is'
Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan said that while the all-female council has made history, "it should also simply be the way it is,” according to The New York Times.
Flanagan spoke to a packed auditorium as the council members were sworn in, telling them that young people “are going to dream big and achieve their dreams because of the risk you were willing to take," the newspaper reported.
Six of the seven women on the council are women of color and all are Democrats.
"This is the vision I had when I first started organizing eight years ago," Nelsie Yang, the representative for Ward 6 who was first elected to the council in 2020, told the Times. "Change doesn’t happen with the same voices at the table."
Yang, 28, is also the first Hmong-American to serve on the council.
Jalali noted at the swearing-in ceremony that the historic first was not without blowback.
"A lot of people who were comfortable with majority male, majority white institutions in nearly 170 years of city history are suddenly sharply concerned about representation," she said. "My thoughts and prayers are with them in this challenging time."
Stats show women underrepresented in municipal politics
According to data from the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University, nearly 70% of municipal offices in the United States are held by men.
In Minnesota, 35% percent of municipal officials in the state are men, placing the state in a tie with Michigan for the 16th highest state in the country for male representatives.
Arizona and Alaska are tied for the states with the most women holding municipal offices at 45%. North Dakota ranks 50th with 20% of the state's municipal offices held by women.
veryGood! (233)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Indiana basketball legend George McGinnis dies at 73: 'He was like Superman'
- Basketball star Candace Parker, wife Anna Petrakova expecting second child together
- Liberals seek ouster from Wisconsin judicial ethics panel of Trump lawyer who advised fake electors
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Jurors will begin deciding how much Giuliani must pay for lies in a Georgia election workers’ case
- A year of war: 2023 sees worst-ever Israel-Hamas combat as Russian attacks on Ukraine grind on
- Author James Patterson gives $500 holiday bonuses to hundreds of US bookstore workers
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Older Americans to pay less for some drug treatments as drugmakers penalized for big price jumps
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Stock market today: Asian markets churn upward after the Dow ticks to another record high
- Wisconsin corn mill agrees to pay $1.8 million in penalties after fatal 2017 explosion
- COP28 climate summit OK's controversial pact that gathering's leader calls historic
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Brooklyn Nine-Nine Actor Andre Braugher's Cause of Death Revealed
- Coca-Cola recalls 2,000 Diet Coke, Sprite, Fanta Orange soda packs
- Jill Biden releases White House Christmas video featuring tap dancers performing The Nutcracker
Recommendation
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
'Thanks for the memories': E3 convention canceled after 25 years of gaming
Pandemic relief funding for the arts was 'staggering'
Brazil’s Congress overrides president’s veto to reinstate legislation threatening Indigenous rights
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
A year of war: 2023 sees worst-ever Israel-Hamas combat as Russian attacks on Ukraine grind on
Older Americans to pay less for some drug treatments as drugmakers penalized for big price jumps
Step Inside Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel's Star-Studded Las Vegas Date Night