RIO
RANCHO, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico voters have a chance this year to send a
historic all-female U.S. House delegation to Congress, no matter which
party wins races.
And the state’s three congresswomen may be all women of color — another national milestone.
Women
are seeking the Democratic and Republican nominations in all six of the
state’s primary races for three congressional seats. In each of those
races, at least one Latina or one Native American woman is running in
her respective party’s primary contests in what has turned out to be
some of the most diverse political battles in the county. The women
candidates have been among the largest fundraisers in races and could be
their party’s nominees.
New
Hampshire in 2013 became the first state to have an all-female
Congressional delegation (Sens. Jeanne Shaheen and Kelly Ayotte, and
Reps. Ann McLane Kuster and Carol Shea-Porter), according to the Center
for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. Deleware’s lone
member of the U.S. House, Democratic Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, who is
black, helped give the state the nation’s first all-female of color U.S.
House delegation in 2017.
But
New Mexico could wind up with the largest U.S. House delegation of
women or women of color in the nation’s history. The state’s population
of about 2 million is 49 percent Hispanic and 9 percent Native American.
“This is
unusual,” Jean Sinzdak, associate director of the Center for American
Women and Politics, said. “A record number of women are running for
House seats, so this is interesting.”
In
New Mexico’s 3rd Congressional Democratic primary, for example, Yale
University graduate and Stanford University-trained lawyer Teresa Leger
Fernandez and former CIA operative Valerie Plame are among those running
in a crowded field to represent the state’s northern region. Both are
indicative of the area’s traditional Hispanic past (Leger Fernandez is
Latina) and recent coastal liberal transplants (the Anchorage,
Alaska-born Plame is white).
On
the Republican side, Navajo Nation member and businesswomen Karen
Bedonie is waging her campaign for the GOP nomination in isolation and
amid a strict curfew aimed at stopping the spread of COVID-19. Her
campaign literature features her in traditional Navajo clothing, and she
often mentions to voters that she’s a mother of eight.
The seat is open because Democratic U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Lujan is running for U.S. Senate.
The
state’s 1st Congressional District is currently held by Democratic U.S.
Rep. Deb Haaland, who was one of the nation’s first Native American
congresswomen.
Retired
police officer Michelle Garcia Holmes, who is Hispanic, is among three
Republicans seeking the GOP nomination to challenge Haaland for the
Democratic-leaning seat representing Albuquerque.
In
the state’s southern 2nd Congressional District, oil executive Claire
Chase and former state lawmaker Yvette Herrell are locked in a nasty,
three-person contest for the GOP nomination. Chase is the first female
chair of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association, and Herrell is an
enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation.
They
are seeking to unseat Democratic Rep. Xochitl Torres Small, the
granddaughter of Mexican immigrants and who grew up in the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Retired
University of New Mexico political science professor Christine Marie
Sierra, who has followed women in politics for years, said this moment
has been building for decades in New Mexico.
“Women
are now seen as viable candidates, and both parties in New Mexico are
doing their part to recruit women to run for office,” Sierra said. “And
what you see here is a reflection of the state’s diversity.”
According
to the Center for American Women and Politics, 490 women have filed as
candidates for U.S. House seats nationwide in 2020, a new record high.
That
surpasses even the record-breaking 2018 midterm election, in which 476
women filed to run for House seats, the center found.
The numbers could grow because filing deadlines have yet to pass in around a dozen or so states.
Much of the surge in candidate filings is in Republican primaries across the country, the center said.
Women
also are making gains in local elections. Last year, for example,
Tucson, Arizona, voters elected Regina Romero, the daughter of farm
workers, as the first Latina mayor in the city’s history.
Leger
Fernandez said whatever happens in her election, she’s proud to be part
of a chance to make history. As a two-year-old, she was in a coma with
spinal meningitis. Doctors didn’t believe she would survive.
Her
grandmother, Abelina Romero Lucero, prayed to La Virgen de Guadalupe
and later made a pilgrimage to Mexico to ask the heavens to heal her
granddaughter.
Leger Fernandez has pictured herself having a conservation with her late grandmother after winning her race.
“I know exactly what she’d say,” Leger Fernandez said. “She’d tell me, ‘I knew there was a reason La Virgen let you live.’ ”
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