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Emily's List

EMILY's List begins 'most aggressive' female recruitment effort

Heidi M Przybyla
USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — Thousands of U.S. women are exploring whether to run for political office as part of an activist wave that began with the election of President Trump, prompting EMILY's List, a major national force for grooming female Democratic candidates, to begin the "most aggressive" recruiting campaign in its 32-year history, the group told USA TODAY.

Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILY’s List.

The political action committee that elevates pro-choice Democratic women is doubling its staff dedicated to recruiting and training them to run for office, ranging from Congress to city council and school board, as it moves swiftly to supply more resources to the millions of women who marched in Washington and in cities across the United States as part of the Women’s March on Washington, a day after President Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration. Their Run to Win effort includes a new online portal where women can learn about how to run for office and leverage its 5-million-person network to match with local volunteers interested in making phone calls, hosting house parties or just asking other women they know to run.

“This is a moment for women across the country,” Stephanie Schriock, EMILY’s List president, said in an interview.

“We’ve done some (recruitment), but never like this,” she said. “We have made very good gains over those 32 years, but when a moment like this comes where women are feeling empowered to take charge and take control of their communities we want to be there and be encouraging and make sure they actually run.”

Since Election Day, more than 4,000 women have reached out to EMILY’s List to say they want to run for office, including 1,660 since Jan. 20 alone. That’s four times the number who reached out in the previous 22 months combined.

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It’s the latest example of Washington’s professional advocacy groups trying to harness the energy of a grass-roots movement shaping itself into a progressive resistance to Trump’s agenda. Other examples include growing financial support for groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union and participation in protests organized by groups such as MoveOn.org outside the offices of U.S. lawmakers. Separately, the organizers of the women's march are forming local chapters, which now number about 700, according to spokeswoman Kaylin Trychon.

The EMILY's List data corresponds with anecdotes from local groups also trying to recruit and support prospective women candidates. Dianne Bystrom, director of the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics at Iowa State University, helps run the Iowa workshops of a national network of training schools. The emails began rolling in on 9:30 a.m. the day after the election, she said. The February training sessions filled up in less than 8 days and had to move to a local Holiday Inn to accommodate an estimated 125 attendees.

It’s the third time in her lifetime, said Bystrom, there's been this much interest in politics from women, citing the feminist movement of the 1970s. Then there was late 1991 when law professor Anita Hill testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee, where she said she was sexually harassed by Clarence Thomas while working in the Reagan administration. Thomas was undergoing confirmation hearings for his nomination to the Supreme Court.  Many women believed that Hill was questioned harshly, which spurred a wave of female candidates getting elected to the U.S. Senate in 1992, which was dubbed the “Year of the Woman.”

“This is happening all over the country,” said Bystrom. It’s a reaction both to Trump’s agenda and the unexpected loss of the first female candidate to represent a major political party, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, she said.

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“Younger women in particular are saying ‘maybe I have been too complacent, have taken too much for granted.’ You’re looking at all the things you’ve had in your life and wondering if you’re going to have access to them anymore,” she said, citing access to affordable contraception, health care and safe abortion.

A new EMILY's List video pictures women waking up to Trump’s victory on television, holding their tongues at a dinner table conversation, Googling stories about Republican plans to defund Planned Parenthood, lacing up their boots and putting on the signature pink hats from the Women’s March. “You’re ready to do something,” the video says, so “face the day” and “stand up.”

If successful, their efforts could help change the composition of local government. Every Latina, African American and Asian American Democratic congresswoman currently serving in Congress is an EMILY’s List candidate. "What I love about all of this is they now realize that they weren’t alone in their communities," said Schriock.

According to Pew Research, only about 2% of Americans have ever run for federal, local or state elected office. Those tend to be white, male and well-educated. Women account for half of the adult population, yet they are just a quarter of those who say they have run for office. While women account for 20% of the U.S. Senate, 18% of the House, and 24% of state legislators, only 10% of governors are women, according to Pew.

This peaking interest in civic participation is converging with an actual revolution in technology that allows any American interested in running for office to pinpoint where the opportunities are, said Jim Cupples, director of RunForOffice.org, which crowd sources data from communities across the country and is partnering with dozens of nonpartisan groups. The site has seen a 131% increase in people signing up to run for local office since the election. Just in the past week, they’ve had 58,000 visits, 90% of which are new.

Technology is driving a dramatic change in the traditional protocol for candidate recruitment whereby prospective officials are groomed by local party power brokers, said Cupples. “I shouldn’t have to be in the Rotary Club and have them tap me on the shoulder,” he said. “You’re so much more capable now of running a campaign with the digital infrastructure that used to be a lot more expensive,” he said.

The most common initial rung for first-time politicians is city council because many of those positions are uncontested. For instance, on Cupples’ November 2014 Oregon ballot, two-thirds of the positions were unopposed or had no filer. “That’s where all of the opportunity is,” he said.

In her 2016 campaign, Clinton made women’s economic empowerment a cornerstone, including paid family leave and equal pay laws. “Now she can’t do it, and they’re saying ‘we’ve got to step up,’” said Bystrom.

Concern over women's rights

It’s also driven by a fear that women’s rights will take a backward slide under Trump and the Republican-led Congress.

The group points to Trump’s recent executive orders, including reinstating a government policy that blocks U.S. federal funding for non-governmental organizations that provide abortion counseling or referrals, called the Global Gag Rule; and concerns that his Supreme Court picks, beginning with Neil Gorsuch, will overturn Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed women the right to abortion. Trump's pledge to repeal the Affordable Care Act could also threaten affordable contraception coverage for women. Finally, a majority of the refugees covered under Trump’s recent travel ban are women and children. “Women are the first line of attack under this White House,” said Rachel Thomas, EMILY’s List national press secretary.

Female legislators have been among the first to push back against Trump’s policies. For instance, Massachusetts attorney general Maura Healey filed a federal lawsuit over his immigration order; Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh is extending a policy directing policy officers not to ask about a person’s immigration status; and in the New York Senate, Andrea Stewart Cousins and Liz Krueger introduced a bill to protect women’s access to abortion and contraception in the event that Roe v. Wade is overturned or Obamacare is repealed. Finally, a majority of the immigration lawyers volunteering at airports are women.

There are parallels to the conservative Tea Party that successfully infused the House of Representatives in Congress with a slew of first-time lawmakers. “Trump has inspired people in the same way that Obama inspired the Tea Party,” said Cupples, who’s confident many of those expressing interest will follow up by actually running.

One major assumption underlining Clinton’s candidacy was that her election would motivate women to put themselves up for elections at all levels of government. In reality, Trump’s victory is a greater motivator, said Kari Winter, an expert on gender and race at the University of Buffalo. “Trump has provided a really powerful, galvanizing force for political engagement among people who thought they had the luxury to being disengaged.”

“The Tea Party is so much less significant. It was an emotional reaction on a relatively small scale. In terms of the long view of history what we are seeing right now is a push to prevent a backward slide in democracy,” said Winter.

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