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Did you notice that when we went to the polls this month, voters in New Jersey and Virginia elected female candidates for governor?
Big news! Come January, America will have women running 14 states, and they. …
Hey, wait a minute. We’re going to celebrate the fact that this country has reached the historic moment when 28% of its governors are female?
That’s actually kind of depressing.
I started my journalistic career in Connecticut covering Ella Grasso, who in 1974 became the first woman not succeeding her husband ever elected governor in the United States. She was nationally known for her motherly demeanor in public, and I always cherished the story about a minor bill she opposed that contrasted with that image. The bill, to allow bow-and-arrow hunting on Sundays, somehow passed, and shortly after, Grasso came up behind one of the sponsors at an event and whispered in his ear: “If I go walking on Sunday and if I get an arrow in my ass, I know who’s going to come and pull it out.”
Always figured Grasso would be followed by a flood of talented women chosen to run their states. Sigh. Well, it’s been more like a high-quality drizzle. But the story got a couple of new pages this month when in New Jersey Mikie Sherrill, a Democrat, beat Republican Jack Ciattarelli for governor by a whopping 57% to 43%, and in Virginia, another Democrat, Abigail Spanberger, won and will become the first female governor in the state’s history. Her election was pretty much preordained, given that Virginia’s citizens were reeling from President Donald Trump’s reign of terror when it comes to laying off federal workers.