« Ind. Decisions - "Sex offender ID law misapplied, higher court says" | Main | Ind. Courts - "Judge Allen rules in favor of Josh Merritt's mother in burial dispute" »

Friday, July 10, 2009

Ind. Gov't. - Indiana needs more female legislators

That is the topic of this editorial today in the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette. Some quotes:

Indiana’s perennial lackluster showing among the 50 states extends to the percentage of women serving in the General Assembly, where a new survey places it 31st. That’s a considerable improvement over last year’s rank of 36. But a legislative body where only 22 percent of the members are female still is nothing to crow about. * * *

Only 5 percent of the northeast Indiana delegation is female. That’s one out of 19 lawmakers, an embarrassingly low figure. Before next spring’s primaries, both political parties should study their ranks and encourage strong female candidates to step up and run.

Rep. Phyllis Pond, R-New Haven, holds the distinction as the region’s only female lawmaker, one she’s held since Rep. Gloria Goeglein died in 2001. Numerous vacancies have arisen since that time, and four general elections have passed with no female candidates. Pond herself failed in a caucus bid for a Senate seat in 2004. * * *

Pond said she believes women bring a different approach to the Statehouse – less interested in climbing the leadership ladder and more interested in issues.

Which issues they champion is also distinct. The General Assembly has an overabundance of economic development champions and too few watchdogs for health and human services. Not surprisingly, the legislative push for oversight of the ill-conceived welfare eligibility outsourcing deal is almost entirely female-driven, a bipartisan effort by Sen. Vaneta Becker and Reps. Suzanne Crouch, Peggy Welch and Gail Riecken.

Goeglein was a passionate voice for Hoosiers with disabilities, including mental illness, while Pond has tirelessly sought ethics reforms.

“A lot of men are using (their legislative seats) as a stepping stone,” she said. “They go into leadership or they go to work as a lobbyist and make tons of money. I think (women) make decisions based more on family reasons than on political reasons.”

Posted by Marcia Oddi on July 10, 2009 09:33 AM
Posted to Indiana Government