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California Legislative Women's Caucus
2007-2008
The California Women's Legislative
Caucus
Woman of the Year
Rose Ann Vuich
The First Legislative Women's Caucus:
The California Legislative Women's Caucus was formed in
1985 by nine
Democrats and six Republicans. These groundbreaking women included
included
Assemblymembers Teresa Hughes (D), the caucus's first chair; Maxine
Waters
(D); Sally Tanner (D); Gwen Moore (D); Marian L. Follette (R); Cathie
Wright
(R); Doris Allen (R); Lucy Killea (D); Sunny Mojonnier (R); Gloria
Molina
(D);and Bev Hansen (R); and Senators Diane Watson (D); Rose Ann Vuich
(D);
Marian Beregeson (R); and Rebecca Morgan (R).
The purpose of the Women's Caucus, according to bylaws,
is to "encourage
collegiality, participation in and cooperation among elected women in
California
government and to promote the interests of women, children and families
through legislation." The bylaws also state that the California
Legislative
Women's Caucus is open to all women members of the California
Legislature.
The chair of the Caucus is alternates yearly between a member of the
Assembly
and member of the Senate, and the vice chair is elected from the
opposite
house of the chair.
2007 Legislative Women's Caucus:
This
year, the California Legislative Women’s Caucus has 34 members. There
are 24
women in the Assembly and 10 women in the Senate. Of those 34 women, 28
are
Democrats and 6 are Republicans. >
In sharp
contrast to the first women’s caucus in 1985, many of the elected women
serve
as Chairs and Vice-Chairs of the Assembly and Senate policy committees,
as well
as leadership positions in both parties. Eight women are part of the
Assembly
leadership and two have positions in the Senate leadership. In the
Assembly,
another eight women chair the Assembly standing committees and all six
Republican women serve as vice-chairs. In the Senate, nine are chairs
of the
Senate standing committees.
Women
continue to break barriers in the Legislature through their own
personal
stories of triumph in elective office.
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Woman of the Year:
The Woman of the Year event was started in 1987 by
Assemblywoman Bev
Hansen (R) and Assemblywoman Sally Tanner (D), who noticed that the
California
Legislature had no events planned for the month of March, Women's
History
Month. In celebration of the contributions to society made by
remarkable
women throughout California, Hansen and Tanner arranged to invite one
woman
from each Senate and Assembly district to come to the Capitol and be
honored
for their accomplishments. The women were to be recognized as Woman of
the Year in a formal ceremony on the floors of the Senate and Assembly.
This yearly event, sponsored and organized by the Women's Caucus, is
greatly
anticipated by all Legislators today.
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California's First Women in the Assembly:
Riding on the coattails of the Progressive Era,
the first four women were elected in 1918 to the State Assembly. Grace Doris, Esto Broughton,
Anna Saylor, and Elizabeth Hughes were re-elected but lost their seats to men by 1924. Over
the next 50 years only 10 other women served in the Assembly.
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California's First Woman Senator:
| Rose Ann Vuich was a
second generation Serbian-American
from the farm town of Dinuba, located on the outskirts of Fresno,
California.
Her political career was launched in 1976 when she was chosen to
replace the presumed Democratic candidate, who had withdrawn from the race. |
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It was assumed that her Republican opponent, an
Assemblyman, was unbeatable.
The Democratic Caucus viewed Vuich as sincere, but naïve. They
thought
her indefatigability and grassroots understanding of the district was
more
old-fashioned than practical and remained unconvinced that she could
compete
with her opponent's connections and political wiles. As a result, Vuich
had little money for her campaign. However, she had enough for a
thirty-second
television piece mocking her opponent for voting to fund Southern
California
freeways while failing to appropriate money for Highway 41 in their own
district. She blamed him publicly for the "freeway to nowhere." The
criticism
caught fire and the "Freeway Lady" won the race.
As the state's first female Senator, Rose Ann Vuich made
a habit ringing
a bell several times a day when colleagues addressed the collective
members
of the Senate as "Gentlemen," failing to note that the chamber was no
longer
an exclusively male domain. And it was Vuich's election, not the
Capitol's
extensive retrofit in the 1970's, that made necessary the conversion of
a closet into a women's bathroom. The bathroom, located behind the
Senate
floor, is still referred to as "The Rose Room." Vuich was not a
commanding
speaker, yet she had a piercing intelligence and could handle the
spotlight
when necessary. On the issues, she was a key vote against a costly Los
Angeles prison and said no to the confirmation of Dan Lungren (future
attorney
general and Republican nominee for governor) for state treasurer. The
latter
drew the wrath of statewide politicians who vainly sought a strong
candidate
to oppose her.
Vuich, who reflected the conservative make up of her
district, was re-elected
three times. A strong advocate for agriculture, she made a habit of
bringing
fresh produce to the Senate and withholding it from hungry colleagues
until
she explained how beneficial the agricultural industry was to the
overall
health of our state.
Vuich served when politics could be a profession, and
legislators had
time to master the issues they cared about. She traveled extensively
and
authored legislation that created the California Trade and Commerce
Agency.
She also wrote California's "Agricultural Export Finance Program,"
which
became a national model.
After sixteen years in the Senate, a time when she
proved that graciousness
was not a sign of weakness and that being a woman was not a barrier to
providing daring leadership, she retired in 1992. The election of Rose
Ann Vuich, the farm kid from the Central Valley, marked the beginning
of
positive change when subsequent women legislators joined her in shaping
the past quarter century. She will forever remain as a symbol of great
leadership to all women.
-- from Terry McHale in
the "Capitol Morning
Report," February 4, 2002
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