HOUSE MEMORIAL 58
54th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - second session, 2020
INTRODUCED BY
Linda M. Trujillo and Andrea Romero and Kelly K. Fajardo and Rebecca Dow and Gail Armstrong
A MEMORIAL
HONORING NEW MEXICO FEMALE ELECTED OFFICIALS AND REQUESTING THE GOVERNOR TO DECLARE MARCH 8, 2020 "INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY" IN NEW MEXICO.
WHEREAS, international women's day, March 8, has been celebrated around the world since 1909 and in the United States since 1977; and
WHEREAS, there are more than three billion seven hundred sixty-four million women in the world; and
WHEREAS, the ability of women and girls to realize their full potential is critical to the ability of a country to achieve strong and lasting economic growth and political and social stability; and
WHEREAS, it is imperative to alleviate violence and discrimination against women and afford women every opportunity to be full and productive members of their communities; and
WHEREAS, this year's international women's day theme is "#BeBoldForChange"; and
WHEREAS, on this day, thousands of events inspiring women and celebrating their achievements will be held throughout the world; and
WHEREAS, the first Hispanic female legislators in the United States served in New Mexico's territorial legislature, beginning in 1895; and
WHEREAS, the United States congress passed the nineteenth amendment to the United States constitution supporting women's suffrage rights in June 1919, and at least thirty-six states needed to vote in favor of the amendment for it to become law; and
WHEREAS, on February 21, 1920, New Mexico voted to ratify the nineteenth amendment to the United States constitution, and by August 1920, thirty-six states, including New Mexico, ratified the amendment, ensuring the right to vote could not be denied based on gender; and
WHEREAS, following New Mexico's statehood in 1912, Representative Bertha Paxton became the first woman elected to the New Mexico legislature in 1923; and
WHEREAS, Soledad Chacon was New Mexico's first female secretary of state, serving from 1923 through 1926, and the first female to act as governor for a substantial period of time in the United States; and
WHEREAS, in 1925, Louise Coe became the first woman elected to the New Mexico senate and, in 1935, became the first female senate president pro tempore in New Mexico and in the United States; and
WHEREAS, New Mexico Representatives Fedelina Gallegos and Porfirria Hidalgo Saiz, who both served from 1931 to 1932, were the first Hispanic female state legislators in the United States; and
WHEREAS, in 1941, New Mexico Representative Concha Ortiz y Pino de Kleven became the first female majority whip in the United States; and
WHEREAS, in 1947, Georgia Lee Witt Lusk of New Mexico's first district became the first woman from New Mexico to serve in the United States house of representatives; and
WHEREAS, in 1959, Virginia Klinekole became the first female president of the Mescalero Apache Tribe; and
WHEREAS, in 1972, Consuela Jaramillo Kitzes Burrell became New Mexico's first Hispanic female state senator; and
WHEREAS, in 1984, Mary Walters became the first woman appointed to the New Mexico supreme court, serving through the end of 1988; and
WHEREAS, Pauline Eisenstadt became the first woman to serve in both New Mexico legislative chambers, having served in the house of representatives from 1985 to 1992 and in the senate from 1997 to 2000; and
WHEREAS, Lynda Morgan Lovejoy, who became the first Native American woman in the New Mexico house of representatives in 1989, later served in the New Mexico senate and is the first Native American woman to serve in both chambers; and
WHEREAS, Debbie Jaramillo, elected mayor of Santa Fe in 1994, became the first female mayor in New Mexico; and
WHEREAS, Representative Sheryl Williams Stapleton became the first African American woman to serve in the New Mexico house of representatives in 1995 and the first African American floor leader in the legislature; and
WHEREAS, Gloria Tristani, who in 1997 was appointed to the federal communications commission, became the first Hispanic woman elected to the state corporation commission in 1995; and
WHEREAS, Mary Jane M. Garcia became the New Mexico senate's first Hispanic female majority whip in 1996; and
WHEREAS, Patricia Madrid became New Mexico's first female attorney general in 1998; and
WHEREAS, Heather Wilson, from New Mexico's first district, became the first female veteran in the United States house of representatives in 1998; and
WHEREAS, Diane Denish became New Mexico's first female lieutenant governor, having served two terms from 2003 to 2011; and
WHEREAS, in 2011, Susana Martinez became the first female Hispanic governor in New Mexico and in the United States; and
WHEREAS, in 2013, Michelle Lujan Grisham, from New Mexico's first district, became the first Hispanic woman to represent New Mexico in the United States house of representatives; and
WHEREAS, in 2018, Michelle Lujan Grisham was elected the thirty-second governor of New Mexico and became the first Democratic Latina to be elected governor in United States history; and
WHEREAS, one hundred forty-two women have served in the New Mexico house of representatives, and thirty-one women have served in the senate; and
WHEREAS, by the end of 2020, Representative Sheryl Williams Stapleton and Representative Debbie A. Rodella will be the longest-serving women to have served in the New Mexico legislature; and
WHEREAS, the following women have served as legislators in the house of representatives since statehood: Ruby V. Appelman, Frances P. Armijo, Deborah A. Armstrong, Gail Armstrong, Janice E. Arnold-Jones, Marsha C. Atkin, E. Shirley Baca, Patricia V. Baca, Karen C. Bash, Blanche Alice Bell, Rachel A. Black, T. "Tweeti" Blanchett, Cathrynn N. Brown, Luella McGaffey Brown, Mrs. R.W.D. Bryan, Micaela Lara Cadena, Barbara A. Perea Casey, Maria Cavanaugh, Soledad Chacon, Christine Chandler, Gail Chasey, Eleanor Chavez, Susie Chavez, Sharon Clahchischilliage, Kandy Cordova, Jane Hyde Cosper, Anna M. Crook, Dara A. Dana, Ollibel C. Dickinson, Patricia Dominguez, Rebecca Dow, Claire Dowden, Carmen R. Cornell Dyche, Nora Espinoza, Calla K. (Wolfe) Eyler, Candy Spence Ezzell, Kelly K. Fajardo, Joanne J. Ferrary, Natalie Figueroa, Minerva E. Foraker, Justine Fox-Young, Doreen Y. Gallegos, Fedelina Gallegos, Mary Helen Garcia, Stephanie Garcia Richard, Joy Garratt, Rita G. Getty, Karen E. Giannini, Toots Green, Ernestine D. Evans Griego, Pauline K. Gubbels, Joni Marie Gutierrez, Lois R. Hall, Dianne Miller Hamilton, Yvette Herrell, Susan K. Herrera, Pat I. Heth, Dayan Hochman-Vigil, Violet Hoffman, Margaret Hogrefe, Hilda Honeyfield, Norma D. Hood, Louise W. Hoover, Adele Cinelli Hundley, Dona G. Irwin, Sandra D. Jeff, D. Wonda Johnson, Elizbeth C. Johnson, Emily Kane, Rhonda S. King, Virginia A. Kittell, Patsy Trujillo Knauer, Martha L. (Marty) Lambert, Nancy Lane, Anna S. Larkin, Idalia Lechuga-Tena, Sharlyn Linard, Georgene Louis, Ida V. Love, Patricia A. Lundstrom, Lisa L. Lutz, Mary Lou Lyon, Sarah Maestas Barnes, Stephanie Maez, Bobbie K. Mallory, Irene Seward Mann, Cecilia Rosales Masters, Marian Matthews, Kathy A. McCoy, Susan McDowell, Muriel McNeill, Margaret Neal, Concha Ortiz y Pino de Kleven, Charlotte Palmer, Bertha M. Paxton, Vickie Perea, Angie Vigil Perez, Danice R. Picraux, Pauline J. Ponce, Marion Portwood, Jane E. Powdrell-Culbert, Judith A. Pratt, Viola K. Reynolds, Louise L. Ringler, Earlene Roberts, Debbie A. Rodella, May M. Rogers, Andrea Romero, Patricia Roybal Caballero, Angelica Rubio, Harriet Ruiz, Judy Vanderstar Russell, Porfirria Hidalgo Saiz, Debra M. Sariñana, DeLoma A. Scott, Mary H. Skeen, Ruth Soper, Melanie A. Stansbury, Sheryl Williams Stapleton, Mimi Stewart, Clara F. Strong, Candie G. Sweetser, Ruth Taichert, Elizabeth "Liz" Thomson, Lillian Thompson, Mary L. Thompson, Carol Wicks Tinker, Sandra L. Townsend, Blanche S. Trigg, Christine Trujillo, Linda M. Trujillo, Mary Tucker, Shirley A. Tyler, Linn J. Tytler, Gloria C. Vaughn, Jeannette O. Wallace, Helen Wells, ImaLee Wells, Darla Whitney-Welles, Avon W. Wilson, Delores C. Wright, Monica Youngblood and Teresa A. Zanetti; and
WHEREAS, in 2017, the New Mexico house of representatives voted three diverse women into leadership positions: Majority Floor Leader Sheryl Williams Stapleton, African American; Caucus Chair D. Wonda Johnson, Native American; and Majority Whip Doreen Y. Gallegos, Hispanic; and
WHEREAS, New Mexico is distinguished nationally for having many political female "firsts";
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that all New Mexico women who have been elected to and served in political office be honored; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the house of representatives recognize that the empowerment of women is inextricably linked to the potential of New Mexico to generate economic growth, sustainable democracy and inclusive security; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the governor be requested to declare March 8, 2020 "International Women's Day" in New Mexico.
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