HomePoliticsA new day: Women rule in Alabama politics

A new day: Women rule in Alabama politics

For many years, Alabama has been ridiculed in national publications for having fewer women in political leadership positions than other assumed-to-be-progressive states.

States like Colorado, New York and California were lauded for having an inordinate number of females in public office. Well, folks, take a cursory look around at Alabama’s political landscape, and it is a new day in the Heart of Dixie, and unlike the above-mentioned liberal states, conservative Republicans make up our slate of women leaders.

The top two most powerful leaders in the state are Gov. Kay Ivey and U.S. Sen. Katie Britt. If you include Public Service Commission President Twinkle Cavanaugh into the mix, then the three most powerful and popular political leaders in the Heart of Dixie are female Republicans. You can eat your heart out, Colorado.

This day did not just happen. These three women have been on the scene and the horizon for a while, and arose the old-fashioned way by rising through and within the system to get to the top of the class.

A new day: Women rule in Alabama politics

Ivey was a student leader at Auburn University. She spent a decade or more working with the Legislature as the lobbyist for the Alabama Commission on Higher Education. She then ran for and was elected state treasurer, serving eight years. She then was elected lieutenant governor where she served six years. She has been governor, now, for almost six years.

Cavanaugh has been on a leadership track since her high school years in Montgomery. She became chairwoman of the Alabama Republican Party at a young age and has been president of the Public Service Commission for over a decade. She is the hardest-working political figure in office in Alabama, with a hardcore grassroots organization.

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