Women Elected Officials
| Name Sort descending | Race/Ethnicity | Party | Roles | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sarah S. Agee | White | Republican |
|
Arkansas |
| Tommye Agee | Unavailable | Democrat |
|
Tennessee |
| Lucinda Agidius | White | Republican |
|
Idaho |
| Vickie Agler | White | Republican |
|
Colorado |
| Cecilia M. Aguiar-Curry | Latina | Democrat |
|
California |
| Irene Aguilar | Latina | Democrat |
|
Colorado |
| Amanda Aguirre | Latina | Democrat |
|
Arizona |
| Linda G. Aguirre | Latina | Democrat |
|
Arizona |
| Debora A. Ahern | Unavailable | Democrat |
|
New Hampshire |
| Pamela I. Bengson Aherns | Unavailable | Republican |
|
Idaho |
Women Elected Officials by Position
| Position | Name | Race/Ethnicity | Party | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Sarah S. Agee | White | Republican | Arkansas |
|
Tommye Agee | Unavailable | Democrat | Tennessee |
|
Lucinda Agidius | White | Republican | Idaho |
|
Vickie Agler | White | Republican | Colorado |
|
Cecilia M. Aguiar-Curry | Latina | Democrat | California |
|
Irene Aguilar | Latina | Democrat | Colorado |
|
Amanda Aguirre | Latina | Democrat | Arizona |
|
Linda G. Aguirre | Latina | Democrat | Arizona |
|
Debora A. Ahern | Unavailable | Democrat | New Hampshire |
|
Pamela I. Bengson Aherns | Unavailable | Republican | Idaho |
Women Elected Officials by Race/Ethnicity
| Name Sort descending | Race/Ethnicity | Party | Roles | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tommye Agee | Unavailable | Democrat |
|
Tennessee |
| Sarah S. Agee | White | Republican |
|
Arkansas |
| Lucinda Agidius | White | Republican |
|
Idaho |
| Vickie Agler | White | Republican |
|
Colorado |
| Cecilia M. Aguiar-Curry | Latina | Democrat |
|
California |
| Irene Aguilar | Latina | Democrat |
|
Colorado |
| Linda G. Aguirre | Latina | Democrat |
|
Arizona |
| Amanda Aguirre | Latina | Democrat |
|
Arizona |
| Debora A. Ahern | Unavailable | Democrat |
|
New Hampshire |
| Pamela I. Bengson Aherns | Unavailable | Republican |
|
Idaho |
Women Elected Officials by Party
| Name | Race/Ethnicity | Party | Roles | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sarah S. Agee | White | Republican |
|
Arkansas |
| Tommye Agee | Unavailable | Democrat |
|
Tennessee |
| Lucinda Agidius | White | Republican |
|
Idaho |
| Vickie Agler | White | Republican |
|
Colorado |
| Cecilia M. Aguiar-Curry | Latina | Democrat |
|
California |
| Irene Aguilar | Latina | Democrat |
|
Colorado |
| Amanda Aguirre | Latina | Democrat |
|
Arizona |
| Linda G. Aguirre | Latina | Democrat |
|
Arizona |
| Debora A. Ahern | Unavailable | Democrat |
|
New Hampshire |
| Pamela I. Bengson Aherns | Unavailable | Republican |
|
Idaho |
About the CAWP Women Elected Officials Database
The CAWP Women Elected Officials Database represents the most complete collection of information anywhere in the world about women elected officials in the United States. The database includes full historical listings for women who have held office at the congressional, statewide elective executive, and state legislative levels nationwide. For each woman officeholder, the database includes their geographic information, party identification, and race identification where available. This tool expands on the officeholder database that the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) has long kept and shared with researchers and, crucially, transforms it into a searchable, online format for public access. It contains entries for more than eleven thousand women officeholders dating back to 1893 when a woman was first elected to a statewide executive position.
Please contact Chelsea Hill, director of data, for any corrections or questions regarding the database. Please contact Daniel De Simone, director of communications, for any press inquiries regarding the database.
Data were pulled from several sources, including CAWP’s own historical records, state officeholder records, local news articles, data provided by KnowWho Data Services, and Elizabeth M. Cox’s Women State and Territorial Legislators, 1895-1995.
Suggested Citation
Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP). CAWP Women Elected Officials Database. New Brunswick, NJ: Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University-New Brunswick, accessed Month, Day, Year. https://cawpdata.rutgers.edu/
In-text citation: Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) Women Elected Officials Database
About CAWP
The Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP), a unit of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is nationally recognized as the leading source of scholarly research and current data about women’s political participation in the United States. Its mission is to promote greater knowledge and understanding about the role of women in American politics, enhance women's influence in public life, and expand the diversity of women in politics and government. CAWP’s education and outreach programs translate research findings into action, addressing women’s under-representation in political leadership with effective, intersectional, and imaginative programs serving a variety of audiences. As the world has watched Americans considering female candidates for the nation's highest offices, CAWP’s five decades of analyzing and interpreting women’s participation in American politics have provided a foundation and context for the discussion.
Acknowledgements
CAWP is grateful for the vision and support of our research from Pivotal Ventures, an investment and incubation company founded by Melinda French Gates.
The bulk of historical data for the state legislative level before 1977 was made possible through the work of Elizabeth M. Cox and her book, Women State and Territorial Legislators, 1895-1995. This exhaustive and detailed historical record was instrumental in being able to provide the full account of women serving in state legislatures, and we are immensely grateful for her invaluable contribution.
Frequently Asked Questions
To get quick answers to our most frequently asked questions, see below.
This database contains data on women elected officials from the congressional, statewide elective executive, and state legislative levels. Each level goes back to the very first woman to hold office in that level.
The CAWP Women Elected Officials Database only includes women who have hold statewide elective executive offices. These are offices that are elected on a statewide basis for executive positions. These do not include executive positions that are appointed or that are elected by district. These offices change from year to year and by state based on state constitutions, causing variance in which offices you will see reflected in our database over time.
This database includes party affiliations for all women officeholders, including those representing major and third parties, those who have been elected as Independents, and those elected to nonpartisan positions. Some states use alternative party labels for major parties, including Minnesota’s Democratic Farm-Laborer (DFL) party; those parties are combined under the major-party label in our search and summary data and visualizations, but are noted in candidate-specific information and data available for export. The two major parties of the Puerto Rican government, Partido Nuevo Progresista and Partido Popular Democratico, are also included to capture party affiliations for women elected officials in the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico.
Currently, CAWP’s Women Elected Officials Database includes data on women elected officials at the sub-national level from the U.S. territories and the Washington, D.C. City Council from 2018 to present. Although our data only goes back to 2018, some officeholders from these areas may have served before this period; that service is not yet reflected in the database. More historical data on women in the U.S. territories and the D.C. City Council may become available in the future. These data do not include congressional delegates, who represent the U.S. territories and Washington, D.C. in the U.S. Congress; complete historical data for these officeholders is included in the database.
Racial/ethnic identification is available for all congressional and statewide elective executive officeholders. For state legislative officeholders, racial/ethnic identification is available for all state legislators from 1997 to present; partial race/ethnicity data is available in earlier years.
We determine officeholders’ racial/ethnic identification by relying on historical records, contemporary public records, and officeholder self-identification. Public records include interviews and website or other available biographies. We also contact current officeholders directly to confirm their preferred racial/ethnic identification. We label officeholders for whom we were unable to determine racial identification as “unavailable.”
Officeholders who identify explicitly as multiracial are listed as "Multiracial Alone". Those who identify as more than one race/ethnicity are included in each group with which they identify. We strongly caution against adding totals from each racial/ethnic group, as it will double count officeholders. For those choosing to report an aggregate count of “women of color,” including any women with racial/ethnic identities other than white, please refer to the database search tool by race/ethnicity (and select all but white and unavailable) or contact CAWP staff directly.
The first option, “Currently Serving,” displays the officeholders who are in office as of the date you are searching. The second option, “Served During Year(s)” allows you to search for any officeholder who served in a given year, including women who only served for a portion of a year. The third option, “Served at End of Year,” allows you to search for the final number of officeholders serving at the end of that year. These end-of-year numbers are used on our historical fact sheets to denote the final level of women’s representation for that year and can be used to make progression over time charts.
You can find summary historical or current data on women officeholders on the Officeholders section of our website.
You can find data on women candidates on our Candidates page.
You can find more information about women officeholders and representation in your state on our state by state information page.
You can learn more about why women are (and have been) underrepresented in U.S. politics on our Publications page.
For any questions/comments or to submit any corrections, please contact Chelsea Hill, director of data.