Beverly White
Beverly White | |
---|---|
Member of the Utah House of Representatives | |
In office 1971–1991 | |
Preceded by | F. Chileon Halladay (57th district) |
Succeeded by | Merrill Nelson (21st district) |
Constituency | 57th district (1971–1973) 64th district (1973–1983) 21st district (1983–1991) |
Personal details | |
Born | Beverly Jean Larson September 2, 1928 Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. |
Died | May 24, 2021 Taylorsville, Utah, U.S. | (aged 92)
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Marion Floyd White |
Children | 5 |
Signature | |
Beverly Jean White (née Larson; September 2, 1928 – May 24, 2021) was an American activist and politician who served in the Utah House of Representatives for the 57th, 64th, and 21st districts from 1971 to 1991, as a member of the Democratic Party. She was the longest-serving female member of the Utah State Legislature. White held multiple positions in the Democratic Party at the local, state, and national levels and also attended many state and national conventions.
Born in Salt Lake City and raised in Tooele, Utah, White was educated at Tooele High School. She entered politics with her involvement in the Tooele County Democratic Ladies Club and later became active in the Tooele County Democratic Party.
White served as vice-chair of the Tooele County Democratic Party, secretary of the Utah Democratic Party for sixteen years, and on the Rules Committee of the Democratic National Committee. She was a delegate to multiple state conventions of the Utah Democratic Party and was a delegate to every Democratic National Convention from 1964 to 2004, with the exception of 1976 when she was an alternate delegate.
Governor Cal Rampton appointed White to the Utah Board of Pardons in 1965, her first office. She was on the board until 1971, when she was appointed to fill a vacancy in the state house created by Representative F. Chileon Halladay's death. During her tenure in the state house she was at times the only female chair of a committee and served as Assistant Whip while in the majority and minority. She lost reelection in 1990 to Republican nominee Merrill Nelson. Following her tenure in the state house she served on a hospital board, wrote a book about female legislators, and aided in the creation of a satellite campus for Utah State University.
Early life
[edit]Beverly Jean Larson was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, on September 2, 1928, to Helen Sterzer and Gustave R. Larson. She was raised by her aunt Margret and uncle Dunn after her mother died from diabetes on September 17, 1941. She graduated from Tooele High School.[1][2] Her father died on June 25, 1978.[3]
On April 8, 1947, White married Marion Floyd White, with whom she had five children, at the Salt Lake Temple. They remained together until his death in 2004. Her husband was elected to the Tooele city council in the 1950s and Bish White, her father-in-law, was elected as sheriff of Tooele County.[4][5][1] She was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[6]
Career
[edit]Politics
[edit]White was elected as president of the Tooele County Democratic Ladies Club in 1959,[7] and was vice-chair of the Tooele County Democratic Party during the 1960s. She served as a delegate to the Utah Democratic Party's state convention multiple times.[8][9][10][11] Her tenure as secretary of the Utah Democratic Party lasted from 1971 to 1987, before she was defeated by D'Arcy Dixon.[12][13][14] White was selected to serve on the Rules Committee of the Democratic National Committee in 1972.[15]
White attended every Democratic National Convention as a delegate from 1964 to 2004, with the exception of the 1976 Democratic National Convention.[16][17] During the 1968 Democratic presidential primary she served as an uncommitted delegate as a part of Utah's twenty-six member delegation to the Democratic National Convention.[18] The Utah delegation at the 1972 convention selected her to be its secretary.[19] She served as an uncommitted alternate delegate to the 1976 convention[20] and as a delegate for U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy at the 1980 convention.[21] In 1984, she served as one of two uncommitted delegates, although she voted for Gary Hart, while sixteen of Utah's delegates supported Hart and nine supported Walter Mondale.[22][23] She was the oldest member of Utah's twenty-nine member delegation to the 2000 convention.[16]
White was a member of the Juvenile Court Advisory Board.[1] In 1965, she was appointed by Governor Cal Rampton and approved by the Utah Senate to serve on the Utah Board of Pardons for the Utah State Prison for a six-year term. She was the first woman to serve on the board, but left early to take a seat in the Utah House of Representatives.[1][24][25][26] White served as secretary of the Tooele County Council of Governments and the Tooele County Planning Commission in the 1970s.[27]
During the 1976 United States House of Representative election, Representative Allan Turner Howe was convicted of soliciting sex. White joined other leaders in the Democratic Party in calling for a resolution to ask Howe to withdraw from the election as he would hurt the chances of other candidates and so that a replacement appointment could be made.[28] Howe did not withdraw from the race and was defeated by Republican nominee David Daniel Marriott.[29]
Utah House of Representatives
[edit]Elections
[edit]Representative F. Chileon Halladay, who served six terms in the Utah House of Representatives, died from bronchial pneumonia on March 4, 1971.[30] Governor Rampton appointed White to fill the vacancy in the 57th district in the state house on March 8.[26] She served in the state house for twenty years, making her the longest-serving female member of the Utah State Legislature.[1]
White won reelection to the 64th district in the 1972 election against Clarence Hansen, a write-in candidate[31][32] and LDS Bishop.[33] During the election she participated in a 27 mile hike with U.S. Representative Wayne Owens.[34] She defeated Republican nominees Carolyn Palmer, vice-chair of the Tooele County Republican Party, in 1974,[27][35][36] Phyllis Dunn in 1978,[37] and Douglas Christensen, president of the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce, in 1980 .[38][39] There was no opposition to her in 1976.[40][41] The 64th district was located entirely within Tooele County, with the remainder of the county represented by the 63rd district.[42]
During the 1982 election, White ran against Representative John E. Smith in the Democratic primary as both of them moved into the 21st district due to redistricting.[43] The 21st district was also located entirely within Tooele County and contained the majority of its population and area, with the remainder being represented by the 1st district.[44] White defeated Smith at the Tooele County Democratic Convention, winning seventy-two delegates to Smith's twenty-three, which was above the seventy percent required to prevent a primary.[45] She defeated Smith, who ran a write-in campaign, in the general election.[46][47] White faced no opposition in the 1984, 1986, and 1988 elections.[48][49][50]
White declined to run for Karl Swan's seat in the state senate from the 13th district in the 1990 election as she wanted to maintain her seniority.[51] She lost reelection to Republican nominee Merrill Nelson, who received over sixty percent of the vote.[52] At one of their debates, Nelson criticized her for being the "most liberal" member of the state house, her support for abortion rights, and for the high number of legislative votes that she was absent for.[53] Although White lost her seat, the Democratic Party increased their representation in the state house by four seats.[54] The Salt Lake Tribune stated that White had been harmed by hospital management controversies.[55]
Tenure
[edit]During White's tenure in the state house, she served as chair of the Social Services committee and as a member of the Local Government and Consumer Affairs committees.[27] At times, she was the only woman to serve as the chair of a committee. White served as treasurer of the National Order of Women Legislators.[27][56][57] In 1974, she was one of six women serving in the Utah state government alongside Georgia Peterson, Milly Bernard, Mary Lorraine Johnson, Nellie Jack, and Rita Urie.[58]
White served as Assistant Majority Whip from 1975 to 1976, and Assistant Minority Whip from 1977 to 1978.[59][60][61] She ran for the position of Minority Whip in 1980, but was defeated by Representative John Garr.[62] White ran for the position of Minority Leader in 1982, but was defeated by Representative Mike Dmitrich.[63] White ran for the position of Minority Whip in 1984, but Representative Blaze Wharton was given the position instead.[64][65] In 1986, she was selected to serve on the Management Committee which was the fourth-highest position in the minority leadership.[66]
White was appointed to serve on the Utah Health Planning Council in 1979.[67] She received the Susa Young Gates Award in 1978.[68] The National Association of Social Workers named her as legislator of the year in 1981.[69] From 1986 to 1993, she served as a member of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women. She was named as the woman of the year by the Central Women Club of Utah in 1982, and as the Democratic legislator of the year in 1987.[70]
In 1987, it was debated on whether or not to seat White, Mont Evans, and Janet Rose as Attorney General David L. Wilkinson stated that the separations of powers clause in Article 5, Section 1 of the Constitution of Utah would prohibit them from holding jobs in the state government while being in the state legislature. White worked for the Utah Department of Social Services in order to find community service jobs for drunk drivers.[71][72] Governor Norman H. Bangerter refused to issue an ultimatum requested by Wilkinson demanding that the legislators either resign from the legislature or be fired. Bangerter believed that the Utah Supreme Court was responsible for settling the matter.[73] On February 23, the Utah Supreme Court ruled in an unanimous decision written by Justice Richard C. Howe that the legislators could retain their seats.[74] Wilkinson filed another case against Evans and Rose in the 3rd district court, but excluded White.[75] White had hired her own attorney while Evans and Rose were represented by the Utah Public Employees Association. The state legislature voted to allot $10,000 for White's legal fees.[76]
Later life
[edit]White served on the Tooele Valley Medical Center Special Service District Board until 1993.[77] She was the board's chair from 1989 to 1991.[77] The Family Practice Group owed $50,000 to the Tooele Valley Medical Center for laboratory services and maintenance to the FPG building, but the FPG requested lenient terms or the cancellation of the debt. Jay Spector, medical staff president of Tooele Valley Medical Center, resigned stating that he could not work with Scott Blakley, who opposed the FPG's debt requests. White offered to resign from the position of chair in 1989, due to controversy involving the debt, but the board voted to show confidence in her.[78][79][80] Despite not wanting to serve another term she was unanimously selected to serve another term in 1990. She declined to serve another term despite having been renominated in 1991, and was selected to serve as secretary after being chair of the board.[81][82]
On January 22, 1991, White and five other people were selected by forty delegates to be candidates to replace Bill Pitt on the Tooele County Commission, but Edwin St. Clair was selected to fill the vacancy. The two Republican members of the county commission were critical of the six proposed candidates with Commissioner Teryl Hunsaker stating that the Democrats did not take the opportunity to select "clean, fresh blood to bring a new perspective into the system".[83][84][85]
White also helped establish the Children's Justice Center in Tooele and worked for the Tooele Adult Probation and Parole Office. White was also as a member of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women from 1986 to 1993.[70]
White wrote Women Legislators of Utah, 1896–1993, a book about women who served in the state government.[86] She received the Eleanor Roosevelt Award in 1994.[1][87] The American Association of University Women named White as the distinguished woman of the year for 1996 to 1997.[88] She aided in the creation of a satellite university for Utah State University in Tooele; the university later gave her an honorary doctorate degree in 2017. She aided in the election of Debbie Winn, the first female mayor of Tooele. White died in Taylorsville, Utah, on May 24, 2021.[1][87]
Political positions
[edit]White voted against an income tax refund in 1979, and blamed it for budgetary problems. In 1980, she supported the idea of eliminating the sales tax, but not while the state was undergoing budget problems.[89]
Abortion
[edit]During the 1970s White supported making abortion laws more restrictive,[27] but by 1990, she supported abortion rights.[53] In 1977, White voted against a resolution calling for a constitutional convention to amend the Constitution of the United States to ban abortion, while the state house voted in favour 55 to 5.[90] White opposed a section of anti-abortion legislation which would require families to see photographs of dead fetuses, saying they were "pornographic" and that anyone who sent them through the mail would be arrested.[91] She criticized legislation passed by the state house in 1988, which required parental consent for materials that mention contraception.[92] She served as a representative for Planned Parenthood to the World Conference on Women, 1995.[93]
Capital punishment
[edit]The Supreme Court of the United States ruled that capital punishment was unconstitutional in Furman v. Georgia, ending the usage of capital punishment in the United States until the Gregg v. Georgia ruling.[94] White supported the restoration of capital punishment in Utah and it became the first state to resume executions in the United States.[27][95]
Equal Rights Amendment
[edit]In 1973, when the Utah state house voted 51 to 20 against ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment, White was one of the representatives who voted in favor.[96] She sponsored another attempt to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in 1975.[97] She called for members of the state legislature to not vote on the amendment based on their religion due to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' opposition to the amendment.[98] Utah is one of twelve states to have not ratified the Equal Rights Amendment as of 2021.[99]
Women's rights
[edit]White and five other female members of the Utah state legislature wrote to Superintendent of Public Instruction Walter D. Talbot to investigate sex discrimination in educational hiring practices.[100] In 1979, Representatives White, Joan R. Turner, Lucille G. Taylor, and Senator Frances Farley praised Governor Scott M. Matheson for appointing a woman, Phyllis C. Southwick, to the state house.[101] The state house voted to abolish the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women in 1980, while White and all other female members of the state house voted against.[102] White was endorsed for reelection in the 1990 election by the National Organization for Women.[103]
Electoral history
[edit]Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 4,059 | 84.37% | ||
Independent | Clarence Hansen (write-in) | 752 | 15.63% | +15.63% | |
Total votes | 4,811 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 3,326 | 66.71% | −17.66% | |
Republican | Carolyn Palmer | 1,660 | 33.29% | +33.29% | |
Total votes | 4,986 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 4,517 | 100.00% | +33.29% | |
Total votes | 4,517 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 2,572 | 65.35% | −34.65% | |
Republican | Phyllis Dunn | 1,364 | 34.65% | +34.65% | |
Total votes | 3,936 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 3,280 | 56.30% | −9.05% | |
Republican | Douglas Christensen | 2,546 | 43.70% | +9.05% | |
Total votes | 5,826 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 72 | 75.79% | ||
Democratic | John E. Smith (incumbent) | 23 | 24.21% | ||
Total votes | 95 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 3,524 | 53.41% | −2.89% | |
Independent | John E. Smith (incumbent) (write-in) | 3,074 | 46.59% | +46.59% | |
Total votes | 6,598 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 5,290 | 100.00% | +46.59% | |
Total votes | 6,598 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 457 | 68.52% | ||
Democratic | Gary Bowen | 210 | 31.48% | ||
Total votes | 667 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 4,277 | 100.00% | +0.00% | |
Total votes | 4,277 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | D'Arcy Dixon | 333 | 62.48% | ||
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 200 | 37.52% | ||
Total votes | 533 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 5,284 | 100.00% | +0.00% | |
Total votes | 5,284 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Merrill Nelson | 4,016 | 66.74% | +66.74% | |
Democratic | Beverly White (incumbent) | 2,001 | 33.26% | −66.74% | |
Total votes | 6,017 | 100.00% |
References
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