12/16/2022
Big Announcement! During our our Recent Winter Holiday Party, our board chair Bonnie Dow made the following announcement:
"So excited to see you all here, it feels like it has been forever. We really wanted to have this event here at Mangia Nashville, our longtime holiday location, and I would like to thank Kay West and Nick Pellegrino for making this happen. To Kay, we say thanks for wrangling this event from North Carolina, and Nick, we so appreciate your support for all of these years, not to mention your delicious food and excellent drinks. Some applause for Nick please, who would like you to know that while Mangia is no longer open daily, it IS open for those amazing special Italian feasts it is famous for.
This is a special night for us, because we are going to look both backward and forward. Last month, WTF turned 10. Ten years ago, we filed the paper work to start a political action committee and started raising money to elect women candidates. Lisa Quigley, one of our founders who will speak in a moment, is going to recount that story. She is the one, by the way, who thought of the WTF acronym that people love to love and love to hate. I cannot tell you how many times over the past ten years that someone has said to me, in a really well meaning way “are you sure you want to use that acronym? Do you know what it means?” YES. YES WE DO.
As I said, tonight we look both backward and forward. The WTF board has made the important decision that as of January 1, we go inactive as a state and local PAC in Tennessee while we step back and think about how we can best reinvent ourselves for the future of women and politics in Tennessee. Redistricting has made our mission pretty much impossible—the only way for us to get more Democratic pro-choice women into the Tennessee legislature is to replace the Democratic pro-choice men that have been very supportive of us over the years. Which doesn’t seems like a good idea.
Over the last decade, we have supported legislative candidates across the state. But we have had the most success at the local level. We have helped elect county and city candidates in Hamilton and Knox and Shelby and Davidson county. But also in Maryville, Clarksville, and Tullahoma. And let us not forget 2015, when we helped to elect Megan Barry as Nashville’s first woman mayor as well as several new women council members, one of them the council's first openly gay member, Nancy VanReece. Or 2019, when we endorsed and funded FOURTEEN women who ran for Metro Council in Nashville and ELEVEN of them won. Including the first Muslim council member, Councilwoman Zulfat Suara, and the first Latina councilmember, Councilwoman Sandra Sepulveda District 30. That was the year that the metro council reached gender parity. Also that year, we helped elect Indya Kincannon as Mayor of Knoxville.
Of course, we have had some state level victories, too. We helped Senator Heidi Campbell flip a state senate seat from red to blue for the first time in 15 years. When she did that she took over the last GOP held legislative seat in Davidson County. We supported State Representative Gloria Johnson of Knoxville, through multiple elections, including this year’s when the Republicans redistricted her into a wholly new district that was designed to make her lose and SHE WON ANYWAY.
But after the redistricting this year, everything about statehouse races will be harder. And we’re not sure that fighting the good fight but always losing, because of the way that the districts are drawn, is the best use of our time or your money. And we wanted to explain that to you and not just disappear. Make no mistake, WTF is a success story—we spent ten years making things better for women in politics in Tennessee. But we may need to find another path to keep doing good. And when we figure out what it is, we will let you know. Tonight, we are here to celebrate what we accomplished with your help. That we supported almost a HUNDRED CANDIDATES over 10 years, and spent THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS IN THOSE RACES. That we helped elect Nashville’s first woman mayor, that we helped create a city council in Nashville that is 50% women and one in Knoxville that is MAJORITY WOMEN. Let’s please raise a glass to all of the women with the courage to run for office over the last ten years and to all of the women who opened their wallets to support them. Because they deserve our thanks.
As WTF: Women for Tennessee's Future steps back, we will be supporting other organizations that support what we support - Democratic women and women's autonomy. We'll be highlighting those organizations in the coming weeks and asking you to help us support them !”