A grand old graduation
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Alicia Robinson
On Friday they graduated. The next step for some could be the
campaign trail.
A group of 15 Republican women from around California gathered
Friday at the Balboa Bay Club to celebrate their completion of the
first Marian Bergeson Excellence in Public Service program. And
celebrating with them was the program’s namesake, a former state
secretary of education, county supervisor and the first woman in the
state assembly and senate.
Members of the California Women’s Leadership Assn., a Republican
group, started the program.
The program, which started in January, included classes held at UC
Irvine on the Constitution, campaign fundraising, public service
ethics and other topics. Students also took trips to Sacramento and
Washington, D.C., to talk with elected officials about what they do.
“It’s very exciting for me because you can see by the quality of
women that are becoming interested in politics that we have a lot of
talent,” Bergeson said.
Students ranged in age from 23 to 67, program executive director
Emmy Day said. Program organizers said there’s even more interest for
next year’s class.
The students learned valuable skills for public service careers,
but the course also helped give them the networking opportunities
male politicos have taken advantage of for years, Day said.
“It’s not so much what was taught, but it’s the connections that
have been made for these women,” she said. “This is what men did on
the golf course.”
The course attracted a mixture of business and professional women
as well as those who work for elected officials or have run for
office.
“I think I ran for my first office in second grade, for secretary
of my elementary school,” program graduate Kelly Hillman said. “I’ve
always been the president of this and the captain of that. I’ve
always liked to talk and people seem to listen.”
An Irvine native who now lives in Newport Beach, Hillman served as
campaign chairwoman for Republican Cristi Cristich, who lost a
primary bid for the 70th Assembly District seat earlier this year.
Hillman now works for Sheldon Public Relations in Newport Beach.
She wants to see more women more proportionately represented in
elected offices, though she’s not sure if she’ll be a candidate
herself.
“I want to serve my community,” Hillman said. “I just haven’t
figured out how exactly that’s going to be accomplished yet.”
The Bergeson program is a valuable platform for getting women
involved in politics, said Carolyn Yellis of Anaheim. She’s a
paralegal and she served as a delegate at the Republican national
convention late last month.
“I gained a lot of camaraderie, a lot of experience and lots of
connections,” Yellis said.
She doesn’t expect to run for office herself, but might like to do
legislative analysis, she said.
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