Politics: The 10 women to watch

OK, so there’s a dearth of young female successors to Hillary, Di-Fi, Barbara, Nancy, and the other pathfinders who’ve changed American politics for the better. But not all is lost: The Bay Area still boasts some younger women with political rockstar potential. We pick the most likely to succeed.

Name: Ana Apodaca

Where she is now: Newark City Council

Age: 34

Résumé: When the city of Newark proposed charging $5 a day for what was a free after-school program, Apodaca called a hearing. Others looked at the fee as modest. But as the only woman on the council, she knew it would be a hardship for working mothers—even though she doesn’t have kids. “When women are not at the table, where are the discussions about childcare, women’s health, domestic violence?’’ she asks. Apodaca grew up in Newark, graduated from Cal State Hayward, worked for former assemblywoman and state Senator Liz Figueroa for eight years (starting as an intern), and was elected to City Council in 2005.

Where we think she’ll go next: Assembly seat held by Alberto Torrico, who is termed out in 2010.

What stands in her way: “I know how much money and work it takes. I have to be really convinced that’s where I want to go.’’


 

Name: Noreen Evans

Where she is now: State Assembly District 7

Age: 52

Résumé: Elected to the state assembly in 2004 and now in her second term representing the Santa Rosa area, she has become a party leader, chairing the Assembly Democratic Caucus, joining the Commission on the Status of Women, and mentoring other women candidates. Before running for the assembly, she was a Santa Rosa attorney and prominent local politician, serving as the city’s planning commissioner and councilwoman.

Where we think she’ll go next: She’ll likely make a try for state Senate once she terms out of the assembly.


 

Name: Jean Fraser

Where she is now: CEO, San Francisco Health Plan

Age: 45

Résumé: After securing healthcare for all San Francisco kids, Fraser then helped the city with its trailblazing plan to insure everyone who needs health insurance. Fraser graduated from Yale undergrad and Yale Law School and was deputy city attorney in San Francisco before taking over her current agency, which caters to low- and moderate-income families

Where we think she’ll go next: It’s no secret: She’s running in 2008 for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors District 1 seat now held by Jake McGoldrick, who is termed out.

What stands in her way: Name recognition. If she can overcome that, says Alix Rosenthal, the sky’s the limit. “She can focus on small issues while seeing the bigger picture.”


­­

 

Name: Kamala Harris

Where she is now: District Attorney, San Francisco

Age: 43

Résumé: The first San Francisco district attorney in decades with previous experience as a prosecutor, Harris had such a successful first term that no one bothered to run against her in 2007. In her first four years, she raised conviction rates, tightened drug and gun laws, scrounged up millions of dollars from state and federal agencies, formed partnerships with business and nonprofits, and sponsored a slew of successful legislation

Inside In the Know

INSIDER

Bad Girl Makes Good

How one writer built a miniempire—and now a TV show—by misbehaving.

METROPOLUST

Just a few good men

Our sexpert chats up a Marina divorcee determined to let her hair down. Way down.

SOCIETY

San Francisco's Best-Dressed, 2006

In this special edition of Outtakes, we applaud the people who give these pages style each month.

CULTURE

Baby Panic!

As the gayby boom leads to baby envy, some gay men are hearing a “biological clock” tick for the first time. Come again?

POLITICS

Staff blog

4/29/08—Supe Ammiano's crew is Dining Out for Life and tipping big. But one pal balks at the four percent surcharge. Scott Hocker asks: Irony, party of six?

SOCIALIST

Exodus!

Tahoe. Cloverdale. Sonoma. The social set heads for the hills for a western-themed blowout, a fashion show, and some ranchstyle entertaining.

BUSINESS

I, Pod

The Apple iTunes revolution, or, the anatomy of a sales job.

THE PROFILE

The admissions whisperer

When it comes to applying for college, some well-connected Bay Area kids have a secret edge: a coach named Mary Clarke.

RESTAURANT SEARCH

SHOPPING GUIDE