- Served as president of NARAL Pro-Choice America from 2004-2012
- Was the first full-time education policy director of People For the American Way
See also: NARAL
Pro-Choice America People
for the American Way
Born
into an Irish Catholic family on February 14, 1952, Nancy Keenan was
raised in Anaconda, Montana. In 1974 she graduated from Montana State
University with a bachelor's degree in elementary and special
education. She then worked for a year at the Yellowstone Boys' Ranch
in Billings, Montana, a religiously oriented school for
abandoned and troubled boys. In 1975 she returned to Anaconda to
teach elementary-school children with disabilities, a position
she would hold until 1988. During her tenure at that job, Keenan (in
1979) earned an M.A. in education administration from the University
of Montana. She also launched an active career in politics during
this period, serving as a Democratic
state representative in Montana from 1983-89. After that, Keenan
spent 11 years (1989-2000) as Montana's state superintendent of
public instruction. For part of that time, she was national president
of the Council of Chief State School Officers.
In 2000, Keenan
ran as the Democratic candidate for Montana's lone seat in the U.S.
House of Representatives. Some of her top campaign donors included
left-wing activist groups and labor unions such as the AFL-CIO,
the AmeriPAC Association of Trial Lawyers of America, Emily's
List, MoveOn.org,
the National
Education Association, People
for the American Way, Planned
Parenthood, the Teamsters, and the United Auto Workers.
Keenan lost the election, however, and subsequently moved to
Washington, DC, where she worked as a private educational consultant
from 2001-03.
In 2003-04, Keenan was the full-time education
policy director of People
for the American Way. As a lobbyist for
that organization, she aggressively attacked tuition vouchers that
threatened to divert money away from the public education system and
the teachers' unions. “Why should we be responsible for [vouchers]
as taxpayers,” she asked,
“and is that in the best interest of our community? And,
fundamentally, is it fair? I think, to all of those, the answer
is 'no.'” Characterizing
vouchers as “a war on public schools and school children,” Keenan
in 2004 suggested
that voucher proposals were often rooted in racism:
“When the Religious Right entered the political arena was right after Brown
v. Board of Education
50 years ago. That was the first time we started hearing about
vouchers so that white children didn't have to go to school with
brown children. They wanted to use tax dollars so white children
could go to white Christian academies.”
In
late 2004, Keenan became president of NARAL
Pro-Choice America (formerly known as the National Abortion
Rights Action League).
Upon taking that position, Keenan announced that she was ready to
wage an ideological battle against then-U.S. President George W. Bush, who she believed was
planning to appoint Supreme Court Justices who would vote to overturn
Roe
v. Wade.
“The stakes have never been higher,” said
Keenan. “Every branch of the federal government is dominated by
powerful opponents of choice. Years of progress on women's health,
reproductive freedom and personal privacy are in peril.”
In
one of her first moves as NARAL president, Keenan, a Democrat, made
it clear that pro-life candidates such as Tim Roemer of Indiana, who
was running against Howard
Dean in a bid to become leader of the Democratic
National Committee (DNC), were not welcome in her party. In January
2005, The
Hill
reported
that Keenan not only “snubbed” Roemer but also mobilized all
of NARAL's state and local affiliates “to contact the 447 DNC
delegates and persuade them to oppose” his candidacy.
In
2006, Washingtonian
Magazine
named
Keenan as one of the 100 most powerful women in Washington,
DC.
During the 2009 public debate over the possibility of
nationalizing health care in the United States, Keenan was
strongly critical of the proposed Stupak-Pitts
Amendment,
which would have prohibited
the use of federal funds to pay for abortion coverage except in cases of rape, incest, or danger to the life
of the mother.
Keenan favors access to taxpayer-funded abortion-on-demand, with no exceptions.
In May 2012, Keenan announced
that she would be stepping down from her post with NARAL at the end of the
year.
For additional information on Nancy Keenan, click here.
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