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Rachel Talbot Ross

American politician from Maine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rachel Talbot Ross
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Rachel Talbot Ross (born 1961) is an American politician and civil rights activist who has broken significant racial barriers in Maine politics. A Democrat from Portland, she is the current State Senator for District 28, having been elected unopposed in 2024.[1]

Quick Facts Member of the Maine Senate, Preceded by ...

Talbot Ross achieved several historic firsts during her political career. In 2016, she became the first Black woman elected to the Maine Legislature when she won a seat in the Maine House of Representatives.[2] She later became the highest-ranking African American politician in Maine history when elected as the 104th Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives in December 2022, serving until December 2024.[3]

The daughter of civil rights pioneer Gerald Talbot, Maine's first Black legislator, Talbot Ross has continued her family's legacy of public service and advocacy for racial equity. She served eight years in the Maine House representing Portland districts, including as assistant majority leader, before her election to the state senate.[4] As a legislator, she championed criminal justice reform and authored groundbreaking legislation requiring racial impact assessments for new laws in Maine.[5]

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Early life and education

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Talbot Ross grew up in Portland with her father, Gerald Talbot, her mother Anita, and three sisters.[6][7] Her father, who also served as a Maine lawmaker and civil rights leader, was the first person of color ever elected to the Maine Legislature, and Talbot Ross describes her family as being consistently involved in public service and civic action. She is a ninth-generation Maine resident.[6]

Talbot Ross attended Wesleyan University and American University[8] and worked as the Director of Equal Opportunity and Multicultural Affairs for the City of Portland for 21 years.[9] She resigned in 2015 following a leave of absence.[10]

She also served as the president of the Portland branch of the NAACP.[11] The branch disbanded in 2013, but as of February 2021 Talbot Ross was working with other area leaders to reinstate the chapter.[12] She also helped direct the Maine Freedom Trails project, the first part of which opened in 2006,[13][14] and co-founded the Martin Luther King Jr. Fellows program with Portland city councilor Pious Ali, a youth-led racial justice program for high school students of color in Portland.[15][6]

Talbot Ross considers herself a prison abolitionist and has advocated for incarcerated individuals in Maine over the course of fifteen years.[16]

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Political career

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Rachel Talbot Ross

Talbot Ross was first elected to represent Maine House District 40 in 2016. She defeated Democrats Herbert Adams and Anna Kellar in the Democratic primary, and after Republican opponent Carol Taylor dropped out of the race in late September, Talbot Ross received 100% of the votes in the general election.[17]

In 2018, Talbot Ross was challenged in the House District 40 Democratic primary by former state representative Herb Adams,[8] but defeated him 75%-25%.[17] She faced no opponent in the general election and was therefore seated for a second term.[8]

Talbot Ross faced no opponents in either the primary or general elections in 2020.[17] On November 3, 2020, she won her third consecutive term representing House District 40.[11] Later that month, the House Democrats unanimously elected Talbot Ross to be the House assistant majority leader, making her the first Black person in a legislative leadership position in Maine history.[11]

Talbot Ross has served on the Judiciary, Health & Human Services,[11] and Criminal Justice & Public Safety committees,[18] as well as the Maine State Advisory Committee for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.[8] She is the chair of the Permanent Commission on the Status of Racial, Indigenous and Maine Tribal Population, which she helped write legislation to create in 2019,[11] and is currently a member of the Legislative Council.[19]

The 130th Maine legislature took up a bill proposed by Talbot Ross, "LD #2: An Act To Require the Inclusion of Racial Impact Statements in the Legislative Process," early in the regular session. It passed both the House and Senate on March 12, 2021, and on March 17, Governor Janet Mills signed it into law. The bill requires that new legislation in Maine be reviewed for its potential impact on traditionally marginalized populations.[20][21] With the law's enactment, Maine became the eighth U.S. state with such a requirement.[22]

With incumbent Speaker Ryan Fecteau term-limited, the Maine Democrats nominated Talbot Ross as Speaker on November 18, 2022. When the new legislature was sworn in on December 7, she was elected Speaker.[3]

Term limited in the State House in 2024, she was elected unopposed to the Maine State Senate that year.[23]

In February 2023, United States President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris honored Black State House speakers Chris Welch, Adrienne A. Jones, Joe Tate, Carl Heastie, and Talbot-Ross at a Black History Month ceremony at the White House.[24]

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Awards and honors

  • 2006 EqualityMaine Bayard Rustin award for collaborative movement-building[25]
  • 2009 Roger Baldwin award, Maine Civil Liberties Union[26]
  • 2014 Deborah Morton Award, University of New England[27]
  • 2020 Gerda Haas award from the Holocaust and Human Rights Center of Maine for work on human rights reforms[28]
  • 2020 Emerge Maine Woman of the Year[19]

Electoral history

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Notes

  1. Taylor dropped out of the race too late to be removed from the general election ballot; votes cast for Taylor were regarded by the Secretary of State's office as blank.

References

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