Jo Comerford Explained

Jo Comerford
State Senate:Massachusetts
District:Hampshire, Franklin and Worcester
Term Start:January 2, 2019
Predecessor:Stan Rosenberg
Birth Date:3 September 1963
Party:Democratic
Residence:Northampton, Massachusetts

Joanne M. Comerford is an American politician who currently serves in the Massachusetts Senate. She is the first woman to hold the seat.[1] Before being elected senator she had worked for the National Priorities Project, the Center for Human Development, the American Friends Service Committee, The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts and MoveOn.[2]

Comerford won her first race, a primary election for state senate, entirely on write-in votes. The long-time incumbent senator for her district resigned abruptly in May 2018 in the face of an ethics scandal, after the filing deadline for potential challengers.[3] After an energized grassroots campaign that mobilized over 650 registered volunteers[4] and adopted the rallying cry "Go With Jo," 14,196 voters wrote in Comerford as their preferred candidate, defeating the only candidate whose name was printed on the ballot and two other write-in candidates.[5]

The Massachusetts Women’s Political Caucus endorsed Comerford as an incumbent candidate in the 2020 Massachusetts general election.

In 2021, Comerford was appointed as the Massachusetts state senate's leader of a COVID-19 working group, helping to provide oversight of the state’s pandemic response.[6] She has advocated for full funding for public schools, turning Massachusetts into a zero emissions state, health care reform, revenue equity, a police reform bill that passed the Legislature in 2020, and work on bringing rail to the western part of the state, among other priorities.[4] [7] In 2021, she filed a bill to establish a five-year moratorium on the construction of new prisons and jails in the commonwealth, in partnership with Representative Chynah Tyler.[8]

She is married to Ann Hennessey, a public school teacher who represented Ward 5 on the Northampton School Committee.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Senator Joanne Comerford . malegislature.gov . 2019-01-10.
  2. Web site: Jo Comerford, campaign director for MoveOn, seeks state Senate seat . Daily Hampshire Gazette . 2019-01-10 . 2018-05-22.
  3. Web site: 2018-05-03. Sen. Stan Rosenberg resigns after ethics report. 2021-06-22. masslive. en.
  4. Web site: Frenier. Adam. Jo Comerford Looks Ahead To Beacon Hill After Write-In Victory. 2021-06-22. www.nepm.org. September 5, 2018 . en.
  5. Web site: 2018-09-06. Comerford wins Hampshire, Franklin and Worcester District with write-in campaign. 2021-06-22. Daily Hampshire Gazette.
  6. Web site: Young. Colin A.. 2021-02-13. Northampton's Jo Comerford to serve as Massachusetts Senate leader on COVID. 2021-06-22. masslive. en.
  7. Web site: 2020-12-08. Comerford, constituents talk legislative achievements, priorities in online town hall. 2021-06-22. Daily Hampshire Gazette.
  8. News: Comerford. Jo. 2021-04-27. Columnist Sen. Jo Comerford: No new women's prison. Daily Hampshire Gazette. 2021-06-22.