Sheila Harrington Explained

State House:Massachusetts
District:1st Middlesex
Term Start:January 5, 2011
Term End:February 16, 2022
Predecessor:Robert Hargraves
Successor:Margaret Scarsdale
Children:3
Birth Date:8 September 1960
Birth Place:Salem, Massachusetts
Spouse:Steve Harrington
Party:Republican
Profession:Attorney

Sheila Curran Harrington (born September 8, 1960) is an American politician and attorney. She represented the 1st Middlesex district in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 2011 until February 2022, when she resigned to take up the position of Clerk Magistrate of the Gardner District Court.[1] [2] She is a member of the Republican party.[3]

Her district included the towns of Groton, Dunstable, Pepperell, Townsend, Ashby and a precinct in Ayer and Devens.She served as Ranking Member on the Judiciary Committee and as a member of both the Committee on Rules and the House Committee on Personnel and Administration. She had previously served as the Ranking Member on the House Post Audit and Oversight Committee and as a Member of the Veterans and Federal Affairs Committee.

Early life and education

Sheila Harrington was born in Salem, Massachusetts and grew up in Danvers, Massachusetts. She attended high school in Peabody at Bishop Fenwick High School She then attended Providence College and earned a Bachelor of Arts in Social Work in 1982. Following college, she attended the New England School of Law and was admitted to the Massachusetts Bar in 1986.[4]

Career

Sheila has been a practicing attorney in Massachusetts for over 30 years. She continues to have a law practice in Groton, Massachusetts along with two other attorneys.

One of Harrington's most notable positions is her stance on Transgender rights. In an op-ed from the Lowell Sun she documented how she came to change her position from opposition to support of transgender rights., how after "passionately protesting a bill on the Massachusetts House Floor", she came to realize, that was wrong in her own mind.

In an op-ed from the Lowell Sun, Harrington described how she came to change her position from opposition to support of transgender rights.[5]

Electoral history

2010 Massachusetts House of Representatives General Election, 1st Middlesex District[6]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanSheila Harrington10,37862.5
DemocratJesse Reich6,22238.5
2012 Massachusetts House of Representatives General Election, 1st Middlesex District
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanSheila Harrington17,592100
UnopposedN/AN/AN/A
2014 Massachusetts House of Representatives General Election, 1st Middlesex District
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanSheila Harrington9,95864.3
DemocratGene Rauhala5,53035.7
2016 Massachusetts House of Representatives General Election, 1st Middlesex District
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanSheila Harrington14,98465.2
DemocratMatthew T. Meneghini8,00334.8
2018 Massachusetts House of Representatives General Election, 1st Middlesex District
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanSheila Harrington15,340100
UnopposedN/AN/AN/A
2020 Massachusetts House of Representatives General Election, 1st Middlesex District
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanSheila Harrington13,20351.5
DemocratDeborah Busser12,40748.4

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2022-01-19 . Baker taps GOP Rep. Shelia Harrington for court post . 2023-01-04 . Sentinel and Enterprise . en-US.
  2. Web site: Mass. Governor’s Council unanimously approve 2 first-degree murder commutations . 2023-01-04 . en-US.
  3. Web site: About Sheila . 19 April 2015 . Sheila Harrington for Massachusetts State Representative . The Committee to Elect Sheila Harrington.
  4. Web site: Sheila C. Harrington. malegislature.gov. 19 April 2015.
  5. Web site: 10 July 2017 . My Journey from Opposing to Backing Transgender Rights . Lowell Sun.
  6. Web site: Sheila Harrington.