Skip to content

EMILY’s List Endorses Minnesota’s Tina Smith

Democratic PAC will connect her with national donor network

Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith, seen here with family members at her mock swearing-in ceremony Wednesday, has earned the endorsement of EMILY’s List. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)
Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith, seen here with family members at her mock swearing-in ceremony Wednesday, has earned the endorsement of EMILY’s List. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)

A day after being sworn into the Senate, Minnesota’s Tina Smith picked up the endorsement of EMILY’s List on Thursday for the November special election.

The political action committee, which backs female Democratic candidates who support abortion rights, will work with Smith’s campaign in an advisory role and introduce her to its national donor network.

Democratic-Farmer-Labor Gov. Mark Dayton appointed Smith to fill former Sen. Al Franken’s seat. Republicans have not yet settled on a candidate. Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales rated the race Likely Democratic after Franken announced his resignation in December.

[Tina Smith Has Just 10 Months to Keep Her Job]

“Tina’s experience in Minnesota — from her work protecting women’s access to care as a vice president of Planned Parenthood Minnesota and the Dakotas, to her success creating jobs, strengthening the economy, and expanding access to early education while serving as lieutenant governor in the state — immensely qualifies her for this role,” EMILY’s List President Stephanie Schriock said in a statement provided first to Roll Call.

Tina Smith will continue the long tradition of great Minnesota senators who have dedicated themselves to opportunity, fairness and improving the lives of working families — and the EMILY’s List community is thrilled to endorse her campaign for Senate,” Schriock added.

Watch: Pence Swears in Democratic Sens. Jones and Smith

[jwp-video n=”1″]

Recent Stories

Walberg gets Republican panel nod for House Education chair

Trump risks legal clashes in plans to not spend appropriations

Watchdog finds no proof of undercover FBI agents at Jan. 6 attack

At the Races: The truth about trifectas

House passes bill to add new judges amid Biden veto threat

Capitol Ink | Kash Patelf