Carol Ronen

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Carol Ronen

Member of the Illinois State Senate
from the 7th district
In office
2000 - 2008
Succeeded by Heather Steans

Born March 28, 1945 (1945-03-28) (age 63)
Chicago, Illinois
Political party Democratic
Religion Jewish

Carol Ronen was a Democratic member of the Illinois Senate, representing the 7th District from 2000-2008.

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[edit] Early life

Ronen graduated from Bradley University with a degree in Political Science. She went on to earn her master’s degree from Roosevelt University in Public Administration.

[edit] Public service

Before becoming state senator, Ronen served in the Illinois House of Representatives from 1993-2000. In the 2006 General Election, she defeated Republican candidate Frank Thomas.

[edit] Senate career

Ronen was first appointed to the senate in 2000 after the resignation of longtime incumbent Arthur Berman [1], and was elected without an opponent. Her legislative priorities have focused on children and early childhood development; health care, violence prevention; and protecting human rights, which she believes include a woman’s right to reproductive choice.

Ronen has received much recognition for her work as a progressive politician. In 2004, the Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organization (IVI-IPO) awarded her the Ethel Parker award for having the best voting record on progressive, good government bills. In 2004, she received the Woman of the Year Award from the Bosnian Herzegovian Organization in recognition of her work to provide services to immigrant communities. The same year she was also awarded the Policy Advocacy Award from Illinois Action for Children for her efforts to expand and improve child care across Illinois.

Ronen was the lead sponsor of the Illinois Human Rights Act which protects Illinois residents from discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Because of her commitment to equal rights, she led a successful effort to increase the minimum wage in Illinois and pass the Equal Pay Act which increases the number of women covered by equal pay protections and provides strong state enforcement.

Ronen formally announced in late October, 2007 that she was stepping down and would not finish her term.[2] Her resignation sparked a last-minute special election race for her seat between community activist Suzanne Elder and Democratic funder Heather Steans, and a controversy over the timing of the move.[3] Steans took the seat following her victory in the primary election in February 2008.

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