Nancy Hanks McDonald (21 October 1934 – 14 May 2007) was a Democratic member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 76 covering Ysleta and parts of El Paso in El Paso County.
A seven-term state representative from El Paso, McDonald first served in the 1984 special session that enacted major reforms relating to public education; she was elected to a full term in the fall of 1984 and continued to serve through 1996, when she declined to run again.
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The only Registered Nurse when she first came to the Texas Capitol in Austin, McDonald played a key role in securing funding for health and human services programs, authored landmark child immunization legislation, and advocated for AIDS patients; her committee assignments included the vice chairmanship of the appropriations committee, longtime service on the public health committee, and service on the Ways and Means and the labor and employment relations committees.
Born in Bowling Green, Kentucky as Nancy Hanks, she graduated from the St Thomas School of Nursing in Nashville in 1954, the same year she married Willis Burr McDonald, with whom she would have 10 children.
In 1975 she became active in the Texas Nurses Association, eventually serving as president of the governmental affairs committee and forming a TNA political action committees. She also held membership in the National Organization for Women and took part in the 1980 march in Washington, D.C. in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.
She died in 2007, aged 72, from ovarian cancer.
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Member of the Texas House of Representatives from District 76 (El Paso) 1984 – present |
Succeeded by Norma Chavez |