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Hawaiian's Win Makes Transgender History
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Wednesday, November 8, 2006 / 02:48 PM
A Hawaii woman won a seat on the state Board of Education
and, according to national advocacy groups, a place in history as the nation's highest-ranking
transgender elected official.
Kim Coco Iwamoto, a 38-year-old attorney, did not tout her gender status
in the campaign but has advocated for transgender youth and related issues. She came
in third Tuesday in the competition for three seats on the 14-member board, which
governs the islands' 285 public schools.
Iwamoto would be the highest-ranking openly transgender person elected
in the United States, said Denis Dison, a spokesman for the Victory Fund, a Washington-based
group that tracks lesbian, gay and transgender candidates and helps fund their campaigns.
Iwamoto, who was born on the island of Kauai and attended a Catholic boys'
school in Honolulu, did not respond to requests for an interview.
Previously elected transgender candidates in the United States were primarily
limited to local seats such as city alderman or council members, Dison said.
Iwamoto has a law degree from the University of New Mexico. She was featured
in a handbook on transgender policy for her advocacy of special restroom facilities
on the school's campus after she was harassed for using the women's bathroom. |
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