Norma Jean Paulus (née Petersen; March 13, 1933– February 28, 2019) was an American lawyer and politician in the state of Oregon. A native of Nebraska, she was raised in Eastern Oregon before becoming a lawyer. A Republican, she first held political office as a representative in the Oregon House of Representatives, and then became the first woman elected to statewide public office in Oregon when she became Oregon Secretary of State in 1977. Paulus later served as Oregon Superintendent of Public Instruction for nine years. She made unsuccessful bids to become Governor of Oregon and United States Senator. Prior to her death on February 28, 2019, Paulus lived in Portland, where she was involved with several non-profit groups and sponsored a ballot measure to create open primaries in Oregon's statewide elections.
Paulus began her political career by winning election to the Oregon House of Representatives in 1970. Elected as a Republican, she represented Salem and Marion County in District 11.[6] She won re-election in 1972 and 1974 to additional two-year terms in the House with her district changing to District 31, serving through the 1975 special legislative session.[7][8][9] Paulus was then elected as Oregon's first female Secretary of State in 1976, the first time a woman won election to a statewide office in Oregon.[10][11]
She took office on January 3, 1977, and served through January 7, 1985, after winning re-election to a second four-year term in 1980.[12] Paulus kept a small statue of a lion on a desk in her downtown Portland home that was given to her in October 1981 by the northeast Portland Lions Club when she was inducted as the group's first female member.[2] The next day, Paulus was visited in her office at the Oregon Capitol by the president of the statewide Oregon Lions Club. He had come to ask Paulus to return the Portland club's gift.[2] He did not think the statue – or membership into the club – should have been given to a woman.[2]
Paulus in 1976
Paulus was a founding member of the Oregon Women's Political Caucus, a bipartisan group of Oregon legislators in 1972. She was instrumental in efforts to pass an Equal Rights Amendment in Oregon in 1973 and 1977.[13] Also, in 1972, she was invited to be part of the Eagleton Institute of Politics' first conference on women in politics. A decade later, while serving as Secretary of State, she was a principal speaker at the Institute's 1982 conference. Paulus remarked in her speech that "We have come a long way" referring to women in politics.[14][15] In 1984, followers of the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh bused homeless people to Wasco County in an attempt to sway local elections.[16][17] As Secretary of State, Paulus recommended the county institute emergency procedures to restrict these transients from registering to vote, which the Rajneeshees challenged in federal court.[16][17] At that time Oregon allowed citizens to register to vote on the same day as an election.[17] Then federal district judge Edward Leavy ruled against the Rajneeshees, determining the emergency procedures were proper.[16][17] The religious sect later faced government investigations over immigration fraud, a related failed murder plot, and the first bioterrorist attack in the United States.[18][19]
Following her two terms as the Secretary of State, Paulus ran for governor in 1986.[10] She won the Republican primary in May,[20] but lost to DemocratNeil Goldschmidt in the November election.[21][22] While campaigning for the office she had been a critic of the new MAX Light Rail that opened that year.[23] During this period, Paulus was appointed by President Ronald Reagan to help oversee the 1986 Philippine presidential elections.
Goldschmidt later appointed her as the Superintendent of Public Instruction on October 1, 1990.[26] Paulus won election to a full four-year term in that office later in the year, and was re-elected in 1994.[26] Paulus then ran for the United States Senate in the December 5, 1995, special primary election.[4] The election was for the nominations to replace Bob Packwood who resigned. Paulus lost to Gordon H. Smith in the Republican primary. Smith then lost to Ron Wyden in the general election before he was elected later in 1996 to fill the vacancy left when Mark Hatfield retired.[27]
As state superintendent, Paulus helped introduce statewide assessment testing for grades 3, 5, 8, and 11 in 1991.[28] Other education reforms introduced that year were the Certificate of Initial Mastery (CIM) and Certificate of Advanced Mastery (CAM) that were designed to replace the high school diploma in Oregon.[28] These were optional programs which were part of a broader program that included issuing a report card outlining the progress as a state, as required by a law the state legislature passed in 1991.[28] Paulus also supported school-to-work initiatives for reforming public education while in office, which were part of the 1991 reforms.[10][28] At the time Paulus was one of only ten women in the nation to hold the top education position in their state.[10] She left the office on January 4, 1999, after two terms.[26] In 2007, the Oregon Legislature eliminated the optional certificates from schools in the state.[29]
She worked to raise funds for a statue honoring former governor and longtime friend Tom McCall, with the statue completed and installed in Salem along the Willamette River in 2008.[32] In 2008, Paulus and co-petitioner Phil Keisling, also a former Oregon Secretary of State, brought Ballot Measure 65 to the November ballot, in an effort to reform the state's primary election system for partisan races.[33]
In 2015, then-Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown dedicated the 2015–2016 edition of the Oregon Blue Book to Paulus, in honor of her lifelong service to the state, including her role as the first woman elected to that office, and statewide, in Oregon history.[34]
↑Turnbaugh, Roy (September 2001). "Secretary of State: Administrative Overview". Oregon State Archives Division (official website). Oregon Secretary of State. pp.16–17. Archived from the original on October 18, 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2006.
123456Compton, Jocelyn West (Fall 2005). "Alumni Close Up"(PDF). Willamette University College of Law. pp.28–29. Archived(PDF) from the original on May 20, 2013. Retrieved November 3, 2006.
12"Norma Paulus". Statesman Journal. October 24, 2005. p.2A.
↑Green, Virginia. "Norma Paulus". Salem Online History. Salem Public Library. Archived from the original on August 13, 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2006.
1234Celis, William 3d. "A Firm Hand In the Schools: Oregon's education chief gives the state a lesson in persistence. Norma Paulus", The New York Times, January 8, 1995, p. EL33.
↑Special to The New York Times. "On Women in Legislatures", The New York Times, June 22, 1982, p. A20.
↑Center for the American Woman and Politics (Eagleton Institute of Politics), & Conference for Women State Legislators. (1982). Women state legislators: Report from a conference, June 17-20, 1982.Archived September 21, 2017, at the Wayback Machine New Brunswick, N.J: Center for the American Woman and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. (PDF). Accessed September 20, 2017.
123"Judge Refuses to Back Sect's Voter Drive", The New York Times, October 18, 1984, p. A18.
1234Special to The New York Times. "Limit on Voters by Oregon County Is Upheld", New York Times, October 23, 1984, p. A14.
↑Norma, Paulus (2017). The Only Woman in the Room: The Norma Paulus Story. Wells, Gail, 1952–, Amacher, Patricia, 1953–. Corvallis, OR. ISBN9780870718953. OCLC961159979.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)