Numerous Life Scientists Seek Election to State Legislatures

In local races across the country, researchers are running on platforms of bringing more evidence-based decision-making into state governments.

Written byKatarina Zimmer
| 4 min read

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ABOVE: Gabby Salinas is a research assistant at the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy who is campaigning for a seat in the Tennessee state Senate.
ANDREA MORALES

Like many other scientists across the country, the results of the 2016 election were a wake-up call for Jasmine Clark, a microbiology lecturer at Atlanta’s Emory University. She first started with organizing a March for Science event in Atlanta, but she wanted to do more. When she found that her state representative up for election was running uncontested, she decided to run for a seat in the Georgia House of Representatives.

“In the democratic caucus in Georgia, there is no scientist at all,” Clark says. Having a research background will help her craft evidence-based policies to address issues that aren’t necessarily science-related, she says. “I think we need someone who can legislate outside of emotion and partisanship.”

In May, she won the election ...

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  • katya katarina zimmer

    After a year teaching an algorithm to differentiate between the echolocation calls of different bat species, Katarina decided she was simply too greedy to focus on one field of science and wanted to write about all of them. Following an internship with The Scientist in 2017, she’s been happily freelancing for a number of publications, covering everything from climate change to oncology. Katarina is a news correspondent for The Scientist and contributes occasional features to the magazine. Find her on Twitter @katarinazimmer and read her work on her website.

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