Nancy Buffington
Nancy Buffington (Republican)
represented [the 34th] district of King County in the
Senate for one term, from 1974 to 1978.
Born in Logan, Utah, to an apolitical
Mormon family, Buffington was educated at
the University of Washington in Cardiac
Rehabilitation and was later employed as
both an Emergency Medical Technician and
as Public Affairs consultant for the
Washington Natural Gas Co.
In 1972, Buffington headed the Dan
Evans re-election campaign in her district. In
1973 she served on a sub-committee of the
Republican Central Committee to find a
Senatorial candidate, for her district. The
committee met over a period of nine months
without success. Though she had declined
the candidacy, because she thought her
chances were not good, on the last filing day
a ruse was employed to get her to file.
Thinking she was giving the committee a few
more days to find a candidate, she signed her
name "For the good of the party." A day later
she discovered there could be no substitutions and she was the candidate.
Though not well-known she worked
hard to communicate with a primarily blue collar
district, trying to convince voters that a
woman could represent their interests.
In the first six-month session Senator
Buffington learned many lessons. "It took
some effort to convince people that I was a
serious legislator, not just 'window-dressing',
or only a mother of four children," she
recalled. "I had the liabilities of being young,
being female, and being new."
--Political Pioneers, The Women Lawmakers