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Nan Orrock

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American politician (born 1943)
Nan Grogan Orrock
Orrock in 2008
Member of the Georgia Senate
from the 36th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
2007
Preceded bySam Zamarripa
Member of the Georgia House of Representatives
from the 58th district
In office
1987–2007
Personal details
Born (1943-11-08) November 8, 1943 (age 81)
Abingdon, Virginia, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Children2
Residence(s)Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
EducationMary Washington College of the University of Virginia
Alma materMary Washington College (B.A.)
CommitteesAgriculture and Consumer Affairs

Nan Grogan Orrock (born November 8, 1943) is an American politician serving as the Democratic State Senator in the Georgia State Senate, representing Senate District 36 in eastern Atlanta. Following the 2006 retirement of State Senator Sam Zamarripa, Orrock was a candidate for his district; in the Democratic primary held on July 18, 2006 Orrock defeated Grace Davis to win a seat in the State Senate since she has no Republican opponent for the general election. She was sworn into office in 2007. She was previously a member of the Georgia House of Representatives from 1987, representing the 58th district. She was the Vice-Chair of the House Democratic Caucus and the former Majority Whip, the first woman to ever hold this role. Orrock was once a member of American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), but has since been critical of their influence.

Orrock founded both the Georgia Legislative Women's Caucus and the Working Families Agenda caucus. Her legislative successes include passage of the Georgia Family Medical Leave Act, the Prescriptive Equity for Contraceptives Act, the Chlamydia Screening Act, Georgia Hate Crimes Act, and the Omnibus AIDS statute. She continually advocates for environmentally sound policies, and worked on passing monumental legislation surrounding regulation of landfills.

Her activism began back in 1963 when she participated in the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Following this, she proceeded to work with SNCC in Georgia and Mississippi and lead civil rights projects in the Black Belt counties of her home state of Virginia.

Orrock is the President of the Women Legislators' Lobby, a national network of women state legislators launched by Women's Action for New Directions WAND in 1991, and has been on staff with this organization since 1997.

References

  1. This is how corrupt our political system is MassReport. Original publisher WXIA. Accessed 20 May 2016.
  2. "WAND | Women's Action for New Directions | About WiLL President Nan Orrock". www.wand.org. Retrieved 2017-10-02.
  3. "Veterans of the Civil Rights Movement — Nan Grogan Orrock". Civil Rights Movement Archive. Retrieved 2017-10-02.

External links

Members of the Georgia State Senate
157th General Assembly (2023–present)
President of the Senate
Burt Jones (R)
President pro tempore
John F. Kennedy (R)
Majority Leader
Steve Gooch (R)
Minority Leader
Gloria Butler (D)
  1. Ben Watson (R)
  2. Derek Mallow (D)
  3. Mike Hodges (R)
  4. Billy Hickman (R)
  5. Sheikh Rahman (D)
  6. Jason Esteves (D)
  7. Nabilah Islam (D)
  8. Russ Goodman (R)
  9. Nikki Merritt (D)
  10. Emanuel Jones (D)
  11. Sam Watson (R)
  12. Freddie Sims (D)
  13. Carden Summers (R)
  14. Josh McLaurin (D)
  15. Ed Harbison (D)
  16. Marty Harbin (R)
  17. Brian Strickland (R)
  18. John F. Kennedy (R)
  19. Blake Tillery (R)
  20. Larry Walker III (R)
  21. Brandon Beach (R)
  22. Harold V. Jones II (D)
  23. Max Burns (R)
  24. Lee Anderson (R)
  25. Rick Williams (R)
  26. David Lucas (D)
  27. Greg Dolezal (R)
  28. Matt Brass (R)
  29. Randy Robertson (R)
  30. Tim Bearden (R)
  31. Jason Anavitarte (R)
  32. Kay Kirkpatrick (R)
  33. Michael "Doc" Rhett (D)
  34. Valencia Seay (D)
  35. Donzella James (D)
  36. Nan Orrock (D)
  37. Ed Setzler (R)
  38. Horacena Tate (D)
  39. Sonya Halpern (D)
  40. Sally Harrell (D)
  41. Kim Jackson (D)
  42. Elena Parent (D)
  43. Tonya Anderson (D)
  44. Gail Davenport (D)
  45. Clint Dixon (R)
  46. Bill Cowsert (R)
  47. Frank Ginn (R)
  48. Shawn Still (R)
  49. Shelly Echols (R)
  50. Bo Hatchett (R)
  51. Steve Gooch (R)
  52. Chuck Hufstetler (R)
  53. Colton Moore (R)
  54. Chuck Payne (R)
  55. Gloria Butler (D)
  56. John Albers (R)
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