Biography

Senator Lisa Brown is the Washington State Senate Majority Leader and an Associate Professor in the Master’s of Organizational Leadership program at Gonzaga University.

Lisa was born and raised in Robinson, Illinois. She studied economics at the University of Illinois, in Champaign-Urbana and at the University of Colorado, in Boulder, where she received a Ph.D. She moved to Spokane in the 1980’s. As an Associate Professor of Economics at Eastern Washington University, Lisa became involved in public policy advocacy for working families. Her early activities included lobbying the Legislature for dental benefits for low-income people, as part of the “Molar Majority” and organizing the first “Take Back the Night” march in Spokane to bring awareness to victims of domestic violence.

At the request of friends and colleagues, she decided to run for a seat in the state House of Representatives in 1992, and her election helped make that year the “Year of the Woman”, when Washington State led the country in the percentage of public offices held by women.

In her first year in Olympia, Lisa accidentally ignited a state-wide controversy when she brought her infant son onto the floor of the House of Representatives during late-night floor debate – an experience which served to solidify her commitment to family-friendly workplace policies and resulted in the annual event in which legislators bring children and grandchildren on the House floor. Lucas, a graduate of Spokane Public Schools, is now attending Evergreen State College.

After serving two terms in the House, Lisa was elected to the Senate in 1996, where she was quickly appointed to serve as chair of the Ways and Means Committee in her first term.  In 2002, she was elected minority leader.  In 2005, she became the first Democratic woman in state history to hold the position of Senate Majority Leader. 

Lisa has been a passionate advocate for Spokane, especially in health sciences education and research, gaining state support for medical and dental education and advanced degree programs in nursing and physical therapy.  She has gained support for bike trails, the North Spokane Corridor, The Spokane Intercollegiate Research and Technology Institute, and human services and community facilities throughout the region, including the Fox Theater, the Mobius Science Center, the renovated YMCAs and YWCAs, the Northwest Autism Center, and Crosswalk.

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