Appointments and party politics by Governor
Cal Rampton. White was elected as president of the Tooele County Democratic Ladies Club in 1959, and was vice-chair of the Tooele County Democratic Party during the 1960s. She was a delegate to the
Utah Democratic Party's state convention multiple times. From 1971 to 1987, she was the secretary of the Utah Democratic Party before she was defeated by D'Arcy Dixon. White attended every Democratic National Convention as a delegate from 1964 to 2004, with the exception of the
1976 convention. During the
1968 Democratic presidential primary she served as an
uncommitted delegate as a member of Utah's delegation to that year's
convention. The Utah delegation at the
1972 convention selected White to be its secretary and she served on the Rules Committee of the
Democratic National Committee. She was an uncommitted alternate delegate to the 1976 convention and a delegate for U.S. Senator
Ted Kennedy at the
1980 convention. In 1984, she was one of two uncommitted delegates; she voted for
Gary Hart, as did 18 of the other delegates from Utah; the remaining 8 supported
Walter Mondale. She was the oldest member of Utah's delegation to the 1996 and
2000 conventions. Howe did not withdraw from the race and was defeated by Republican nominee
David Daniel Marriott.
Utah House of Representatives Elections to Republican nominee
Merrill Nelson (pictured in 2021) after serving for twenty years. Representative
F. Chileon Halladay, who had served six terms in the Utah House of Representatives, died from bronchial pneumonia on March 4, 1971. Governor Rampton appointed White to fill the vacancy in the 57th district in the state house on March 8. She served in the state house for twenty years, making her the longest-serving consecutive female member of the
Utah State Legislature as of her death. White won election to the 64th district in 1972 against Clarence Hansen, a
write-in candidate and
Latter Day Saints bishop. During the election she participated in a 27-mile hike with U.S. Representative
Wayne Owens. She defeated Republican nominees Carolyn Palmer, vice-chair of the Tooele County Republican Party, in 1974, Phyllis Dunn in 1978, and Douglas Christensen, president of the Tooele County
Chamber of Commerce, in 1980. There was no opposition to her in 1976. The 64th district was located entirely within Tooele County, with the remainder of the county represented by the 63rd district. During the 1982 election, White ran against Representative
John E. Smith in the Democratic primary, as both of them moved into the 21st district due to redistricting. The 21st district was also located entirely within Tooele County and contained the majority of its population and area, with the remainder being represented by the 1st district. White defeated Smith at the Tooele County Democratic Convention, winning 72 delegates to Smith's 23, which was above the seventy percent required to prevent a primary. She again defeated Smith, who ran a write-in campaign, in the general election. White faced no opposition in the 1984, 1986, and 1988 elections. White declined to run for
Karl Swan's seat in the state senate from the 13th district in the 1990 election as she wanted to maintain her seniority. She lost reelection to Republican nominee
Merrill Nelson, who received over sixty percent of the vote. At one of their debates, Nelson criticized her for being the "most liberal" member of the state house, for her support for abortion rights, and for the high number of legislative votes that she was absent for. Although White lost her seat, the Democratic Party increased their representation in the state house by four seats.
The Salt Lake Tribune stated that White had been harmed by hospital management controversies.
Tenure During White's tenure in the state house, she served as chair of the Social Services committee and as a member of the Local Government and Consumer Affairs committees. In 1974, she was one of six women serving in the Utah state government alongside Georgia Peterson,
Milly Bernard, Mary Lorraine Johnson, Nellie Jack, and Rita Urie. White held the position of assistant majority
whip from 1975 to 1976, and assistant minority whip from 1977 to 1978. She ran for the position of Minority Whip in 1980, but was defeated by Representative
John Garr. White ran for the position of Minority Leader in 1982, but was defeated by Representative
Mike Dmitrich. She sought the position of Minority Whip in 1984, but Representative
Blaze Wharton was given the position instead. In 1986, she was selected to serve on the Management Committee which was the fourth-highest position in the minority leadership. White served as secretary of the Tooele County Council of Governments and the Tooele County Planning Commission in the 1970s. She received the
Susa Young Gates Award in 1978. The
National Association of Social Workers named her as legislator of the year in 1981 due to her work on committees related to social services. From 1986 to 1993, she was a member of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women. She was named as the woman of the year by the Central Women Club of Utah in 1982. In 1987, Attorney General
David L. Wilkinson filed a lawsuit which stated that the separations of powers clause in Article 5, Section 1 of the
Constitution of Utah would prohibit White, Mont Evans, and Janet Rose from holding jobs in the state government while being in the state legislature. White's job in the Utah Department of Social Services was to find community service jobs for drunk drivers. Governor
Norman H. Bangerter refused to issue an ultimatum requested by Wilkinson demanding that the legislators either resign from the legislature or be fired, believing that the
Utah Supreme Court was responsible for settling the matter. On February 23, the Utah Supreme Court ruled in a unanimous decision written by Justice
Richard C. Howe that the legislators could retain their seats. Wilkinson filed another case against Evans and Rose in the 3rd district court, but excluded White. White had hired her own attorney while Evans and Rose were represented by the Utah Public Employees Association. The state legislature voted to allot $10,000 () for White's legal fees. ==Later life==