In 1967 and 1969, she served in the
Oregon House of Representatives as a Republican representing Portland. McCready was appointed to the Portland City Council in 1970, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of commissioner Stanley W. Earl, and was sworn in on March 19, 1970. She proceeded to serve as a commissioner (city council member) until 1979, being elected in 1972 and re-elected in 1976. McCready was the second woman to serve on the City Council. In 1979, by a vote of her fellow city commissioners, McCready was appointed to the position of mayor of Portland upon
Neil Goldschmidt's resignation to become
United States Secretary of Transportation in the
Carter Administration. She assumed office as mayor on September 5, 1979. She was the second of three women to hold the post. McCready was mayor during the
1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens when Portland was blanketed by ash on three occasions, and eventually threatened businesses with fines if they failed to remove the ash from their parking lots. She was defeated in the May 1980 primary by
Frank Ivancie, whose succession to the office took effect on November 24, at which point McCready retired from politics. A
Republican, she was noted for her maverick political views which often deviated from the party line, including staunch support of the
Equal Rights Amendment and
gay rights. McCready died in 2000 of complications from a stroke. ==References==