Argentina •
Isabel Perón, first female president of Argentina
Australia •
Millie Peacock, first woman elected to the
Parliament of Victoria; she said when she retired:
"Parliament is no place for a woman." Canada •
Cora Taylor Casselman •
Jennifer Cossitt •
Eloise Jones •
Margaret Mary Macdonald •
Sarah Ramsland •
Margaret Rideout •
Jean Yip Guyana •
Janet Jagan, both first female prime minister and later president of Guyana
Indonesia •
Sherly Tjoanda was elected as the governor of North Maluku after replacing her husband's,
Benny Laos, candidacy, who died in a speedboat fire.
Ireland Includes politicians from the
Irish Free State and
Republic of Ireland. •
Caitlín Brugha (succeeded
Cathal Brugha in
Waterford in 1923; he had been elected to
Waterford–Tipperary East seat and then died in combat in the
Irish Civil War) •
Bridget Rice (succeeded
Eamon Rice in
Monaghan, 1932) •
Mary Reynolds (succeeded
Patrick Reynolds in
Leitrim–Sligo when he was murdered during the 1932 election campaign) •
Bridget Redmond (succeeded
William Redmond in Waterford, 1933) •
Honor Crowley (succeeded
Frederick Crowley in
Kerry South, 1945) •
Mary Ryan (succeeded
Martin Ryan in
Tipperary, 1944) •
Celia Lynch (succeeded
James B. Lynch in
Dublin South-Central, 1954) •
Joan Burke (succeeded
James Burke in
Roscommon, 1964) •
Sheila Galvin (succeeded
John Galvin in
Cork Borough, 1964) •
Eileen Desmond (succeeded
Dan Desmond in
Cork Mid, 1965) •
Eileen Lemass (unsuccessfully contested her husband
Noel Lemass' seat in
Dublin South-West, 1976; later elected to the Dáil in
Dublin Ballyfermot, 1977)
Japan •
Keiko Nagaoka •
Nobuko Okashita Malaysia •
Linda Tsen, elected in the
2010 Batu Sapi by-election after the seat had been vacant upon the death of the incumbent,
Edmund Chong Ket Wah, who was Tsen's husband •
Mastura Mohd Yazid, elected in the
2016 Kuala Kangsar by-election after the seat had been vacant upon the death of the incumbent
Wan Mohammad Khair-il Anuar, who was Mastura's husband •
Irene Mary Chang Oi Ling succeeded her husband
Wong Ho Leng in the
Bukit Assek state constituency in Sarawak
New Zealand •
Mary Grigg first female MP of the National Party. •
Elizabeth McCombs first female MP, succeeded her husband
James McCombs in 1933, following his death, and was in turn succeeded by their son
Terry McCombs in 1935. •
Iriaka Rātana first female Māori MP.
Philippines In the Philippines, a candidate that has died up until midday of election day can be substituted by someone who has the same surname as him or her, almost always the spouse. • Remedios Fortich, elected on the 1947 special election, succeeded her husband Carlos Fortich Sr. in
Bukidnon's at-large district. • Gloria Tabiana, elected on the
1965 special election, succeeded her husband Ramon Tabiana in
Iloilo's 3rd district. •
Magnolia Antonino, elected on the
1967 Senate election, succeeded her husband
Gaudencio Antonino who died on the eve of the election.
United Kingdom •
Margaret Wintringham succeeded
Thomas Wintringham in
Louth, Lincolnshire,
1921 by-election •
Agnes Hardie succeeded
George Hardie in
Glasgow Springburn,
1937 by-election •
Beatrice Rathbone succeeded
John Rathbone in
Bodmin,
1941 by-election •
Lena Jeger succeeded
Santo Jeger in
Holborn and St Pancras South,
1953 by-election •
Irene Adams succeeded
Allen Adams in
Paisley North,
1990 by-election •
Trish Law succeeded
Peter Law in
Blaenau Gwent,
2006 by-election (Welsh Assembly) •
Gill Furniss succeeded
Harry Harpham in
Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough,
2016 by-election MPs who resigned from office Historically, women would get into politics by taking the seat of her husband.
Nancy Astor became the first ever British female
Member of Parliament to take her seat after her husband
Waldorf was appointed to the
House of Lords. Astor was the MP for
Plymouth Sutton in Devon.
United States of Wyoming was the first woman elected governor of a U.S. state. The following is a list of the women in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives who have succeeded their spouses in Congress. •
Maryon Pittman Allen (Senate) •
Elizabeth Andrews (House) •
Jean Spencer Ashbrook (House) •
Irene Baker (House) •
Lindy Boggs (House) •
Veronica Boland (House) •
Frances Bolton (House) •
Mary Bono (House) •
Vera Buchanan (House) •
Jocelyn Burdick (Senate) •
Sala Burton (House) •
Vera Bushfield (Senate) •
Beverly Byron (House) •
Katharine Byron (House) •
Lois Capps (House) •
Hattie Caraway (Senate) •
Marguerite Church (House) •
Marian Clarke (House) •
Cardiss Collins (House) •
Jo Ann Emerson (House) •
Willa McCord Blake Eslick (House) •
Elizabeth Farrington (House) •
Willa Fulmer (House) •
Elizabeth Hawley Gasque (House) •
Kathryn Granahan (House) •
Florence Reville Gibbs (House) •
Muriel Humphrey (Senate) •
Florence Prag Kahn (House) •
Elizabeth Kee (House) •
Catherine Small Long (House) •
Rose McConnell Long (Senate) •
Doris Matsui (House) •
Clara McMillan (House) •
Maurine Neuberger (Senate) •
Mae Nolan (House) •
Catherine Dorris Norrell (House) •
Pearl Peden Oldfield (House) •
Shirley Neil Pettis (House) •
Louise Goff Reece (House) •
Corinne Boyd Riley (House) •
Edith Nourse Rogers (House) •
Edna Simpson (House) •
Margaret Chase Smith (House, subsequently elected to Senate) •
Leonor Sullivan (House) •
Lera Millard Thomas (House) •
Effiegene Locke Wingo (House)
Nellie Tayloe Ross was the first
female governor of a U.S. state, serving as Governor of Wyoming from 1925 to 1927. Her husband
William B. Ross was governor from 1923 until his death in October 1924, at which point secretary of state
Frank Lucas succeeded him. Nellie Tayloe Ross was elected to replace her husband in a
November 1924 special election.
Florence Shoemaker Thompson, of
Daviess County, Kentucky, was the first female
sheriff to carry out an execution, and oversaw the hanging of
Rainey Bethea in 1936, which was the last public execution in American history.
Andrea Seastrand succeeded her husband
Eric Seastrand as the member of the
California State Assembly for the
29th district in 1990. When
Joseph Crouch died in 1989, his wife
Joyce Crouch replaced him in the
22nd district in the
Virginia House of Delegates. In January 2001,
Jean Carnahan was appointed to the Senate to replace her husband
Mel Carnahan, who had been posthumously elected to the Senate in November 2000 after dying in a
plane crash three weeks earlier. In 2007,
Niki Tsongas was elected to a house seat that was held by her deceased husband
Paul Tsongas between 1975 and 1979. In 2015,
Deborah Dingell became the first wife to succeed her living husband in the House of Representatives after
John Dingell Jr. retired in 2014. He had succeeded his deceased father,
John Dingell Sr. in a special election for the same seat in 1955. As of 2025, the Dingell family has represented the southeastern Michigan area for 96 consecutive years. In 2021,
Julia Letlow ran for and won a House seat in Louisiana that was vacant due to the death of her husband
Luke Letlow the year prior. Unusually, Luke Letlow died before actually being sworn in to office, having won an election to succeed a retiring Congressman. The same year, Texas congressman
Ron Wright died in office. His wife
Susan Wright ran in the
special election to succeed him but came in second place to
Jake Ellzey. == See also ==