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Future Hindsight Podcast: Cynthia Richie Terrell on Fixing Incumbency, Ranked Choice Voting, and How to Elect More Women

RepresentWomen’s Cynthia Richie Terrell joins Future Hindsight to break down the incumbency problem and why term limits and Ranked Choice Voting are unlocking real gains — like NYC’s council reaching 61% women. Practical reforms to help women run, win, serve, and lead.

Podcast: Future Hindsight
Episode: Leveling the Playing Field for Women
Guest: Cynthia Richie Terrell — Founder & Executive Director, RepresentWomen; Co-founder, FairVote
Host: Mila Atmos

Overview
In this in-depth conversation, RepresentWomen’s Cynthia Richie Terrell explains why the U.S. keeps stalling on women’s political representation—and what structural fixes actually work. With roughly 520,000 elected offices nationwide, she argues the biggest obstacle to change is incumbency. Pairing term limits (to create open seats) with Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) (to prevent vote-splitting when multiple women run) has proven effective: New York City’s council is now 61% women after adopting term limits, public financing, and RCV. The episode moves beyond candidate training to the systems reforms that help women run, win, serve, and lead.

Key Takeaways

  • Incumbency is the core barrier. With reelection rates often above 90%, challengers—especially women—struggle to break in. Term limits boost competition.

  • RCV reduces vote-splitting and rewards coalition-building. Candidates seek second-choice support, which tends to lower negativity and expand viable paths for multiple women in the same race.

  • Proven results in cities. In NYC (and St. Paul), RCV + open seats + candidate support ecosystems produced historic gains for women—without sacrificing voter choice.

  • Serving & leading require policy supports. Childcare, paid leave, proxy/remote voting options, and fair compensation enable more women to serve effectively and advance to leadership.

  • Scaling representation. Terrell highlights multi-member districts with proportional RCV as a way to reflect diverse voter preferences, reduce gerrymandering incentives, and foster cross-partisan collaboration.

  • Act locally. Voters can back local/state RCV measures and join RepresentWomen’s Women’s Power Collaborative to connect pipeline groups with democracy reform efforts.

Listen: Future Hindsight — “Leveling the Playing Field for Women” (Full Episode)

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