Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Elizabeth Barrett Anderson

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Governor
  
Eddie Calvo

Succeeded by
  
???

Preceded by
  
Leonardo Rapadas

Spouse(s)
  
Daniel Anderson

Governor
  
Joseph Franklin Ada

Political party
  
Republican Party

Preceded by
  
???



Born
  
July 21, 1953 (age 70) Guam, U.S. (
1953-07-21
)

Name
  
Elizabeth Barrett-Anderson

Education
  
University of San Francisco, Santa Clara University School of Law

Elizabeth Barrett-Anderson (born July 21, 1953) is a Guamanian lawyer, judge, and politician. She serves as the Attorney General of Guam, a U.S. territory. She previously held the office from 1987 to 1994. She is the longest-serving attorney general in Guamanian history and was the first woman to serve as attorney general.

Contents

Biography

Barrett-Anderson is the daughter of Jack Barrett and Concepcion "Chong" Cruz Barrett a former senator of the Guam Legislature. Barrett-Anderson earned her B.A. at the University of San Francisco and her J.D. at the University of Santa Clara School of Law. She was the first Chamorro woman to be admitted to practice law in Guam. She operated a private law practice on Guam until she was appointed Attorney General by Governor Joseph Franklin Ada in 1987. She later won election to the office.

She resigned as attorney general in 1994 to run for the Guam Legislature, where she served two terms. In 1997, she was appointed to the Superior Court of Guam by Governor Carl T.C. Gutierrez, and she was confirmed as a judge by the Legislature in 1998.

In 1990, she opposed the enactment of a law restricting abortion to cases in which the life of the mother is threatened. When it passed and became the most restrictive abortion law in the U.S., she said her role had "now shifted to one of law enforcement".

In 2014, twenty years after she left the post of Attorney General, she ran again for the office and won, defeating incumbent Leonardo Rapadas by a wide margin in the November 2014 general election.

In April 2015, Barrett-Anderson ordered the director of the Guam Department of Public Health and Social Services to begin processing same-sex marriage licenses on April 15, 2015, which would have made Guam the first U.S. territory to allow same-sex marriage.

References

Elizabeth Barrett-Anderson Wikipedia