Education
Winston graduated in 1966 from Thomas Jefferson High School in Dallas, Texas. She first attended Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and thereafter received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of New Orleans.
Winston graduated in 1966 from Thomas Jefferson High School in Dallas, Texas. She first attended Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and thereafter received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of New Orleans.
Her District 77 includes parts of Saint Tammany and Tangipahoa parishes in suburban New Orleans. In 2012, the district becomes based only in Saint Tammany Parish. She is a fellow of the Institute of Politics of Loyola University in New Orleans, along former Representative Garey Forster and government watchdog C.B. Forgotston.
Prior to her legislative service, Winston was the executive director of the Saint Tammany West Chamber of Commerce from 1988-1996.
She also operated her own retail business in Covington. She has been active in the Children’s Advocacy Center, the Louisiana Breast Cancer Task Force, Habitat for Humanity, and the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation.
Married to Robert Bryant “Bob” Winston (born April 15, 1945), she is Lutheran. In the 1995 House election, Winston led a three-candidate field with 5,824 votes (356 percent).
Trailing her was the then Democrat Jay Blossman and a second Republican, Denis P. Bechac, who received 5,642 (345 percent) and 4,897 (299 percent), respectively.
In the ensuing general election Winston defeated Blossman, 9,549 votes (52 percent) to 8,800 (48 percent). Shortly after his defeat by Winston, Blossman switched party affiliation and was elected in 1996 to the Louisiana Public Service Commission. Winston was unopposed in the 1999 and 2003 House primaries.
In 2005, Winston ran in a special election to succeed the late State Senator John Hainkel, also a former state representative.
She was defeated by a fellow Republican, Julie Quinn, a young Metairie attorney who resigned from the Jefferson Parish School Board to enter the Senate race. Winston led the first round of balloting with 5,611 votes (316 percent), trailed by Quinn’s 4,243 (239 percent).
Five other candidates, including former Public Service Commissioner John F. Schwegmann, received the remaining 45 percent of the ballots. In the second balloting, Quinn polled 8,843 (515 percent) to Winston’s 8,333 (485 percent).
In 2007, Winston announced that she would challenge Quinn for a full term in the state Senate but thereafter withdrew from the contest in which Quinn prevailed.
In the House, Winston served on the Appropriations. Education; Retirement. And Municipal, Parochial and Cultural Affairs committees.
She was a member too of the Budget Subcommittee on Civil Service, Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget, and the Select Committee on Fiscal Affairs.
During only a portion of her legislative career, Winston voted for more than $1.3 billion in additional taxes and fees, an issue used against her by opponent Quinn. Winston frequently lectures in public forums on the role of women.
In 2001, she addressed the "Women"s History" forum at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond. In 2005, she addressed the annual banquet in Covington of the interest group, the National Association of Women in Construction, formed in 1953 to promote the interest of women in the construction industry.
She geared her address to the construction needs stemming from Hurricane Katrina.
On that same day Republican Shirley D. Bowler won a second term in the neighboring 78th District House seat by an identical margin over a Democratic opponent. Shortly after her House term ended, Winston donated to the congressional campaign of a former conservative colleague Steve Scalise, who in a special election won the United States. House seat vacated by Governor Bobby Jindal and formerly held by United States. Senator David Vitter and former Representative Bob Livingston.