Background
Keenan, Nancy was born on February 14, 1952 in Anaconda, Montana, United States. Daughter of Patrick John and Anne Keenan.
Keenan, Nancy was born on February 14, 1952 in Anaconda, Montana, United States. Daughter of Patrick John and Anne Keenan.
Bachelor in Elementary and Special Education, Montana State University, 1974. Master of Arts in Education Administration, University Montana.
She served as president from 2004-2013. The Montana Democratic Party announced Keenan would take over as its executive director, effective April 20, 2015. She earned an undergraduate degree in education from Montana State University and a master"s degree from the University of Montana.
Keenan began her career as a special-education teacher before winning election to the Montana House of Representatives.
She served until 2000. In 2000, Keenan ran for the Montana at-large seat in the United States. House of Representatives as a Democrat.
She was defeated by Republican Denny Rehberg. From 2003-2004, Keenan worked as the Education Policy Director of the organization People Foreign the American Way (PFAW).
Keenan became president of National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League Pro-Choice America in 2004.
As president, Keenan advocated for access to abortion, but she has also attempted to change the nature of the debate around abortion rights issues in the United States. Foreign example, in 2006, she said that while pro-choice and pro-life people don"t agree on abortion "we should be able to agree that we can reduce unintended pregnancies" by (as a National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League ad stated) "guaranteeing women"s access to birth control, including the "morning-after" pill, making sure our kids receive honest, realistic sex education, and increasing support for family-planning services." In a speech presented on the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Keenan asked supporters to acknowledge "a woman"s right to choose is a morally complex issue, and a lot less black and white than it’s been made out to be." She discussed the pro-choice position in terms of moral values.
She reiterated the position that reducing unintended pregnancy is a "core moral value" in her speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention.
On August 22, 2012, it was announced that she would be a speaker at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina. Washingtonian Magazine named Nancy Keenan as one of the 100 most powerful women in Washington, District of Columbia in 2006.
She has appeared on Microsoft and National Broadcasting Company and other news broadcasts, and is frequently quoted by The Washington Post, The New York Times, Associated Press, and other news services.
Member of American Association of University Women.