
If Walls Could Talk [1] –a 440-page history of the state’s first families. Her most recent book, an autobiography entitled Don’t Let the Fire Go Out [2], highlights her service in the U.S. Senate. Her speech on Women of Achievement was selected for national publication in Vital Speeches of the Day.
In the US Senate
In 2000, her husband, Gov. Mel Carnahan, was campaigning for the U.S. Senate when he, their son Randy, and campaign adviser were killed in an airplane crash just three weeks before the election. On Election Day, Missouri voters elected Governor Carnahan posthumously by a 48,000-vote margin over Sen. John Ashcroft. When Jean agreed to take her husband’s place in Washington, the appointment made her the first woman in Missouri history to serve in the U.S. Senate.
During her two years in Washington, she was a leading advocate for working families. The Senate voted to include her first bill the, “Quality Classrooms Act,” in the “Leave No Child Behind” law. Following the Enron scandal, she introduced the “Informed Investors Act,” which passed into law, requiring corporations to make swift, electronic reporting of insider trading. She also secured an extension of health care benefits for returning reservists and National Guard personnel.
She served on the Commerce Committee, the Governmental Affairs Committee, the Special Committee on Aging, and the Small Business Committee. She was the fifth woman to ever serve on the Armed Services Committee.
Sen. Carnahan was a member of the first congressional delegation to Afghanistan after 9-11 and conferred with heads of state in Turkey, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Oman.
Most Recently
In 2004, she was the National Democratic Institute's representative at the national women's political conference in Pristina, Kosovo, where she delivered the keynote address. She is the co-founder of the political blog, firedupmissouri.com.
Watching the next generation of Carnahans run for public office, Jean jokes that the family’s political nature may come from “a genetic defect.” In 2004, her son, Russ, was elected to the Third U.S. Congressional District seat vacated by Richard Gephardt and her daughter, Robin, was elected Missouri Secretary of State. Like her other children, Tom, is an attorney. He is also the founder and CEO of Wind Capital Group, a wind energy company [3].
Since leaving the Senate, Jean resides in St. Louis, where she is a writer, speaker, political activist . . . and indulgent grandmother of four.