Mary Elizabeth Coleman is an American politician, attorney, and anti-abortion activist from Arnold, Missouri. She has served in the Missouri Senate since 2023, representing the 22nd district. Coleman was previously a state representative from 2019 to 2023 and a Arnold city councilwoman from 2013 to 2015.
From 2007 to 2009, Coleman worked as an associate at Oppenheimer, Blend, Harrison and Tate. She was then a member of the Arnold, MissouriCity Council. Coleman operated an independent law firm from 2009 to 2015 and joined TuckerAllen in 2015. Coleman has also worked for the Thomas More Society, a Pro-Life law firm.[4]
Arnold City Council
On April 2, 2013, Coleman won an open seat on the Arnold City Council, representing the 2nd ward.[5] Her term began on April 11.[6] She did not run for re-election in 2015.
Missouri House of Representatives
In March 2018, Coleman announced her campaign for the Missouri House of Representatives in the 97th district. The seat was considered competitive after Democrat Mike Revis narrowly flipped it from the Republicans in a February 2018 special election.[7]
In the House, Coleman served as chair of the House Children and Families Committee. In December 2021, Coleman introduced a bill that would ban abortion in Missouri after eight weeks, modeled after the Texas Heartbeat Act. In 2022, Coleman proposed that Missouri women who leave the state to get an abortion should be prohibited from doing so.[8]
Missouri Senate
In February 2021, Coleman declared her candidacy for a seat in the Missouri Senate.[9] She came in first place against three opponents in the Republican primary, and then won the general election of 2022.
In 2024, Coleman reinstated "ballot candy" provisions to a bill that would add barriers to citizen-initiated constitutional amendments. The provisions were previously removed in bipartisan negotiations in which the language was criticized by Democrats as "deceptive" and "unnecessary" while Republicans described it a means of being inclusive of rural voters.[10]
Missouri Senate Primary Election, August 2, 2022, district 22[11]