Jacqueline Cotton is a small business owner, mother and widow. She grew up in Illinois across the river from St. Louis and attended college at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, TX where she earned a degree in Communications and Public Relations with a minor in Music. She married her college sweetheart, Robert Cotton, moved to Creve Coeur and finally to Chesterfield to raise their family. She and Robert spent 37 happy years together bringing up their two daughters, Allison and Miranda. She was by his side as he fought brain cancer (Glioblastoma) and passed away in early 2022. She cares deeply about health insurance after having been through a 3 year losing battle with her husband, who had no health insurance at the time of his diagnosis. This gives her a unique point of view regarding health insurance. When her brother passed suddenly 2 weeks after her husband, she opened up her home to his son, Marshall, which gave him the opportunity to pursue his undergraduate education in the area. In addition, she has long been passionate about Reproductive Rights and has volunteered often with Planned Parenthood. Jacqueline wants to step up and be part of recovering those rights. Missouri has become a dangerous state for many and she is compelled to make District 101 and all of Missouri a safe place to live, work and play!
Jacqueline Cotton for Representative!
A Voice For
Missouri
Meet Jacqueline
Prioritizing The Issues You Care About
Quality, accessible, and affordable healthcare is every Missourian’s right. But every year Missouri families must make increasingly difficult decisions for how they prioritize spending on prescription drugs and medical bills over the basic costs of living.
Without the insurance available through the Affordable Care Act, Obamacare, Jacqueline's husband wouldn't have been able to afford the $50k per month cost of his treatment. Republicans continue to try to remove the very insurance that enabled his cancer treatments.
At the same time, the Republican-led House has left millions of federal dollars on the table meant for expanding healthcare access to Missourians. Their inaction means less healthy communities, higher premiums for those with coverage, and the loss of hospitals, especially in rural areas.
As your state representative, I’ll support common sense measures like expanding Medicaid, so no Missourian is forced to choose between a decent job and keeping their healthcare.
Every person should have the autonomy to make decisions about their body and their life. Republicans have passed extreme abortion bans in recent years, limiting access to abortion even in cases of rape, incest, or medical need.
Mothers die from childbirth in Missouri in numbers far greater than the rest of the industrialized world, and instead of promoting healthcare, Missouri legislators have placed burdensome restrictions on it, while trying to compel Missouri's medical schools to leave out the teaching of abortion procedures. Medical decisions should be in the hands of a patient and their medical professional, NOT the government.
Republicans have gone so far as to pass legislation that costs hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars to defend against Constitutional challenges, while at the same time blaming budget shortfalls for lack of funding for essential items like school transportation.
As your state rep, I will stand with women for the right to make the best decisions about their healthcare for their own lives. No one should be able to use your body without your permission.
Every Missouri child should have access to free, quality public education regardless of their zip code. As your representative, I will work to strengthen our public schools and fully fund our commitment to our kids.
I will support our teachers who, in Missouri, are the least paid professionals in the country. We are losing would be teachers to other career paths because they are unable to earn a living wage. This cut in education spending is the reason many school districts open only 4 days a week. Our students educations are being cut, in addition to the child care crisis in the affected areas.
I will support universal early childhood education, because investing in our kids from an early age is the best way for us to invest in our future. I will also support investment in higher education and workforce training, to ensure all Missourians have the opportunity to gain the skills to compete in our economy.
Central to the role of government is to fairly enforce the law, and to provide protection for its people. I will support our law enforcement officers in their difficult jobs, while also demanding accountability when they overreach.
I will support tough sentences for violent criminals, while also seeking ways to reduce our prison population and reintegrate folks into society after they have served their time. I’ll also support drug treatment courts and diversion programs that find alternative ways to punish and rehabilitate non-violent criminals without simply throwing them in prison.
No matter where you live in Missouri, the root causes of crime are the same: a lack of educational and work opportunities, along with drug addiction and poverty. Addressing these basic issues must always be central in any conversation about crime.
Our prescription drug epidemic tragically touches too many families in every community across Missouri. Tracking the frequency of prescriptions filled for these addictive drugs would allow for a chance to intervene with high risk users and save lives.
One critical tool our state can deploy to combat the misuse of opioids is the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP). Missouri remains the only state in the entire country without a statewide PDMP, and I will support efforts to finally pass this legislation for our citizens.
Every year for the past two decades, the Missouri Non-Discrimination Act (MONA) has been filed, only to be blocked by Republicans. MONA would allow basic protections to our LGBTQ community by adding sexual orientation and gender identity to Missouri’s Human Rights Act.
Missourians should not have to fear losing their jobs or being denied housing for who they love—discrimination that is currently completely legal in our state.
Meanwhile, Republicans in recent years have also passed legislation that makes it easier for employers, landlords or businesses to discriminate based on race, age, religion or gender—more so than in any other state.
As your state rep, I will work for a Missouri that welcomes people regardless of race, religion, gender, age or sexual orientation, and protects all people from discrimination.