A woman with short gray hair wearing a white knit top and name badges sits in a chair, looking slightly to the side.
Rep. Mari Cordes, D-Lincoln, plans to resign her seat and move to Canada. Seen at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Monday, June 16. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

MONTPELIER โ€” On July 4th, Rep. Mari Cordes is leaving Vermont for Nova Scotia in a move that also marks her resignation as a representative.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s the day of my own independence,โ€ Cordes, D-Bristol, said Monday in a somber, shaky voice. 

As a queer person, a senior and a nurse at the University of Vermont Medical Center, Cordes had a whirlwind of personal and political reasons that spurred her decision to resign and relocate, she said.ย 

In her job as a nurse, Cordes is personally feeling the effects of staffing cuts across Vermont hospitals, she said. She simply isnโ€™t getting enough work hours โ€” and watching friends and colleagues make the move to Canada has inspired her to do the same, she said. 

As a lawmaker who sits on the House Committee on Health Care, leaving the state while its health care system faces many challenges is heartbreaking, Cordes said. โ€œItโ€™s not in my nature to not fight,โ€ she said as tears welled in her eyes. 

But her pain is not without relief. Cordes has feared for her safety as a member of the LGBTQ+ community since President Donald Trumpโ€™s first presidential term, and in her past six years as a representative sheโ€™s received two death threats, she said.ย 

Besides homophobic attitudes, Cordes is also concerned that Trump will slash Social Security. โ€œI am facing a very uncertain future as an elder,โ€ the 66-year-old said. 

A person stands and speaks among seated individuals in a formal meeting room with red chairs and an American flag visible in the background.
Rep. Mari Cordes, D-Lincoln, speaks in favor of a prescription pricing bill on the floor of the House at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Friday, May 23. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Now, sheโ€™s looking forward to starting a new nursing job at a hospital in Nova Scotia. The process has been easy, and a good friend of hers recently did the same, she said. Canada is opening up its medical practices to American doctors in response to Trumpโ€™s presidency, according to KFF Health News

Outside a doorway to the House floor, Cordes greeted Rep. Emily Carris-Duncan, D-Whitingham, who was walking past with a fellow representative. 

Carris-Duncan rested her hand on Cordesโ€™s shoulder. โ€œWe only aspire to continue your legacy,โ€ Carris-Duncan said.