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Women Break the Gender Barrier in 2006 Elections

By Allison Stevens, Women's eNews. Posted November 8, 2006.


With Nancy Pelosi as the presumptive next House speaker, another woman Senator elected and at least another four Democratic women elected to the House, this was an election women can be proud of.

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Democrats wrested control of the House of Representatives in yesterday's midterm elections, putting Nancy Pelosi of California in position to smash through a political glass ceiling that has kept women out of the upper echelons of power throughout U.S. history.


In addition, the Senate will have at least one more female Senator, and at least four additional Democratic women will become members of the House.

When House Democrats meet to elect their leaders next year, they are expected to promote Pelosi to become Speaker of the House, which would put her third in line for the presidency and make her the first woman to hold the position, the most powerful in the legislative branch of government. Pelosi is also a strong backer of abortion rights; if she controls the House she can be expected to put the brakes on a strategy pushed successfully by Republicans over the last dozen years to chip away at abortion rights.



Democratic control of the Senate--which depends on final results in Montana and Virginia--could prevent President Bush from putting another anti-choice justice onto the Supreme Court if a vacancy opens up.



South Dakota Abortion Ban Defeated



Meanwhile, South Dakota's statewide ban on virtually all abortions appeared on its way to defeat. Also, Roger Hunt, the state legislator who wrote the abortion ban law and funneled $750,000 in the referendum campaign, was re-elected to his House seat, defeating Democrat Mary Ann Giebink.



Dem Women Make Gains



Democratic women also made gains in both chambers of Congress on Tuesday. In the House, women will see at least four new female members, and possibly many more. Sure pickups include Democrats Kirsten Gillibrand and Yvette Clark of New York, Betty Sutton of Ohio and Kathy Castor of Florida. A number of other House races featuring women were too close to call.



In Illinois, Democrat Tammy Duckworth, the fighter pilot who lost both her legs in Iraq, conceded defeat just after midnight, losing her bid to take over the district that had been represented by retiring abortion foe Henry Hyde. During her concession speech, the crowd chanted: "2008, 2008."



In the Senate, women will increase their numbers by at least one. Minnesota Democrat Amy Klobuchar beat Republican Rep. Mark Kennedy in the race for the seat left open by retiring Democrat Mark Dayton.



Missouri Democrat Claire McCaskill also has a good chance of winning entry to the upper chamber. She's mounted a strong challenge to Sen. Jim Talent, a freshman Republican from Missouri. Her race was not called last night.



All Incumbent Female Senators Win



Meanwhile, all female incumbents who faced re-election to the Senate won: These were Democrats Maria Cantwell of Washington state, Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, Dianne Feinstein of California and Hillary Clinton of New York, and Republicans Olympia Snowe of Maine and Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas.



Republican women in the House, meanwhile, took a hit as incumbents Anne Northup of Kentucky and Nancy Johnson of Connecticut were ousted.



With Democrats in control of the House, women are in line to advance to high positions in party leadership and on committees. Four women are in line to take over control of House panels, and numerous other women are poised to control House subcommittees.



Dem Women Poised for Powerful Seats in House



Most significant, New York Rep. Louise Slaughter will likely become chair of House Rules Committee, which sets the parameters of floor debate. Rep. Juanita Millender-McDonald of California will chair the House Administration Committee, which oversees federal elections and day-to-day operations in the chamber.



New York Rep. Nydia Velazquez is in line to rule the Small Business Committee, a panel of special significance to women because they are becoming independent entrepreneurs in disproportionate numbers.



And Rep. Jane Harman of California is next in line on the House Intelligence Committee, which oversees the intelligence community, a key position in the post-Sept. 11 security environment. It is unclear whether Harman will assume the position given her reportedly sour relationship with Pelosi.



In terms of sheer numbers, it was unclear whether 2006 will match 1992, when women nearly doubled their ranks in both chambers. That year, women picked up 19 House seats and three Senate seats, putting 47 women in the House and seven women in the Senate. Before today's election, there were 67 women in the House and 14 women in the Senate, making women 15 percent of the entire legislative branch.



The unprecedented gains of 1992 were due to a combination of factors that aren't present today, the main one being an unusually high number of open seats, the best opportunities for female political aspirants to enter Congress.



In addition, House districts are less competitive now than they were in 1992, thanks to a 2001 redistricting process that strengthened most incumbents, most of whom are male. And although there are several scandals on Capitol Hill this year, none has engaged the female electorate in the same way that the sexual harassment investigation into Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas did in 1992.



Many Races Not Yet Called



Still, odds looked good on Tuesday night that women would make considerable gains. Among the races where women were running strong include Democrats Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona, Diane Farrell of Connecticut, Tammy Duckworth and Andrea Zinga of Illinois, Lois Murphy of Pennsylvania, Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, Christine Jennings of Florida, Carol Shea-Porter of New Hampshire, Darcy Burner of Washington state, Nancy Boyda of Kansas, Tessa Hafen and Jill Derby of Nevada, and Ellen Simon of Arizona.



Republicans looked sure to pick up at least one new female House member, Mary Fallin of Oklahoma. But two other favorite challengers--Martha Rainville of Vermont and Joy Padgett of Ohio--lost to Democrats.



Democratic challengers who lost their races include Phyllis Busansky of Florida, Linda Stender of New Jersey and Judy Feder of Virginia. There were also several close races featuring two women. In the open-seat match-up in Minnesota Republican Michele Bachmann defeated Democrat Patty Wetterling. In Colorado Republican Marilyn Musgrave defeated Democrat Angie Paccione.



Several other races still had not been called by Wednesday morning: Ohio Houses races between Democrat Mary Jo Kilroy and Republican Deborah Pryce; Democrat Victoria Wulsin and Republican Jean Schmidt; and a New Mexico House race between Democrat Patricia Madrid and Republican Heather Wilson.


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Allison Stevens is Washington bureau chief at Women's eNews.

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View:
President Pelosi
Posted by: Theodore on Nov 8, 2006 12:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and you thought Hillary would be the first female US president! All it will take is a double-impeachment of Bush & Cheney, which might not sound so bad to Congress as it would under threat of "President Hastert."

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» RE: President Pelosi Posted by: drone
» RE: President Pelosi Posted by: insulaparadigm
The soft bigotry of low expectations.
Posted by: fanny666 on Nov 8, 2006 4:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Iran still has a higher percentage of women in their parliament than we have in our legislature.

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I have my reservations about Pelosi.
Posted by: WhatNow? on Nov 8, 2006 6:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hope she will improve things. I worry though, that capital is her queen and that people and the planet will be secondary. I doubt she can be any worse than tom delay though.

"All Incumbent Female Senators Win" , Is that something anybody should be pleased with? Fienstein, clinton, and hutchison probably have worse voting records than mccain. They're as good of a democrat as lieberman. Hillary wants to ban flag burning. Is she really that stupid of a redneck or nazi? You can get some dumbass man down here in dixie to do that good a job.

Another thing I find disappointing is that when two women ran the repug won most often. That is what I read? I am not sure. I hope I misunderstood.

Well it looks like the women won in quantity. I guess only time will tell if we all won in quality.

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The people have had their say. Now, let's give Pelosi the chance to lead as Speaker.
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 8, 2006 6:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And yes, the Democrats will have to cooperate with Pelosi especially on issues such as the economy, environment, foreign policy, etc ...

Remember, as George Lakoff would say "Aunt Sally may not support abortion but ..." she would love a party that fights for better pay for lower/middle class citizens such as herself, the safety of children especially from gun violence, privacy rights and less government intrusion from military recruiters on her children, cleaner environment to help cure the asthma mess, etc ...

Sorry if I sound a bit confusing but will elaborate sometime tomorrow.

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Keep their feet to the fire
Posted by: Jeanne on Nov 8, 2006 9:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The citizenry can't sit back and expect change to happen just because Ds have replaced Rs. They have to keep hearing from their constituency to make sure that positive movement happens. Investigations need to be completed. The Military Commissions act needs to be repealed. There is a war to end. Parity in wage compensation to be addressed. Healthcare, etc, etc, etc. It's not over. Not by a long shot.

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Progress, just not enough
Posted by: NoPCZone on Nov 8, 2006 10:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This isn't 1976 folks- it is 2006. We should have far more women in cabinet positions, sitting as Federal Judges, heads of Congressional Committees, etc.

As for Ms Pelosi- you go, girl.
I think this lady is a lot tougher than her civil composure would suggest. BushCo and others underestimate her at their own peril.

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Do we really want a Neo-Lib in power?
Posted by: Phenix on Nov 9, 2006 10:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She is one tough lady but she is also a Neo-Lib and IMO a closeted Neo-Con. I believe that she supports the Iraq War positions of Senators McCain and Clinton. She will want to place more and fresher troops in Iraq that will help to "stabilize" the region. Essentially she complained about the mismanagement of the War in Iraq and now she wants to show the world and the American people that the Democrats can prosecute the war more effectively.

Also please let me know if this is wrong but I also believe that she supports CAFTA and NAFTA which is destroying the middle class in America. The major victories in the my area were won by Democrats who ran on economic populism along with a strong stance against the war in Iraq. The one person who loss, Lois Murphy, was a younger Nancy Pelosi. Lois supports FTAs and complained about the prosecution of the War in Iraq.

I do not want to see Pelosi become the speaker of the house. My personal preference is John Murtha because he is ACTUALLY against the War and is also an economic populist. I'd take him any day over a neo-lib and neo-con.

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Pelosi
Posted by: rwa on Nov 9, 2006 12:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You and Congress and the Cabal have been responsible for melting the moral compass of this nation in the vanquished flames of an Empire that cannot be achieved. The course that Bush set this nation on, with the nearly total acquiescence of the congress, was a path that attempted to exempt USA incorporated from the global guidelines for all modern warfare. The goal was for the world see the USA as a law unto itself. Iraq was to showcase a display of American Imperial Power-a power that could never be militarily resisted. By our actions we wanted to intimidate the world into believing that we can do whatever we want, without allies, anywhere, anytime-because any resistance to the American-Israeli Empire would always be futile. Instead what has happened clearly demonstrates, to anyone with eyes that we have invested all this time and treasure into nothing but death, destruction and a level of national-disillusionment that surpasses even the blood-drenched failures in Viet Nam.

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More than gender, please
Posted by: opeluboy on Nov 9, 2006 4:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure it's great to see more women in the Congress, but I would hope women are voting for qualifications and ideas, not just vaginas. This writer sounds as if that's all that is required. Clinton and Feinstein retaining their seats is hardly cause for celebration. Tasini would have been a huge improvement over Clinton, while Feinstein's husband is a first-rate Iraq war-profiteer, which makes her entirely unfit to make decisions in this area.

And Condoleeza is doing a heckuva job.

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» RE: More than gender, please Posted by: opeluboy
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