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Beyond Hillary: How to Get More Women in Office

By Ann Friedman, The American Prospect. Posted July 22, 2008.


The Year of the Woman was 16 years ago, and the number of women in elected office has flatlined. We have yet to break the 25 percent barrier.

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In 1992, the much-vaunted "Year of the Woman" when 27 women were elected to Congress, Sen. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland said, "Calling 1992 the Year of the Woman makes it sound like the Year of the Caribou or the Year of the Asparagus. We're not a fad, a fancy or a year."

To a certain degree, Mikulski was right. It wasn't just a fad; the numbers of women in Congress have slowly and steadily increased since then. But there has never since been an election like 1992, with a sizable class of incoming women legislators. And, needless to say, women have yet to achieve anything close to parity at the highest levels of government.

Hillary Clinton's historic campaign for president has inspired some important conversations about women in politics, mostly focused on how sexism has played out in her campaign, or how voters have responded to a female candidate for such a high office. But it's time for us to look down the pipeline. Progressives have a vested interest in getting more women into office -- and not only because it's good to have our elected bodies better reflect the population. Nearly 30 percent of women in Congress are members of the Progressive Caucus, while only 10 percent of men in Congress are. As blogger Matt Stoller put it, "The more women in office, the more progressives in office." (For a look at some up-and-coming progressive women in politics, see the chart in this issue.)

For all the progress made in electing women over the past 16 years, however, the glass ceiling remains stubbornly in place. None of the remarkable individual women who have risen to the highest ranks of our political system -- Nancy Pelosi, Hillary Clinton--has been more than a crack in the glass. To be sure, they are inspirational pioneers who give us a first glimpse of a better, more equitable future. But the glass ceiling won't truly be shattered until women have achieved a critical mass in government.

Despite the drama and excitement that have accompanied Clinton's campaign, we're not at a high point for women in politics. The high-water mark came nearly two decades ago. The biggest shifts toward a more woman-friendly political culture all happened between 1991 and 1993. Those years saw not only the largest group of women elected to Congress but to state legislatures and as governors. That's also when Democratic women came together to form the Women's Leadership Forum to get more women involved in the party. Whether it was the Anita Hill hearings (which some women have cited as the reason they chose to run for office) or simply an unusual number of open seats, a record-breaking number of women seized the moment and, for the first time as a group, got a foothold in national politics.

Those days feel a long way away. Since the Year of the Woman, the number of women in national office has leveled off. Today, women are still less than 25 percent of senators, representatives, governors, and state legislators. The 2008 election isn't shaping up to be much different. In 1992, 11 women were candidates in Senate races. So far this year, only two women have won Senate primaries. We currently have eight women governors (including Democrat Janet Napolitano, whom Dana Goldstein profiles in this issue), and this election year will see 11 gubernatorial races. Thus far, only two women have won primaries. Compare that to the record-setting year for women governors, 1994, which saw 34 women file for races and 10 win their primaries. It's clear we aren't going anywhere fast.

Those numbers mirror the situation for women in other careers. In almost every professional field, women are stuck at the 25 percent barrier. We're less than 25 percent of corporate officers, law partners, writers for major magazines, and Wall Street execs. And I would argue it's the same set of factors (partners unwilling to shoulder their share of the child-care burden, inflexible workplace policies, straight-up sexism) that keep women from rising through the ranks of both corporations and Congress. Outliers like Pelosi and Clinton -- and Fortune 500 CEOs like Xerox's Ann Mulcahy -- do not in themselves amount to the shift necessary to make lasting change. When a magazine hires a female editor-in-chief, the number of women's bylines does not automatically increase. I would argue that the reason sweeping change doesn't occur is not because these remarkable women aren't doing enough. It's simply that one woman at the top cannot change an entire culture. Looking at these numbers across the board, it's clear that the real ceiling is not limiting individual women's ambitions. It's keeping women as a group from breaking the 25 percent barrier.

If we want to cross that threshold, we need to look at the system. We're never going to successfully implement quotas as other countries have, and it takes time to change the traditional views about a woman's proper place in society that persist in certain U.S. regions (see Harold Meyerson's piece in this issue). But those who would agree with the statement, "We need more women in positions of political power" -- most of the Democratic Party leadership and most readers of this magazine, I'd guess -- need to take a step back in the wake of Clinton's candidacy and, rather than examine what went wrong in the Clinton example, look at how to ensure we don't have to rely on outliers like Clinton in elections for the next 30 years. The real goal should be to identify significant numbers of female candidates as future leaders and promote them through the ranks in a far more conventional manner. In other words, to change our very political culture -- not just have one woman triumph over it.


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Ann Friedman is AlterNet's managing editor and an editor of Feministing.com.

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What women candidates need is an independent feminist movement
Posted by: hagwind on Jul 22, 2008 5:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's more to it than encouraging women to run for office, and ensuring that they have mentors along the way. What we need is an large, diverse, and independent grassroots feminist movement in this country. Right now the nationally organized feminist movement looks a lot like the Democratic Party, only it's got more women in it, and it's got more "women's issues" on its banners and placards. That's important, but it's not enough.

What Barack Obama did have that Hillary Clinton didn't -- apart, of course, from better politics and no albatross named Bill around his neck? A core constituency that recognized him as its best bet: black voters and, to a significant extent, other people of color. This constituency isn't monolithic, of course, or even all that well organized, but it backed Obama with votes and contributions in ways that women voters did not back Hillary Clinton.

Women voters (including me) had plenty of good reasons not to back Hillary Clinton. Hillary Clinton's core constituency is well within the Democratic Party mainstream. It looks a lot like Bill Clinton's core constituency, and we're right to mistrust it. But how much choice did she have? What organized feminism there is, like NOW and EMILY's List, is within Bill Clinton's old constituency. It couldn't provide Hillary, or any liberal/progressive female candidate, a place to stand while speaking against the same old same-old.

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» Permission to Vomit Posted by: weathered
'Feminsim' the new 'Moral Majority'
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jul 22, 2008 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is an outrage and a detriment to everything the woman movement is about! It was not to guarnatee woman an advatage over their male counterparts, but opportunity to compete on level ground.
Hillary was a terrible example of a female competitor- she used her female package as her selling point when all her other qualifications and actions had shown she was not the RIGHT PERSON FOR THE JOB!She worked harder to support Mac's candidacy then even a fellow Democrat, she never admitted she had voted WRONG on the Iraq invasion, she repeated the Cheney Doctrine of Pre-emptively stiking Iran ("Obliterate Iran") she dared to invoke the Assassination of RFK- 3 times- to scare people into thinking, hoping, contemptation eliminating Sen Obama!Her lack of action and foresight on the Armed Services Committe alone proved she was NOT qualified to Oversee,protect or command Our Military!
But she is not alone in this disgraceful use of 'Womens' Lib'- Pelosi and Feinstein have been just as disgusting and inept!
I dont not think with my Vagina so I do NOT Vote with It either.
Feminism has become the same ideological BS as the 'Good Ol' Boy' system and works off the same gutteral Illogical emotions as the 'Moral Majority' - WE as a nation are bound to 'Created Equal' thus we are looking for the Right people for the job, not just what they look like on the outside!
If your 'logic' were the only basis for our Political decisions than Laura Bush would be elcted Pres and Cheney's wife would be her VP!
Get a clue Ladies - the Neo CON tactic is working the 'left' to do their dirty work AGAIN! They want you first to be indignate about Obama winning the nomination, then they want you to become so militant about your ideology you make males afraid of your goals for future elections! Just as they Used the Over the Top Moral Majority to provoke a blind Faith for their 'religious agenda' they are banking on Women to be so fervant about any female- they vote in any woman who shares their Corp Doctrine!
Amazing hwo women have been able to see through Mac's act but yet are unable to see how closely he and Hillary were on most of the issues- Why do you think she was so supportive of his Run? Who did she work with on the Armed Services Com (CON)- come on Ladies- she's is a Neo Con disguised in a Blue Jumpsuit!

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Women create elected office glass ceilings
Posted by: scheherezade on Jul 22, 2008 6:34 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For all the progress made in electing women over the past 16 years, however, the glass ceiling remains stubbornly in place...Those numbers mirror the situation for women in other careers. In almost every professional field, women are stuck at the 25 percent barrier.

Not the same thing at all. These spots are elected.

If women were to vote, en bloc, for women, there would be no elected power ceiling.

How many sad, silly cows voted against Hillary for spitefulness reasons (rather than her questionable politics -- most U.S. voters pay no attention to such things). An enormous number of women, usually but not always the most ignorant, will always revert to pleasing-Mr.-Man mode even in the privacy of the voting booth.

This also plays a part in private industry glass ceilings.

Females on upper-management tracks in male environments must always be aware of the fact that males are mentally incapable of separating sexual attraction from work decisions.

Thus they face a constant bread-and-butter threat from tits-and-ass underlings; a problem when it comes to mentoring and encouraging female management structures. Unfortunate, but true. Such fears on the part of women also play into women's voting decisions.

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» BULLSH*T Posted by: bizeeb
» RE: BULLSH*T Posted by: scheherezade
Electing Pseudo-males doesn't help
Posted by: nfamous on Jul 22, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree we need more women in office but they have to be real women and not women pretending to be men like Hillary. If women are just going to tow the white male patriarchy line then we may as well just keep what we have. We don't need women in office that are not trying to make substantive change. The same goes for men but simply putting more women in office that put their personal goals and aspirations about those of the people would change nothing. Cynthia McKinney is a real woman that would change politics as usual. She is running under the 2008 Green Party ticket for president of these Disunited States.

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Men? Women? What FUCKING difference does it FUCKING make ?!?!?
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 22, 2008 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's look at the women who are currently in office and take a closer look at their voting records. Regardless of party, most of them side with the male sellouts thereby proving to be female sellouts. Electing more women over men, Democrats over Republicans, minorities over whites, etc ... will make no FUCKING difference as long as you allow the "conservative" sellout ideology to perpetuate !

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It just takes one leader with vision and resolve.
Posted by: fork on Jul 22, 2008 7:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Closing the gender gap: Why women now reign in Spain

In a country where gender attitudes are not so different from the US . . .

"In Spain, women earn about 30 per cent less than men, and take up less than 4 per cent of the places on the boards of the major companies. More than 40 per cent of Spanish mothers of young children work outside the home. Domestic violence persists: during 2007, 71 women were killed by their husbands or partners."

. . . they were able to do it by just, well, doing it:
"The new Spanish cabinet, sworn in by the socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, has nine women alongside eight men . . ."
"Mr Zapateros's choice of cabinet ministers is a symbolic step towards eliminating the barriers to opportunity – more eye-catching, though perhaps not as ambitious, as the legislation he introduced two years ago imposing the so-called 40 per cent rule. This prohibits men or women from making up more than 60 per cent of the candidates of any political party that contests national or local elections. It also demands, but does not require, that by 2010 any company negotiating for public contracts should appoint women to 40 per cent of the places on their boards of directors."

All the rest is just excuses, anti-feminist rationalizations.

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» RE: Those laws are sexist Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
» RE: Those laws are sexist Posted by: JakobFabian01
» RE: Those laws are sexist Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
» RE: Those laws are sexist Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
» RE: Those laws are sexist Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Those laws are sexist Posted by: rfrancis@godisdead.com
What Is is
Posted by: logic on Jul 22, 2008 9:45 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the balance of male female needs to happen in politics in the US first and then we would see the world balance with nature. Prejudice in any form is not an answer. It's a question of balance. The "from man" stance of many women is against the basics of biology. The female of anything is identified by the ability to procreate. Behind every good man there's a good woman. Small changes at the grassroots are huge in the subconscious. Beside every good man there's a good woman. Why fight? Isn't that a male thing? Men come from women and are nurtured by women. It is the nature of the male to see things as threatening.Men are visual creatures and have supposed that women are the same. Every media is pounding IMAGE at us- image is a male viewpoint. Imersion into the truth of feminine nature would benefit most women worldwide. Aggression is also a male tactic. C'mon girls, if a man is sexually satiated with a full belly, game over!

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Three keys to gender equality
Posted by: willymack on Jul 22, 2008 11:33 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They're 1. education 2. education, and 3. education. Most men's hearts are in the right place when it comes to women. We look upon Mom, our sisters, girlfriends, and wives with affection. Trouble is that many men's thinking is mired in the book of genesis which portrays Eve in a role subservient and secondary to Adam's. The fact that half of our intellectual resource resides in female heads never occurs to most men, therefore the need for education.

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Women in office: Quality vs. Quantity
Posted by: lynmarenjensen on Jul 22, 2008 12:04 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd rather have see fewer but better-qualified women in office than see more women who are apparently out to prove they, too, can be nothing but the same party hacks any man can be. Our first woman Speaker of the House will be remembered as Nancy "Impeachment is not on the table" Pelosi, so unwilling or unable is she to understand her duties or her oath of office. Other women in Congress include "Mean Jean" Schmidt, who called a veteran a coward because a man told her to, and Marilyn Musgrave, dubbed "the queen of gay-bashing" by Rolling Stone. If anybody voted for these people just to put more women in office, are you sorry yet?

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Yes, the world will become a better place if we just elect more women to office.
Posted by: GuitarBill on Jul 22, 2008 2:05 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just ask Margaret "to the right of Ronald Reagan" Thatcher, Benazir "Wanted by Interpol in Switzerland" Bhutto, Dianne "I vote for war because my husband, Richard Blum, profits off it" Feinstein, Nancy "Impeachment is off the table" Pelosi, Hillary "I'll obliterate Iran" Clinton, and, last but not least, Madeleine "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we think the price is worth it." Albright.

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Democracy matters.
Posted by: JakobFabian01 on Jul 22, 2008 3:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I always sigh when a writer treats something like US-Americans' aversion to affirmative action (and particularly to quotas, the most misunderstood part of this policy) as if it were an immutable law of nature, like gravity. Part of the success of the neoconservatives is due to their conviction that a good idea does not have to be popular in order to be a good idea. Listen up, liberals: Our faith in democracy does not compel us to assume that every unpopular idea has to be bad. It merely obliges us to take courage in the conviction that no truly good idea will be unpopular forever. If we would act on this courage more often, then perhaps we would more often achieve success.

I believe that affirmative action, preferably including quotas, should inform the policy of EVERY large institution that has dedicated itself to the removal of institutional biases, including sexism. Quotas are not the primitive straitjackets that people imagine them to be. The Green Party of Sweden, one of the most progressive parties in Europe, has very flexible quotas for gender balance: 60% to 40% is good enough. In other words, Swedish Greens don't make a fuss unless the number of women in their party rises above 60% or drops below 40%.

Leaving affirmative action aside, I believe that better democracy - with or without affirmative action - would mean better representation for women, by women. There is strong evidence to suggest that a proportional (i.e. a more accurately representational) electoral system would enable us to elect more women and improve women's representation. Douglas Amy, in his book "Real Choices, New Voices: The Case For Proportional Representation In the United States" (1993), has shown that proportional electoral systems consistently yield higher percentages of women elected to public office - even without the use of quotas.

"Among Western nations," Amy wrote, "the United States has one of the best organized women's movements - the envy of many European feminists - but in terms of women's representation, we remain one of the worst countries. In contrast, some countries, such as Ireland, with very poorly developed women's movements - but with PR [i.e. proportionally representative] voting systems - do better than the United States."

It's time for "Emily's List" to join up with "Fair Vote" and to reflect on how proportional representation, such as Instant Runoff Voting (IRV), might improve women's representation.

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Dumb Sexists Men
Posted by: lifeaholic on Jul 24, 2008 6:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had two very bright secretaries and wanted to put them in management positions.
My boss liked the idea.
But, old timer, religious nut, fought it and boss backed off.

Monthly Period. Cannot travel. Pregnancy, etc Too emotional.

So dumb.

They were smarter, less experienced, than I and much more qualified than some managers I had.

One was valedictorian in high school.

I still get angry when I think of the waste of ability.

p.s. one did go on to be Purchasing Manager in large firm.

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