Women step up in House GOP leadership. Why that's just a start.
Cathy McMorris Rodgers rises to the No. 4 position in the House GOP leadership, which saw a net add of one woman to its roster. But the party lags badly in having women among its ranks in Congress.
Cathy McMorris Rodgers rises to the No. 4 position in the House GOP leadership, which saw a net add of one woman to its roster. But the party lags badly in having women among its ranks in Congress.
Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington claimed the fourth-ranking position in the House GOP Wednesday.
But even as her ascent up the leadership ladder showed Republicans realize they need to improve their standing with female voters, it was also the exception that proves the rule that Democrats have done far more to reach out to women, including by electing them to Congress.
With the backing of House Speaker John Boehner, among others, Representative McMorris Rodgers defeated Rep. Tom Price of Georgia, a former chairman of the largest House conservative caucus who had the backing of former vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan, in the race for the GOP鈥檚 conference chairman.
That news was welcomed in many GOP circles as a good sign for a party that endured a yawning gender gap in the 2012 election cycle, where Democrats won women鈥檚 votes by an 11 percent margin over their Republican foes.
鈥淪he is a firebrand for conservative women, and electing her to the chairmanship is the first step in a much-needed transformation of the GOP party,鈥 said Sabrina Schaeffer, the executive director of the conservative Independent Women鈥檚 Forum, in a statement. 鈥淭he party 鈥 still viewed by many as too old, too white, and too male 鈥 needed a shakeup, and Congresswoman McMorris Rodgers is the right person for the job.鈥
Rep. Renee Ellmers (R) of North Carolina, one of 20 women among House conservatives, was likewise pleased.
鈥淚'm proud to see the progress that is being made within our party and the growing role of women in our leadership,鈥 Representative Ellmers said in a statement.
The number of women in the GOP leadership increased by one versus the last cycle 鈥 while Rep. Kristi Noem (R) of South Dakota stepped away, Rep. Lynn Jenkins (R) of Kansas and Rep. Virginia Foxx (R) of North Carolina both joined the leadership team.
McMorris Rodgers isn鈥檛 a token lawmaker 鈥 she was Mitt Romney鈥檚 congressional liaison and was already in party leadership during the last Congress. Moreover, she defeated a man who has deep respect in the conference for his knowledge of policy issues, particularly on health care.
But compared with the level to which women have come to help define the Democratic party in Congress, McMorris Rodgers and Co. have a long, long way to go.
One need only look to earlier in the day, when House minority leader Nancy Pelosi showed the potency and breadth of women鈥檚 power in her party. There was Representative Pelosi, standing shoulder to shoulder with many of the nearly 60 House Democratic women at a press conference announcing that she, the first-ever female speaker of the House, would stay on as leader of her caucus for another two years.
That鈥檚 a nearly three-to-one advantage for Democrats in terms of female representation in the House. In the Senate, where liberal heartthrobs like Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren (D) of Massachusetts and Senator-elect Tammy Baldwin (D) of Wisconsin will join the party in 2013, Democrats will have 16 women senators to the Republicans鈥 four.
Overall, that鈥檚 the most women in the Senate ever 鈥 and it鈥檚 a four-to-one advantage for Democrats.
While there isn鈥檛 a one-to-one connection between lawmakers and gender support, the results of the 2012 election are unambiguous: Exit polls showed women breaking for President Obama and Democrats by double-digit margins in many states.
鈥淚 come here with my sisters,鈥 said Pelosi, noting that when she came to Congress a quarter of a century earlier there were only 23 total women in the House, split relatively evenly between right and left.
鈥淭oday, we have over 60 House Democratic women,鈥 she said as her members applauded. 鈥淰ery good. Not enough. We want more.鈥
In the Republican event unveiling the party鈥檚 new leadership, women 鈥 even with three of them on stage 鈥 went with nary a mention.