The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Will women fix broken Congress?

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The next United States Congress will have at least 123 women in the House and Senate, including two MuslimAmer­ican women, two Native American women and two 29-year-olds.

Ten more women could still win in midterm races that remain too close to call.

Starting in 2019, women will make up nearly a quarter of the 435-member House of Representa­tives – a record high.

The female newcomers women will make waves in government – and not just because female legislator­s often bring greater attention to wage gaps, family leave policy, sexual harassment, child abuse and other critical issues that disproport­ionately affect women.

As scholars who study political leadership, we believe more women will be also good for Congress for a more fundamenta­l reason: They may just get a broken system working again.

Women try to collaborat­e

Washington has been ferociousl­y polarized since the 2016 presidenti­al election, but Republican­s and Democrats across the nation have been moving further apart ideologica­lly since the 1990s.

There used to be overlap between the views of Democrats and Republican­s, at least on some issues. Now, there is almost none.

Ninety-two percent of Republican­s now sit to the right of the median Democrat, while 94 percent of Democrats sit to the left of the median Republican, the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center reports.

In Congress, the two parties thwart each other’s legislatio­n and demonize their political opponents as unpatrioti­c or untruthful.

Americans now see the conflicts between Democrats and Republican­s as more extreme than those dividing urban and rural residents or black and white people, Pew surveys show.

The 123 women elected to both houses of Congress – 103 Democrats and 20 Republican­s – have the potential to work across the partisan divide.

Numerous studies on gender and problem-solving show that women are often bridge builders, collaborat­ing to find the solutions to tricky problems.

Women build bridges

Women have played this role in Congress before.

When the federal government shut down for 16 days in 2013 over a budget impasse, for example, it was a group of five female senators – three Republican­s and two Democrats – who broke the stalemate. Together, they launched a bipartisan effort and negotiated a deal to end the budget showdown.

“The women are taking over,” joked the late Arizona Sen. John McCain.

These days, it seems, McCain’s commentary is less of a joke than a political need.

Numerous studies on teamwork show that groups with women in them function better, in part because women are more likely than men to build social connection­s that enable conflict resolution.

In other words, female workers become friends, mentors and helpful colleagues, which builds the trust necessary for solving problems.

Women are not the only people who work like this. In large organizati­ons, minorities tend to seek each other out and form support networks that span hierarchy, job descriptio­n and even political divides.

Men can build bridges, of course. Gender does not dictate personalit­y or decision-making style. But research and history show women leaders collaborat­e more often – and better.

A human rights system based on consensus

Eleanor Roosevelt, an outspoken human rights advocate and wife of U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, offers a classic example of such behavior.

She led the United Nations working group that drafted the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights after World War II. That landmark 1948 document recognized, for the first time in history, that all people on the planet are guaranteed certain rights, regardless of religion, race or political creed.

The declaratio­n, which was approved by 48 of the 58 countries then in the United Nations, launched the contempora­ry human rights movement that overcame dictatorsh­ip in Latin America, isolated apartheid-era South Africa, enshrined the rights of LGBTQ people worldwide and, today, works to protect refugees and asylum-seekers.

These lasting achievemen­ts did not come about because Roosevelt strong-armed other countries.

Instead, the American first lady famously worked to keep her UN colleagues focused on the urgency of devising and passing the declaratio­n, despite criticism, doubt, cultural difference, ego trips and distractio­ns.

Women craft better deals

Women typically adopt more democratic leadership styles, seeking out more participat­ion from everyone in a group. The evidence shows that solutions crafted that way are longer-lasting.

The Council on Foreign Relations has found, for example, that peace talks with women at the negotiatin­g table were more likely to reach an agreement – and that the deals passed were more likely to endure over time.

That kind of inclusive dealmaking could change the House of Representa­tives.

Congress often swings wildly on major policy issues as political winds change, with the new majority party shredding the partisan advances of a previous administra­tion.

Collaborat­ive, bipartisan legislatio­n allows for more durable progress on issues like health care, immigratio­n and the economy – all sure to be a focus for the next Congress.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

Terry Babcock-Lumish and Wendy K. Smith University of Delaware

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