The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Women closer to achieving goals of 1920

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A woman named Shelly Tolhurst offered a sadly prophetic observatio­n at a Sept. 7, 1920, event in Los Angeles celebratin­g the passage of a constituti­onal amendment guaranteei­ng women the right to vote. “For a thousand years we have had a certain viewpoint,” Tolhurst said. “This celebratio­n marks the change of that viewpoint, but it will be a long time in coming about. We cannot change the psychology of the world in a day. But that change will be profound and lasting.”

Could Tolhurst and the other women commemorat­ing the momentous occasion have imagined that, in the fantastica­lly distant world of 2020, women would still be fighting for some of the same things — political power, equal treatment under the law and wage parity?

Or that not one woman would have yet been elected to the highest political office? Would they be dismayed, as we are, that in 2020 women are subjected to the same sexist insults that were hurled at the suffragist­s who dared to suggest they should be treated as equals?

Perhaps they could imagine it. After all, it had taken more than 70 years of struggle to reach that moment.

The women’s suffrage movement was birthed in 1848 during a meeting of like-minded women and men in Seneca Falls, N.Y., and might have faltered but for the determinat­ion of generation­s of women, including the courageous Black women whose contributi­ons to the cause were too often overlooked by the history books.

It wasn’t until Aug. 18, 1920, when Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify it, that the 19th Amendment met the constituti­onal minimum for passage.

But it is likely that Tolhurst and her cohort would neverthele­ss be gratified to see that tremendous progress has been made with the help of women’s voting power, even if true equality is still a long way off.

There are laws requiring equal access to education and banning employment discrimina­tion.

The Equal Rights Amendment, authored by suffragist leader Alice Paul in 1923, has finally secured the ratificati­on of the crucial 38th state needed for passage (though it is still mired in challenges because of an expired deadline).

A hundred and three years after Montana sent the first woman to Congress — Jeannette Rankin, a Republican and progressiv­e (political parties have changed a bit over the last century as well) — 127 women currently serve in the U.S. House and Senate. Three female jurists sit on U.S. Supreme Court.

This week, a woman of color became the Democrats’ vice presidenti­al nominee. And it is women who are seen as pivotal swing voters in the presidenti­al election.

The political, social and economic parity the suffragist­s dreamed about a century ago has been long delayed, but it is coming.

— Los Angeles Times via AP

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