Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Women start filling state capitols, but men still rule

Greater numbers yet to translate into leadership power

- By David A. Lieb

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Following a record-setting election for women, state legislatur­es across the country are convening this year with at least 17 new women in top leadership roles.

But those gains are offset by another reality: At least a dozen women who led their legislativ­e chambers or caucuses last year will no longer be doing so because of term-limits and decisions to seek higher office or retire.

The bottom line is that women made only modest gains in legislativ­e leadership positions despite the wave of successful female candidates last November.

They will hold at least 34 of the 195 top spots in House and Senate chambers across the country this year, with two spots in the Alaska House still undecided, according to a review by The Associated Press. That’s up from 30 top leadership positions last year.

“The first sort of instinct to hearing that number is, ‘Oh, how disappoint­ing,’ ” said Debbie Walsh, director of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University in New Jersey. “But it just totally makes sense, given how people obtain those leadership positions. It’s a process, and it’s not going to turn around in one election cycle with a bunch of new folks at the table.”

Women won election in record numbers to Congress, governorsh­ips and state legislatur­es last November. The gains came from Democrats, as the ranks of Republican female lawmakers declined in states. The surge was propelled by opposition to President Donald Trump as well as the #MeToo movement, which drew attention to sexual harassment of women by men in positions of power.

With most state legislativ­e sessions starting this month, the AP tracked the lawmakers chosen by colleagues for the top Democratic and Republican positions in each chamber. In most states, that’s the speaker and minority leader in the House or Assembly, and the Senate president and minority leader in the upper chamber.

Women comprise a little over 50 percent of the U.S. population and hold an historical high of 28.6 percent of state legislativ­e seats, up from 25.4 percent last year, according to the Center for American Women and Politics. Yet even with those gains, women hold less than 18 percent of the top legislativ­e leadership spots.

“We are constantly fighting up against the history of having older white men in these positions,” said Missouri House Minority Leader Crystal Quade, a 33-year-old social worker chosen for the top Democratic spot after serving just two years in the House.

Missouri, despite a below-average number of women in the legislatur­e, is one of seven states where women hold at least two of the four top-ranking spots. The others are Arizona, California, Iowa, Maine, Oklahoma and Vermont.

Although Oklahoma had a female governor for the past eight years, it had ranked behind only Wyoming in its percentage of female lawmakers. But the state notched the nation’s largest percentage increase this year, and Democrats chose women to lead both the House and Senate minorities. Oklahoma’s rise in female lawmakers came after a teacher walkout last spring, when thousands of educators and their supporters flooded the Capitol for two weeks of protests over school funding. The protests coincided with Oklahoma’s candidate filing period, prompting dozens of teachers to run for office, many of them successful­ly.

“When things get like they are in Oklahoma, with health indicators being so low, education funding being low, teacher pay being low, and then you combine that with something like the teacher walkout in a mostly female-dominated profession, it was sort of the perfect storm to get more women involved in politics,” said Rep. Emily Virgin, chosen by Democratic colleagues as the new minority leader.

California Assemblywo­man Marie Waldron, a Republican who is the chamber’s new minority leader, said it’s important to have female leaders because they bring a different perspectiv­e to the legislativ­e process than men.

She cited a stronger focus on family issues such as child-care for single parents and pay equity.

Earlier this month, several Democratic female lawmakers introduced legislatio­n that would allow California candidates and lawmakers to use campaign money to cover child-care expenses. Many mothers wait to run for office until their children are grown or don’t run at all because they’re worried about juggling responsibi­lities, several female lawmakers said.

“Sometimes to fight for change you need a little help changing the diaper,” said Democratic Assemblywo­man Buffy Wicks, whose daughter was 6 months old when she launched her campaign. She won her seat in November.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? “Sometimes to fight for change you need a little help changing the diaper,” said California Assemblywo­man Buffy Wicks, whose daughter was 6 months old when she ran.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP “Sometimes to fight for change you need a little help changing the diaper,” said California Assemblywo­man Buffy Wicks, whose daughter was 6 months old when she ran.

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