Emily’s List is a political interest group dedicated to promoting the equality of women in the political scene by electing pro-choice Democratic women to office. The process begins with the recruitment of strong pro-choice Democratic women candidates to run in viable political opportunities. Local communities are then informed about these women and asked to donate to the campaigns of candidates for the House, Senate, and governor. Furthermore, extensive training for the candidates and staff is provided to ensure they can make the most of the limited sources and succeed through the toughest of elections. Finally, and perhaps the most essential step in the process, Emily’s List reaches out to women voters in the days and weeks before Election Day with tactfully persuasive messages that motivate them to cast their ballots for progressive Democrats, following the philosophy “When Women Vote, Women Win!”…
Le Veness, Frank P. & Sweeney, Jane P, Women Leaders in Contemporary U.S. Politics, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder, CO 1987…
An interesting fact Miss Representation showed was that women make up 51% or the US’s population, but only account for less than 17% of the US Congress. Also, 2010 was the first time women have not made gains in the US Congress since 1979. This could be due to the gender inequality we have in our country. Men are thought to hold more authority and power over women, and are thought to accomplish more. This idea of gender inequality is present in school systems across the US. Not only in education, but in athletics as well. Women are often criticized if they try to participate in a sport such as football, or even baseball. Some schools even ban women from playing in male dominated sports and don’t have an alternative option for them.…
Females were deemed insignificant to males for far too long and they grew tired of the unjust laws and felt they deserved unalienable rights; such as the right to vote. The mistreatment of women in the US traces back to colonial America where the term “housewife” was uprooted. A women’s occupation was reserved to caring for her family and the house. Since this time, things cultivated and women desired to make an impression on the world.…
While women did not lose seats in 1994, the "year of the woman" had definitely come and gone - due in part to the Republican takeover in Congress. The elections of 1994 and 1996 held women steady at approximately 11 percent of the House and 9 percent of the Senate.…
In the last few Congresses, the representation of minorities has continued to grow, and is the highest it has ever been. However, the percentage of minorities in Congress is still surprisingly low, only seventeen percent of the 114th Congress consists of non-whites. As gender and racial biases are continuously being squashed in the public square, very strong and more sensible reason for this high under-representation in Congress is because of the high reelection rate. With ninety-five percent of Congress members reelected, there is little room for the minorities to vote in a representative. And even though studies have concluded that females are more effective in political positions, only twenty percent of congress is made up of women.…
On the contrary, this is a man’s world that we live in today, but as the famed James Brown sang, “But it wouldn't be nothing, nothing without a woman or a girl”. Congress plays a crucial role in politics. With that being said women who have a seat in congress can use their influence to bring about more aggressive change. I believe congresswomen should be sympathetic to the fight for equality as most of them, if not all can relate to being discriminated against. Women have been drastically outnumbered in congress and politics. Today women hold 104 seats, seventy-six of which are democratic and twenty-eight of which are republican. However, the 104 seats that women currently occupy make up only 19.4% of the 535 seats available (Center for American Women and Politics). Congress needs to be more proactive in passing legislation supporting that wage be based on performance and not gender. Congresswomen must lead this charge. Gender based discrimination is contributing to the glass ceiling that is…
For many years, throughout history women have fought hard political battles to win rights that men possessed automatically because of their gender. Since the early times women have been viewed as inferior and have had fewer opportunities. Today most women have gained legal rights throughout the world like the right to vote. American Women have made many strides in gaining rights and equality; however we still face some concern for women’s equality especially in the workforce.…
However, till this day women are still extremely underrepresented in politics. According to the Center for American Women and Politics, nationally women make up 19.4 percent of the 535 seats in Congress and 21 percent of the 100 seats in the Senate. In Connecticut, 27.3 percent of women make up the state legislature. This means laws pertaining to women’s rights, like paid maternity leave, are created and implemented by men. That needs to…
“Women could become eligible to vote only through a Constitutional Amendment. Back then, the law would have to get a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress and then a majority vote in 36 of the state legislatures—or three-fourths of the states. The vote for ratification came down to the Tennessee legislature. And do you know what that vote was, Mama? It was 50-49. So American women can vote in all elections now thanks to a single state legislator from the state of Tennessee.”…
Women’s rights in the U.S. has been fought for more than a century and is still being fought for today. Women are still fighting for equal opportunities as men. But why is there this gender inequality in politics, why is there an unequal distribution of power between men and women, and why was suffrage denied to women in the United States for so long? Women chose not to continue being stay-at-home moms doing the chores, cooking and cleaning for hundreds of years. The debate of women’s suffrage started since the mid 1800’s to gain a voice in politics. “The equal treatment and voting rights of women have been debated since 1848 at the first women’s rights convention (Imbornoni).” Because of what women’s influences to society and hard work ethic,…
Most women today are employed as pink-collar workers in clerical work, sales, and services; jobs intended just for females. Furthermore, many men do not support women’s attempt to gain economic equality because they believe this would threaten their superior status in the job market and at home. Regarding educational attainment, women’s role has been traditionally limited to the household, while men have always been figures in the public sphere. The emphasis on this tradition has impacted women greatly. Women compromise two thirds of illiterate persons worldwide. In regards to gender political representation, women have been far less visible than men in politics. Male dominance is associated with politics due to the aspects of power and authority. Women’s ultimate fight for the right to vote was at the beginning of the twentieth century, unfortunately we continue to fight and face opposition in the political…
a) The sources strongly suggest that the main reason for withholding the vote for women was due to the fact that by nature they were physically weaker than men.…
Even though women constitute over 50% of the Southern Sudan society, they participate marginally in the…
their emotionas are very fickle, which leads them to make irrational decisions. This is why I believe they should not vote or have authority, because they make decisions based on their emotions, and their emotions can be immature and very fickle. When it comes to truth and rationality, we cannot go by our emotions, because our emotions can change. We have to go by logic, and women put their emotions before their logic. My opponent also said that women are better at communicating than men. However, unless my opponent can prove women use telepathy, I fail to see why women are better commMy point is that women will usually put their emotions before their logic. And I'm not saying that women can't be as smart as men. Some women are very intelligent. However, when it comes to making decisions, women use emotions first and logic second. unicators. The governments have indeed used women to destroy the family unit. The culprits are the Secret Societies. These are people like the Rothchilds and the Rockefellers. These are the people who run the government. They also run the banks and the oil. They are multi-billionaires, and these are the people who control the governments. They are the forces in the shadows, and they also control the legal system. The agenda of these people is power and control. They wanted women to rely on the state instead of their own family. By doing this, it gave them more power and control over society. When the family unit is strong, the governments have less authority over people. The government and Secret Societies set up a system where women could rely on the state, where the father was not needed. The reason why fathers have very little rights over the children is because the governments often put corrupt judges into the legal system, because their agenda is to destroy the family unit and make women dependant on the government instead of the father. As a result, more and more fathers are not taking responsibility, and more and more mothers are…