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Society
The US midterm elections of 2006 may well go down in history as the Year of Democratic Women. The American midterm election was a stunning victory for all women, but especially for women in the Democratic Party. The next session of Congress beginning in January 2007 will see Representative Nancy Pelosi, Democrat from California, take her seat as the first woman Speaker of the House of Representatives, a powerful position that puts her third in line for the presidency should anything happen to the president and vice-president. Unprecedented numbers of Democratic women will hold office in both houses of Congress as well as in various state offices - ranging from governor to attorneys-general to secretaries of state. Women's successes in these critical elections clearly benefited from a surge in the number of women voting to put Democrats back in power. "Women voted for change in this election," says Susan Carroll, a senior scholar at the Centre for American Women in Politics at Rutgers University. "The exit polls provide compelling evidence that Democrats would not be in control of the new Congress without strong support from women voters." In the US House of Representatives, 10 new women were elected - eight of them Democrats - putting the number of Democratic women in the House at 50 (out of 435), the highest level ever. And that number could rise: Five seats are still undecided, as too-close-to-call recounts take place. Another 57 women incumbents were re-elected. When the House convenes in January 2007, at least 70 women will be seated, setting a new record. In the Senate, the election of Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Amy Klobuchar in Minnesota brings the number of women in that chamber to a new high of 16 (out of 100). Eleven are Democrats, five Republican. Six incumbents, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, won re-election; eight women were not up for re-election this year. Pelosi,
Speaker of the House-elect, is viewed as a formidable politician. The
mother of five and grandmother of five, she began her political career
in 1987 when she was first elected to the House of Representatives. In
2002, her colleagues voted her as Democratic Leader of the House, thus
becoming the first woman in American history to lead a major party in
the US Congress. Pelosi has fought for improved education, healthcare,
worker's rights and environmental protection. She helped to defeat
repeated attempts by the Republican administration to reduce funding for
international family planning programs and she has been an outspoken
advocate for people living with HIV/AIDS. Many women
elected to office reflect Pelosi's pledge and share her political
energy. Senator-elect Claire McCaskill, a lawyer and single mother for
many years, was the first female prosecutor in Jackson County, Missouri.
She served as Missouri State Auditor before winning this election.
Kirstin Gillibrand, who will join the House of Representatives from New
York, is a pro-choice attorney who ran on a "people-centred platform"
aimed at protecting Social Security, cutting taxes for working families,
and passing tough ethics and lobbying reforms. Groups like EMILY'S List - a political network that helps elect pro-choice Democratic women candidates - and the National Women's Political Caucus are convinced that having a critical mass of women in office will make a difference in policy. Women, they say, emphasize and understand women's issues and will bring a new perspective to debates. "Many issues
that women address are important to all, but often they are led by
women," Representative Melissa Bean told the Chicago Daily Herald in
2005. "Education, environment and health care tend to be championed by
women in government because they are more intimately involved in these
issues." One of EMILY'S List's priorities is getting women elected to state office so that they are "constantly getting women into the pipeline" for higher office. "It's not only about winning today, it's about building for tomorrow," says Oliver. "We need to increase the number of women who have a place at the table." November 26, 2006 (Elayne Clift writes about women, politics and social issues from Vermont, USA.) By arrangement with Women's Feature Service The Week of November 26, 2006
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