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June 18, 2013
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Backsliding Under the CeilingPosted on Apr 6, 2011By Ruth Marcus WASHINGTON—At fancy Washington dinner parties decades ago, it was the custom for men and women to part ways after the meal. The men stayed at the table for brandy, cigars and Serious Talk; the women, as Katharine Graham recounted in her autobiography, retreated “to powder their noses and gossip.” Mrs. Graham, mercifully, put a stop to that fusty custom. Last weekend, though, I was at a Washington dinner—the old-friends kind, not the fancy variety—and the genders split on their own accord. The men, bless their sports-addled brains, watched basketball. The women talked politics—specifically, gender politics. Our group included veterans of Geraldine Ferraro’s vice presidential campaign, so the question naturally arose: Have things turned out better or worse for women in politics than we expected back then? Way worse, was the unanimous conclusion of our group—a hospital administrator, a civil rights lawyer, a business school professor and a recovering Senate staffer. Who would have thought, in the heady days when “It’s a Girl” cigars were being passed out on the convention floor, that 27 years later there would not have been a woman president or vice president? Not me, although I adopted the glass-half-full attitude. Absent the phenomenon of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton would have been president—and the arc of gender politics would have taken on a far rosier hue. In 1984, when Ferraro was tapped to be the vice presidential nominee, there were only 24 women in Congress, including two senators. Today, there are 88, including 17 senators (the most senators ever). The overt sexism that Ferraro encountered—questions about whether she could bake muffins or, alternatively, pull the nuclear trigger—is inconceivable today. Advertisement What has me more rattled is a new report by Princeton University about the declining number of female students serving in leadership positions there (student body president, editor of the newspaper) or winning academic prizes and prestigious post-graduate fellowships. “We had assumed ... that after the pioneering years of undergraduate coeducation at Princeton, women would have moved steadily into more and more prominence in campus leadership,” concluded the report, ordered by President Shirley Tilghman. “In fact, this was true through the 1980s and 1990s. But ... there has been a pronounced drop-off in the representation of women in these prominent posts since around 2000.” During the 1990s, for instance, 22 women served in such resume-burnishing roles. In the following decade, that number fell by nearly half, to 12—even as the proportion of women in the class grew to nearly equal numbers. Only one woman has been elected president of the student government since 1994. This backsliding is not a Princeton-specific phenomenon. Harvard hasn’t had a woman head of its undergraduate council since 2003. Yale has elected one woman as student body president in the last decade. Despite the stellar credentials required for admission, women arrive at Princeton, as at similar colleges, reporting lower levels of self-confidence and less likely to think of themselves as leaders than equally qualified men. The Princeton study describes a situation familiar to anyone who’s ever sat through a meeting with both genders. Women “undersell themselves” and “make self-deprecating remarks.” Women are “more reticent about speaking up,” where men tend “to raise their hands and express their thoughts even before they are fully formulated.” And, the explanation most persuasive and disturbing: Women don’t win these offices because women don’t run for them. They’re more likely to do the behind-the-scenes grunt work. This finding echoes a 2008 study by Jennifer Lawless and Richard Fox concluding that “women perform as well as men when they do run for office.” The problem occurs beforehand, with “a substantial gender gap in political ambition.” The numbers of female candidates grew during the 1980s and 1990s but has since leveled off. I can understand that women juggling work and family might be deterred from seeking the political life. But college students? Among the most accomplished college students in the country? If they’re not pushing their way to the front now, what happens after graduation? The Ferraro aftermath notwithstanding, it’s unimaginable that, sometime in the next 27 years, there won’t be a woman elected president. Or is it? Ruth Marcus’ e-mail address is marcusr(at symbol)washpost.com. © 2011, Washington Post Writers Group New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By prisnersdilema, April 8, 2011 at 12:38 pm Link to this comment
Yes Ruth pursuing cosmetic change has always been a failure. I suppose you will
continue to focus on the number of women this or that, when we are eating grass in the
Park just to stay alive.
Cosmetic change has always been a diversion from the real issue of the plutocratic take
Report thisover of our government.
By question, April 7, 2011 at 1:56 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I don’t know if it’s a cause or a symptom, but there are few excellent female role models getting publicity, respect & admiration by important institutions unlike the earlier years. Snookie is paid more money than Nobel prize winning Toni Morrison by a UNIVERSITY? And the press thinks it’s hysterical? Which female guests are most often on TV whether news or documentaries or politics? Ones that look like Sarah Palin with the stereotypical requisite reduction in brain power & education or the Geraldine Ferraros? Young woman also have hit the financial wall face first; even with great grades & amazing accomplishments they may have to work 3 jobs after entering school to pay for their outrageous student loans. I realize there are many issues involved, but still I don’t see anywhere near the number of accomplished female academics & politicians as I do Snookies & Lindsays anymore. Also, for the record, the formats where they do appear are virtual shout-fests instead of reasoned, cultured debates & idea exchanges. I watched Katrina vanden Heuvel last nite - she was interrupted continuously as she tried to speak & Spitzer never controlled the situation unless he wanted to interrupt or change the subject as well. I got a headache & switched off. I’m rambling perhaps, but you get my point & I’m grateful for yours.
Report thisBy SarcastiCanuck, April 6, 2011 at 5:00 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Wow Ruth,you mean it isn’t all the fault of men.What a revelation based on facts.
Report thisBy msvox, April 6, 2011 at 4:51 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Ms. Marcus, I think, makes a false assumption: Hillary Clinton would not have won in 2008. Part of why Barack Obama won was that the media were caught flat footed by his “phenomenon.” They couldn’t pivot quickly enough to exploit racial fears. That took them a little while, but they were very ready for Hillary.
Report thisBy Bird48, April 6, 2011 at 4:20 pm Link to this comment
I agree with Gerard and I said 40 years ago that to encourage women to be more like men was the opposite way to go; we should have encouraged men to be more like women. Why is it so laudable to be pushy, arrogant, nasty, selfish, aggressive and overbearing?
Had we gone the other way I seriously doubt the country would be involved in at least three wars, letting people die from lack of health care, starving children living in poverty, cutting off aid to the disabled and elderly, enriching the upper class beyond imagination etc. These are male traits and to condemn women for not “pushing their way to the front” is so much drivel.
Report thisBy louiss123, April 6, 2011 at 3:17 pm Link to this comment
oh brother..or sister..Ruth..you just don’t get it. If you can keep your mind open
Report thisfor just a second longer..I will state that I come from a fully functioning human
being space, not a male talking to a woman. By my saying..“you just don’t get
it”..it was meant to get your attention.
If a woman in office..acts just like the men before her..why bother at all?..
ex:
Authorizing to go to war
Passing laws that reduce our liberty
Telling people how to live their lives
Bailing out the banking ‘elite’ ...and so on
Women are no different than men..when in power..they get a little big headed.
Hillary?..read up on the Cathy O’Brien story-google/youtube..what you will read
about Hillary there..if it doesnt make you nauseated..will at least have you
choose a different “woman” to support.
Its all about LIBERTY 1st folks..and trying to find a way to be united. Please stop
the childish men vs women..liberal vs conservative stuff.
Its time to evolve..and stop being victims!
By MK Ultra, April 6, 2011 at 3:07 pm Link to this comment
It’s always amazing to read, for example, the comments on the NYT to articles on the ME and see a number of Rah Rah Rah All Amerikan Boyz come to the defense of the women in the ME because they are oh, ever so oppressed while the women in their own backyard are oh, ever so oppressed themselves. Sexism in the US is still as rampant as it was 50 years ago. Much like racism, today’s brand is covered with the veil of politically correctness which makes it taboo to speak about it but not engaging in gender discrimination. One look at Latin America will show a host of female presidents while the US is still a long, long shot from its first. That right there should tell anyone looking in what they need to know about the reality of the US.
Report thisBy gerard, April 6, 2011 at 2:30 pm Link to this comment
One “root of the matter” may be that women, by “maternal” nature don’t automatically “take to” competition except in matters related to sexuality.
Report thisOf course any simplistic statement like this is—well, simplistic. And millions of exceptions can be pointed out readily. But statistically speaking—which is what we are talking about in this article—it may be that women “naturally” go for cooperation.
Fine! It is screamingly obvious that our society
needs less competition and more cooperation. Women have what amounts to the most important role in the world to play from now on. If the human race is to
survive, it will do so by learning to cooperate more, not by learnng to compete more.
Get that idea into men’s heads everywhere, and we have it made!
By LadyR, April 6, 2011 at 1:46 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Good article, Ruth. But good luck with seeing any change anytime soon.
Report thisBy John Poole, April 6, 2011 at 12:25 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
If Hillary Clinton had won the presidency in 2008 the “arc of gender politics” may
Report thisby now be a moot topic. The USA would probably by now be starting its tenth war
of invasion and occupation. By the way isn’t it time we moved beyond needing a
King or even a Queen to rule in the form of the office of the Presidency of the US?