[ad_1]
Women in US politics face similar challenges to those in other professions due to gender discrimination. Until the 1990s, female politicians were a small minority, and even now, they face sexist comments and criticisms. The 2008 election saw the first female presidential and vice-presidential candidates, but they faced particular problems based on their gender. Sexism still exists in modern times, and women in politics continue to face special problems.
The special problems faced by women in politics in the United States are similar to those faced by women in any professional field. Until recently, gender discrimination in the United States and around the world was so common that many people considered it a normal situation. Even in modern times, women face special challenges in US politics because of their gender. Until the 1990s, female politicians made up a small percentage of lawmakers in local or federal positions. The 2008 election saw women vying for president and vice-presidency, but facing particular problems their male counterparts did not encounter.
Until the 20th century, there were few female politicians locally and none at the national level. In fact, women could not vote in national elections until the 20th Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified in 19. Individual states had granted the right to vote before that time, allowing the first female congresswoman , Jeanette Rankin, to be elected in 1920. A Republican, Rankin was an outspoken progressive and pacifist and the only member of Congress to vote against US entry into World War II. You served two non-consecutive terms; until the 1917s, most other women in Congress held posts previously held by their late husbands, a phenomenon called widow’s succession.
Widespread gender discrimination has been a challenge for women in any profession throughout the 20th century, including women politicians, lawyers and judges. Men in positions of power often could not accept women as equals or felt threatened by them. Some have tried to argue that female-only conditions, such as pregnancy, menstruation, and menopause, would put women at a disadvantage in male-dominated fields. This type of thinking, called sexism, was played down by the educational and political work of the women’s liberation movement in the 1920s. It still exists, however, as many modern women can attest.
Until the 1990s, women in politics made up, at most, 2% of all members of Congress at any given time. The 1992 elections saw 28 women elected and the number has slowly increased since then. However, that didn’t mean the end of the problems faced by women in politics. High-profile women in politics have often faced sexist comments and criticisms that men in similar positions would not have encountered. These women included Geraldine Ferraro, the first Democratic vice presidential candidate; Nancy Pelosi, the first female Speaker of the House; and Hillary Clinton, the first lady in the Clinton White House and later a New York state senator.
When Clinton sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, she was widely considered the first female presidential candidate. Whether Clinton’s gender played a role in her eventual defeat remains a matter of debate. Criticisms of Clinton in the popular media included many derogatory comments based on her gender. The same election saw the first Republican vice presidential candidate, Sarah Palin. This resulted in highly sexualized parodies of Palin on the internet and elsewhere, confirming that women in politics still face special problems in the 21st century.
[ad_2]