What Happens When You Add A Woman Here And Here And Here?
Glamour|November 2018

Some Researchers Predict A 30 Percent Female Congress Would Overhaul Washington. But Will Women Bridge The DivideOr Just Join It?

Mattie Kahn
What Happens When You Add A Woman Here And Here And Here?

THE END OF THE 2013 GOVERNMENT shutdown started with pizza, wine, and 20-ish frustrated female senators. It was Aaron Sorkinesque, except zero men were present.

By the first week of October, the partisan battle had dragged Washington to a halt. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D–N.H.) invited the women to her office to discuss a plan to reopen the government that Senator Susan Collins (R–Maine) had put forth. “There were a lot of people—ahem, men—who would have liked to be the bullies on the playground and just cross their arms and see who had to back down first,” Senator Patty Murray (D–Wash.) recalls. “We didn’t want to wait to see who backed down.” She’s heard that women politicians are more polite and more patient than men, but that wasn’t their motivation: “What we were was impatient.” To finish it. To get back to business.

When the shutdown ended at last, the late Senator John McCain (R–Ariz.) tipped his hat to his female colleagues: “Leadership, I must fully admit, was provided primarily from women in the Senate.”

The Senate comprises 100 members. At the time of the 2013 fracas, its female faction was made up of 16 Democrats and four Republicans. Today the Senate boasts 23 women (only 52 have ever served). It’s a paltry improvement, but leaps and bounds better than the fraction of women in power in other strata of influence: Just six governors are women. Only 24 Fortune 500 companies are women-led— that’s less than 5 percent.

This story is from the November 2018 edition of Glamour.

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This story is from the November 2018 edition of Glamour.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.