The Republican Mens’ Club

By The Seminal

I finally wised up and switched over to C-Span tonight.  The Democrats did something interesting–they had a segment in which members of the House of Representatives who are women read letters from voters.  As one congresswoman after another spoke, I wondered: do the Republicans even have enough women in the House to do something like this?

To answer my question, I went through each congressional delegation (counting senators as well), and counted the number of Republican women who are members of Congress.  There are more than 240 Republican members of Congress, and just 26 are women.  The Democrats can beat that if you just count the delegations in two states: California and New York.  (California, with 21 almost does it singlehandedly).  Women are equal partners in the Democratic party, evidenced by their role in leadership, including the fact that the Speaker of the House is Nancy Pelosi.

This ought to be a national embarrassment.  It is certainly very telling.  The Republican party is not a party for all Americans–it is a party for the privileged few–mainly white men.  88 years after women won the right to vote, the Republican party still hasn’t found a way to make women a real part of their power structure.

Why not?  They don’t care.  That’s not what the Republican party is about.   It is most certainly not what John McCain is about.

Media elites have breathlessly gossiped over their manufactured controversy, wondering whether Hillary supporters would object that the impressive senator from New York didn’t get her due.  They should be asking how many years it will take before the Republican party can even conceive of getting to this point.  They should point out, at the Republican convention next week, that women are barely recognized by the Republican party.

Democratic primary voters can put 18 million cracks in a glass ceiling.  Republican women are still trying to break into the ground floor.  Next week, perhaps Chris Matthews will tell us what place the Republican party offers to women.

Comments

(10)

Condi Rice....NEXT!

When you men get home and face an anti-war protestor, look him in the eyes and shake his hand. Then, wink at his girlfriend because she knows she’s dating a pussy… ~ Attributed to General Tommy Franks

nah

They'll save her for sweeps week.

give me lever, and a place to stand...

When is somebody going to break it to Tommy

that his wife was banging a hippie draft resister every time he shipped out?

hopefully, never

Given that quote, and his "general" attitude, he's heavily overcompensating.
Give the bad news...

Major ego problems
sudden big family problem
far from home...
stressful environment...

Can you say suicide risk?

give me lever, and a place to stand...

no no no lumie

Condi can't show up next at the Democrat convention. That would be too big of slap at her party. No she'll wait to back Obama in the privacy of the vote booth.

You make the point FOR us...


All you have to offer is an ANECDOTE... a "token".

"When you men get home and face a privileged rich-kid chickenhawk, look him in the eyes and shake his hand. He's fucking your girlfriend while you had your balls blown off for the worst president in American history"...~ Attributed to General Tommy Franks

By IntellectuallyBankrupt August 27, 2008 - 10:01pm

Now... why don't you try differentiating between elected Republican women in the US congress who have to climb the steep hill of being accepted by the old white male constituents in their Party and the token appointment used to give the appearance of acceptance and equality.
____________________
"We can bomb the world to pieces, but we can't bomb it into peace."
"Power to the peaceful..."
--Franti

By SJerseyIndyAugust 28, 2008 - 8:56am

It should be pretty funny watching the RNC convention next week - while watching the Dem convention, the camera pans over the audience and the diversity is astounding! With that in mind, watching the RNC convention next week, you know, that party that 'works for ALL people", will be like watching a WASPconvention ... let the fun begin!

Oh! And, on another note ... does anyone remember that tool of a pastor who said that he was praying for torrential rain in Denver during the DNC convention? Well, how's this for twisted poetic justice ... Hurricane Gustav, while not directly hitting St. Louis (uh, no shit!), will be all OVER the news next week if it hits as hard as predicted (hopefully not - it's the last thing the Gulf region needs), making the news-worthiness of the convention pretty minor if it does. Guess when the good ol' pastor and his flock of brain dead's prayed for rain on the 'sinful heathens', Dog thought he meant the Repugs! Guess Dog really doesn't like the RePUBICons, after all ...

"I'm completely in favor of the separation of Church and State. My idea is that these two institutions screw us up enough on their own, so both of them together is certain death."
George Carlin

By Pookie2112 August 28, 2008 - 9:36am

It should be pretty funny watching the RNC convention next week - while watching the Dem convention, the camera pans over the audience and the diversity is astounding! With that in mind, watching the RNC convention next week, you know, that party that 'works for ALL people", will be like watching a WASPconvention ... let the fun begin!
------------------------
Heh. Sure it's comical and enjoyable having fun at their expense. But there is also something not funny at all about a political Party in America that has an obvious problem with diversity.

I watched the past few nights with absolute pride, as young and old, black and white, man and woman, gay and straight, etc. etc. joined together as one to make progress for our future.

Did you ever find yourself in the situation where others are able to more clearly put to words the feelings, thoughts, and emotions swirling inside of you? I'm not the most artful or poetic writer, and I often find myself in such a situation.

That was the case in reading billmon's diary on DKos last night.
I'll let billmon take it from here:

...I have had a long and conflicted relationship with the Democratic Party -- one that generally ranges between reluctantly supportive (on the really good days) to utterly disgusted (most days).

To compare it to a bad marriage would be an insult to unhappy couples everywhere.

My discontents are probably shared by many of you, maybe most of you:...
[...]
But there are loyalties that go deeper than policies, deeper than ideas, deeper, even, than folly and cowardice. When I turn on the TV and see the crowd at a Democratic National Convention -- black and white and every shade in between, Anglo and Hispanic, gay and straight, old and young, Jew and gentile, I know somewhere deep down in my gut that those are my people, the Americans that I want to be my fellow Americans.

Maybe that emotional loyalty is why I've never quite been able to throw in my lot with the Greens or the Democratic Socialists or Ralph Nader (in the latter case it also helps that the guy is a complete asshole), even though their beliefs and positions are probably closer to mine than the Democratic Party's will ever be...
[...]
For better or worse, the Democratic Party is the rock; all else is the sea -- to steal Frederick Douglass's old line about a different (very different) Republican Party. It's the only political organization in the country that offers even a remote prayer of advancing a progessive agenda.

But that's pretty weak beer most days: More of an apology than an argument.

This evening, though, I watched something happen that I was solid sure would never happen in my lifetime, or probably my children's lifetimes: A major American political party just nominated an African American as its candidate for the presidency of the United States...

Watching it on C-SPAN, I saw a closeup shot of an African American delegate after Nancy Pelosi banged the gavel down. She was hugging the delegate next to her (a white woman) And the tears were pouring down her cheeks.
[...]

In the interest of full disclosure: I found myself tearing up as well.

[...]
I dunno, I guess that's when it hit me -- the enormity of what I'd just seen. It may not mean as much to you youngsters (get off my lawn!) but for someone of my age, who grew up in the dying days of segregation, who still remembers the colored and white drinking fountains and the monochrome lunch counters, who saw Washington DC burn the night Martin Luther King was killed -- who, in some sense, has essentially spent his whole life living in the shadow of American racism, it was completely mindblowing. The party of Jefferson Davis and George Wallace (but also of FDR and Bobby Kennedy) had just chosen a black man as its standard bearer...
[...]
I know there are those who will say I'm making too much of this...
[...]
I don't care. I know I shouldn't make too much of this, but I sure the hell am not going to make too little of it, either.
[...]
Maybe the old lie that anyone can grow up to be president is still just that -- an old lie. But now we know that any child (man child at least) can grow up and become the presidential candidate of one of the country's two main political parties -- because the Democrats just proved it.
[...]
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/8/27/185922/893/893/576781

A-fucking-men.
____________________
"We can bomb the world to pieces, but we can't bomb it into peace."
"Power to the peaceful..."
--Franti

By SJerseyIndyAugust 28, 2008 - 10:27am

Ditt-fucking-o, SJI.

"I'm completely in favor of the separation of Church and State. My idea is that these two institutions screw us up enough on their own, so both of them together is certain death."
George Carlin

Comments

(10)