113th Congress: No women receive committee chair positions in next US House
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113th Congress: No women receive committee chair positions in next US House

Washington : DC : USA | Dec 11, 2012 at 9:54 AM PST
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Committee chairs have been decided in the US House of Representatives, and there are no women among them. The only open slots, including panels in Washington, are the House Ethics Committee and House Administration Committee which are still to be named, according to Politico.

The meetings to decide who will chair committees is closed to the public, so the all-male decision makers cannot be scrutinized for their decision making process or their reasoning for not having any women in any of these key positions.

According to the 2010 census, the US population is 50.8 percent female, and one would think the “people’s house” in Washington would make some attempt to be representative of women in leadership roles.

Michigan Representative Candice Miller was the top female considered to lead a major committee, but she lost out to Texas Rep. Mike McCaul for the chairmanship of the Homeland Security Committee.

Republican women did make gains with the help of Republican leadership. Washington Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers will be House Republican Conference chairwoman, Kansas Rep. Lynn Jenkins will be her vice chair. No Democratic women were among the considerations, which is glaring because there are Democratic women who will be ranking members on committees. House Democrats should have five women as ranking members committees as follows: Rep. Nita Lowey (N.Y.) or Rep. Marcy Kaptur (Ohio) on Appropriations, Rep. Maxine Waters (Calif.) on Financial Services, Rep. Louise Slaughter (N.Y.) on Rules, Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (Texas) on Science and Rep. Nydia Velazquez (N.Y.) on Small Business.

There were places in the House for women to be considered as new chairmanships, but they were all awarded to men: New chairmen include Reps. Jeb Hensarling of Texas atop Financial Services, Ed Royce of California on Foreign Affairs, Bob Goodlatte of Virginia on Judiciary, Lamar Smith of Texas on the Science, Space and Technology Committee and Bill Shuster of Pennsylvania atop Transportation and Infrastructure.

Republicans are not the only ones who can “change” the rules

Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin) will be keeping his chairmanship of the Budget Committee thanks to the GOP bypassing its own rules and giving a waiver to Ryan, so he can keep his post for a fourth term. The Democrats need to remind the Republicans they are not the only ones who can change the rules.

Yesterday, the Senate asked a federal judge to dismiss a citizen lobbying group’s lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Senate rules setting a 60-vote threshold for defeating filibusters. Harry Reid the Senate Majority Leader wants the ability to bring a bill before the Senate with the approval of a simple majority of its 100 members. A minority of 41 opponents could still resort to a filibuster to prevent the Senate from voting on the bill itself, but only by talking continuously about it on the Senate floor, according to a Washington Post report.

The states’ constituency of the women elected to the US House need to make their voices heard in Washington. There are ranking women both Democrat and Republican, and they deserve to have leadership positions to, at the very least, represent the demographics of the United States for equal and fair representation.

Resources

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1112/84293.html#ixzz2ElPAarEc

http://www.indexmundi.com/facts/united-states/quick-facts/all-states/female-population-percentage#map

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/senate-lawyers-want-filibuster-challenge-dismissed-critics-call-60-vote-rule-unconstitutional/2012/12/10/a90dcb4a-4316-11e2-8c8f-fbebf7ccab4e_story.html

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According to the 2010 census, the US Population is 50.8 percent female, and one would think the "people's house" in Washington would make some attempt to be representative of women in leadership roles.   
Dava Castillo is based in Clearlake, California, United States of America, and is an Anchor for Allvoices.
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Posted By herbinchi Herbert Dyer, Jr. | 5 months ago
Dava,

It's clear that these guys simply do not believe in a real democracy; that they are ignoring the results of last month's election; that they will continue with their right wing agenda until they are all defeated. Can you imagine what would be happening now had Romney actually won?

Rated up/shared.
Reply By BeanerECMO BeanerECMO | 5 months ago
Apparently, it was missed that Rep. Candice Miller, R-Michigan, was appointed as chair of the House Administration Committee.
Reply By DavaCastillo Dava Castillo | 5 months ago
Thanks for reading and commenting Herbert.

I cringe to think what would have happened if Romney would have gotten elected. The American people knew whom they could trust, and it was not the Republican party.
Posted By ahol888 Adrian Holman | 5 months ago
This is not surprising since the House is controlled by the GOP. The GOP only wants women to make sandwiches for them.
Reply By JBQ21 JBQ21 | 5 months ago
Let's be specific! What kind of sandwiches? Peanut butter and jelly is out! Turkey without mayo and a tomato and onion would be great.
Reply By DavaCastillo Dava Castillo | 5 months ago
Thanks for reading and commenting Adrian.

The GOP is going to pay at the polls in 2014.
Posted By Redhanded101 Redhanded | 5 months ago
Women are paid significantly less in Obama White House than their male counterparts. On average, there is an $11,000 difference in the median pay between female and male White House staffers.

P.S. Rep. Candice Miller (R-MI) is on the House Administration Committee. I guess Republican or Conservative women do not count.
Reply By DavaCastillo Dava Castillo | 5 months ago
Redhanded,

This article was about awarding chairmanships to women in the House, not whether they are on a committees. (If you would have read the column.)
Reply By BeanerECMO BeanerECMO | 5 months ago
Apparently, it was missed that Rep. Candice Miller, R-Michigan, was appointed as chair of the House Administration Committee.
Posted By cfmurray755 cfmurray755 | 5 months ago
Dava, you can pick up your NAG card at the door. It´s all about seniority, or the lack thereof, as to why there aren´t MORE women in chairmanship positions. It has nothing to do with the sex of the person up for the position. Good way to twist things around and make something out of nothing.

BeanerECMO- they have to piss and moan about the fact that Mrs. Miller is the chairwoman of a SUBcommittee. This is all an non-issue.
Posted By Concerned_Citizen Concerned_Citizen | 4 months ago
Who cares...The world is a better place when we find the best "person" for the job, and if that means the men who have been selected are better than the men and women who were not selected, then so be it. Crying that there should be 50% women does not lead to equality, it leads to entitlement. If 10,000 men put their name forward, and 100 women did, should there be 50% women selected? I would hope your common sense would say "no".

Best PERSON for the job is the ONLY way humans will move ahead. That means height, age, skin colour, eye colour, hair colour, gender, marriage status, sex drive, and countless other frivolous things do not matter. The only thing that matters is that you are the best PERSON for the job.

It just so happens that men were the best PERSON for these positions. Stop your crying. Stop trying to make this a gender issue. Stop using situations like this to further a political agenda. The world is sick of hearing about it.
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  • 	According to the 2010 census, the US Population is 50.8 percent female, and one would think the “people’s house” in Washington would make some attempt to be representative of women in leadership roles.   

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