This book was a fascinating read. I love how author Jennifer Steinhauer weaved together the history of women in Congress with interviews and recollections of current and past Congresswomen. Such a great read, and I learned a lot — not only about the solidarity of women in Congress and how they seem to form a support network that is vastly different than that of their male counterparts. But also about women in Congress that I had never even heard of, who paved the way for badass women like Ayanna Pressley, Deb Haarland, Sharice Davids, Abigail Spanberger, AOC, and many more.
This was invigorating and hopeful and exasperating and gripping. The parts about a gym for Congresswomen and a BATHROOM for female Senators, and the casual misogyny everywhere we’re just infuriating (that comment directed at former Congresswoman Pat Schroeder was just....wow...WOW.)
Also infuriating: Katie Hill’s hasty departure from Congress when MEN like Ken Calvert (R-CA), Duncan Hunter (R-CA) and many more are still in Congress is just....so sad. She deserved better. We deserve better.
Also, these quotes were all ones that I want to remember forever (taken from an ARC, fyi)
“For women elected in areas where their politics future depends on republicans, the outlook seems less clear. “There are some people who don’t really seem to understand the math of the majority making,” [Abigail] Spanberger told me after a particularly frustrating week on the Hill. “Some people think that we’re out of touch, and that if we just worked hard, more Democrats would come out of the woodwork and so we should just try to say all the things that excite all of the Democrats. Well, you can say that until you’re blue in the face. There are just not that many Democrats in my district.” P. 156
“Having more women in Congress matters, because we are more skilled at building relationships and nurturing them” Ilhan Omar (D-MN) p 167
“At the end of the day, however, Congress is about power. And with every child who gazes upon the new freshmen in awe, with every elderly woman who had never seen a congresswoman of her race or gender in her town, who grabs a female Congress member by the elbow in excitement, that power is amassing and accruing. The congresswomen may not have craved power in the traditional sense of how we think about electoral politics, but they certainly fought for it and intend to keep it. Sometimes simply being there changes the way people in newly represented groups see themselves, and opens the notion of possibilities.” P 196