Nancy Pelosi’s Lasting Gift

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When Nancy Pelosi first came to Congress, she was one of only 23 women with a seat in the House of Representatives.

Today, as Pelosi prepares to step down as Speaker, there are 123 women in the House. We also have seen a steady increase of women serving in state legislatures and running for office at all levels. 

Pelosi deserves some credit for those increases thanks to her trailblazing political career as the first woman to serve as Speaker. As Billy Jean King and others have said; “You have to see it to be it.”

When I was a little girl, I rarely saw a woman in power. The lawmakers I saw on the news were all men and the newscasters presenting the news were all men. Most of the women I saw on television were wearing aprons and solving household dilemmas on sitcoms.

On television today (and online and social media), girls can see women presidents (although not one from the United States) and women CEOs and Generals and astronauts and women in so many other leadership roles from which they once were excluded. 

While acknowledging the continuing lack of gender parity in Congress and many other fields, I also want to celebrate the progress we have made and how Pelosi as a role model helped get more women to enter politics. She first broke the Congressional glass ceiling to become speaker in 2007, serving until the Democrats lost their majority in 2011. She continued to head her party as Minority Leader until the Democrats regained control and she once again became Speaker in 2019.

Susannah Wellford, the CEO and founder of Running Start, a national nonpartisan organization that trains young women to run for elected office, told me that Pelosi’s “presence in leadership helps normalize it for our participants. For many, we’ve always had a female Speaker.”

I can’t quantify Pelosi’s influence on today’s women entering politics, but Washington Rep. Liz Berry, D-Seattle, put it well when I asked her to comment: “Nancy Pelosi has no doubt inspired the next generation of women to lead.”

Linda Kramer Jenning
Linda Kramer Jenning
Linda Kramer Jenning is an independent journalist who moved to Bainbridge Island after several decades reporting from Washington, D.C. She taught journalism at Georgetown University and is former Washington editor of Glamour.

4 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks, Linda. We can’t thank Nancy Pelosi enough for her leadership of House Dems to make real progress. Obamacare alone was made possible by Pelosi and there is much more for which she deserves our cheers.
    I am glad you underscored her role inspiring so many women to run and win office.
    She was once here 10 years ago, I think it was, and spoke forcefully at Seattle City Hall to a packed roomful of women about issues that matter to women particularly — issues like student loan forgiveness, child care and pay equity.
    I won’t ever forget the footage shown of her reaction on Jan. 6, speaking on the phone, seeking to rescue Congress, and counseling the Vice President against attempted abduction. She showed guts, courage and leadership at a time of great peril.

  2. Also kudos to you Jean for stepping up and serving in public office. Think of how seeing you on the City Council may have inspired other women to run.

  3. Nancy Pelosi showed her true leadership even when she was attacked by some freshmen members of her own party, who kept calling for “new leadership” (code for “you’re too old.” ) They muted their voices in grudging respect, after her courageous response to January 6. Just.

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