The Washington Post
By Ed
O’Keefe, Friday, January 17, 4:03 AM
After
decades of trying to amass power, several women have vaulted to the top of
influential congressional committees, putting them in charge of some of the
most consequential legislation being considered on Capitol Hill.
The $1.1
trillion spending plan Congress approved this week was the handiwork of Senate
Appropriations Committee Chairman Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) and her House
counterpart, Harold Rogers (R-Ky.).
In
December, when lawmakers approved a budget deal with big majorities in both
chambers, credit went to Senate Budget Committee Chairman Patty Murray
(D-Wash.) and House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.).
Next month,
when attention will turn to passing a farm bill, Senate Agriculture Committee
Chairman Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), who has spent three years working on the
measure with House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank D. Lucas (R-Okla.),
will be at the center of the action. Leaders and aides in both chambers expect
the bill to pass.
And women’s
influence extends beyond the marquee legislation to other policy areas.
Last year,
seven women on the Senate Armed Services Committee took the lead on writing a
historic plan to revamp how the military handles cases of sexual assault and
rape. It was included in the annual Pentagon policy bill.
In coming
weeks, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) will
begin a debate about reforming the National Security Agency, and her home-state
colleague, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D), negotiated a major water and public works
bill last year.
Mikulski
was quick to note the role that Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) often plays in
these very partisan times; Collins has been the key GOP power broker in tough
negotiations between warring factions.
In recent
months, while the country has been distracted by extended disagreements in Washington , led mostly
by men, a cast of powerful female lawmakers has been amassing some notable
victories.
This
success is partly coincidence and partly the natural evolution of the old
order. Seniority has produced a series of female heads of committees
responsible for some of the most important, and often most controversial,
legislation before Congress.
After last
year’s historically unproductive session, 2014 has been devoted to completing
difficult work left over, and there’s a feeling among many people that some
corners of Congress are starting to function differently because of the power
that women now hold.
Collins
lauded the female senators for getting together frequently for informal dinners
designed to provide space to talk about things other than work. But she said
other important factors also are at play.
“One is the
collaborative style that I think women as a whole . . . bring to legislating,”
she said. “Second is that we’re in key positions and that allows us to shape
legislation more directly. And third is that we do trust each other.”
Trust is a
scarce commodity in the Capitol these days.
“It’s not
surprising that every time I’ve passed a piece of legislation, I’ve had a
strong Republican woman helping me across the aisle,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand
(D-N.Y.) said in a recent interview. “Women are often very good at finding common
ground and building bipartisan support.”
The
achievements make Mikulski especially proud. She’s the longest-serving woman
in the Senate and praises Republican and Democratic women in both chambers for
bringing a different approach to negotiations that men have long dominated.
“While we
work on the macro issues, we also work on macaroni-and-cheese issues,” she
said.
Rep. Tammy
Duckworth (D-Ill.), a freshman lawmaker and veteran of the Iraq war, noted that
most of the women cutting deals were mentored through the years by older male
colleagues — just as she was while serving in uniform.
“Maybe
there’s something about the fact that they climbed the ranks against high odds
that made them able to negotiate these tough bills,” Duckworth said.
In an
interview, Mikulski recalled the first time she walked into a meeting of the
Senate Appropriations Committee. She was the only woman assigned to the panel.
“I was at the end of the table, I was at the bottom of the line, but when I
walked into the Appropriations room — this beautiful room that is longer and
wider than my house in Fells Point — I was awestruck by all that had gone on
there,” the Baltimore native said.
She said
the late senator Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.), a longtime appropriator, quickly
took her under his wing and frequently reminded her of Congress’s
constitutional responsibility to control the government’s spending habits.
“He taught
me to love and understand the Constitution of the United States , to follow the rules,
to obey the law and fight like hell for what you believe in,” she said.
On
Wednesday, Rogers, the Appropriations chairman, seemed especially pleased with
the result of his work with Mikulski. “I can’t think of a more satisfying time
that I have had in this chamber in all these years,” he said on the House
floor.
Senate
Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) praised Mikulski on Thursday, saying, “I
don’t know if anyone else could have done what she did working with the
Republicans in the House.”
Stabenow
suggested that women remember to play nice.
“It’s
important to share credit with other people,” she said. “It’s important to
worry less about who gets credit and more about getting things done.”
Rep. Collin
C. Peterson (D-Minn.), who has led farm-bill talks with Stabenow, Lucas and
Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.), said that having Stabenow in the room has made a
difference. “I think she’s more tenacious, but more diplomatic, than a guy,” he
said.
Several
female House Republicans are pushing for changes to the Affordable Care Act but
haven’t found sufficient support in the Senate. Only one woman, Rep. Zoe
Lofgren (D-Calif.), has been directly engaged in long-stalled talks on
immigration reform — the next big issue that many lawmakers are likely to
tackle. And there’s no guarantee that Mikulski and Murray will be able to
strike similar budget and appropriations deals later this year.
Collins
urged them to keep reaching across the aisle — and not to forget about the men.
“We have
many good male members of the Senate as well, and I would not want to see an
all-female Senate any more than I would want to see an all-male Senate,” she
said. “I don’t think either would be healthy.”
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