Women in the Workplace

Politics and Parenting: The Absence of Family Leave

By Molly McNamara, Summer 2023 Power in Place Collaborator

Image from: Vecteezy

The United States is notoriously known as the only developed country in the world without paid maternity leave. While this is a sad reality that affects millions of American women and birthing people, it is something that many do not realize affects female elected officials. Many women hold off their political careers until their children reach adulthood, but more and more women with young children are recently being elected. Women should not feel that they need to put their lives on hold in order to raise their children. By providing access to paid family leave, women can have access to the resources that they need to focus on their children. 

Maternity and paternity leave allows parents to spend quality time with their newborn child in the most formative weeks of their lives. Mothers and fathers can connect with their child in a way that would not be possible without the security of paid time off. But the US does not guarantee this security as paid maternity leave is not federal law. Only 11 states offer paid family leave, some of which are California, New York, and Washington. Parents should not be forced to worry about finances when taking time off to care for their newborn. Financial security is necessary for new parents to be successful, especially during a time that has many other stressors. 

Women who are in elected positions have their fair share of stress, especially if they have children at home waiting for them. But taking care of a family should not hinder women from pursuing a political career. Resources should be in place to allow women to do it all. But the public does not see it that way. A Pew Research Center study found that 51 percent believe that women should have children before her political career or early on in her career. 26 percent believe that women should wait to have children until her career is well established, and 19 percent believe that she should not have children at all. While these statistics are enlightening on public views of motherhood and politics, a woman’s career and a woman’s family planning timeline should be able to intertwine. The proper resources such as paid family leave should allow her to do that. 

Some elected officials find themselves in difficult situations when having a child during their term. Michigan State Senator Mallory McMorrow gave birth during her time in office and found that she did not qualify for paid time off. Michigan has 12 weeks of paid parental leave for state employees, but since McMorrow is not a state employee but rather an elected official, she found that there is no parental leave for state legislators. She is then also forced to miss out on votes in committee and on the floor, as there is no way to vote remotely or proxy vote. This forces new mothers to choose between time with their newborn child and their political career.

Parenting is challenging as it is, but managing a political career at the same time may be considered impossible. Thankfully, this new generation of female elected officials is proving otherwise. Women with young children are infiltrating the political world. They are proving that you can have your cake and eat it too, but paid parental leave would make that a whole lot sweeter. Paid family leave is a human right and millions of women across the US deserve to have that security. 

 References

 [1] Miller, Claire Cain. “The World ‘Has Found a Way to Do This’: The US Lags on Paid Leave.” The New York Times. October 25, 2021

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/25/upshot/paid-leave-democrats.html#:~:text=Besides%20the%20United%20States%2C%20the,Papua%20New%20Guinea%20and%20Tonga.

 [2] National Conference of State Legislatures. “State Family and Medical Leave Laws.” NCSL. Sept. 9, 2022

https://www.ncsl.org/labor-and-employment/state-family-and-medical-leave-laws#:~:text=Paid%20Family%20Leave,paid%20family%20and%20medical%20leave.

[3] Censky, Abigail. “With More Women in State Office, Family Leave Policies Have Not Caught Up.” NPR News. March 28, 2021

https://www.npr.org/2021/03/28/981730104/with-more-women-in-state-office-family-leave-policies-have-not-caught-up

[4] Igeilnik & Parker. “When should a woman have children if she’s thinking about running for office?” Pew Research. May 9, 2019

https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2019/05/09/when-should-a-woman-have-children-if-shes-thinking-about-running-for-office/

Molly McNamara is a rising Junior at George Washington University. She is double majoring in Political Science and American Studies with a minor in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Molly is involved in the GW campus chapter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and is interested in writing, mental health advocacy, and political engagement. After college she hopes to either enter the political realm or nonprofit work in hopes to create a more equitable society.

.

To Aim Higher as a Woman

Graphic by Javier Jaen for the Wall Street Journal.

Graphic by Javier Jaen for the Wall Street Journal.

BY: ELIZA KING FREEDMAN, SUMMER 2020 COLLABORATOR AT POWER IN PLACE

A young boy tells his school teacher that he wants to be the President of the United States. That teacher is charmed, and, in the back of his or her mind, he or she believes that maybe he could really do it. 

A young girl tells her school teacher that she wants to be the President of the United States. That teacher is charmed, but, in the back of his or her mind, he or she believes that it is truly unlikely and assumes that that young girl will change her mind before graduating elementary school. 

Society teaches young boys to aspire to be CEOs, partners at law firms, lead surgeons, and tech pathfinders. And young girls are finally being taught that they can achieve in these same careers. However, for girls it is often not CEOs but employees, not partners but lawyers, not lead surgeons but participants in the field, and not pathfinders but lower-level coders. As females, we are asked to step back. We can be intelligent, we can get the grades in school, but after graduation only a few of us will fight against the male-dominated business world and win. Women make up 50.8 percent of the United States population, earning nearly half of all law and medical degrees handed out each year, however as of November 2018 women made up only 5 percent of CEOs of all Fortune 500 companies [1].

Power in Place represents far more than just a collection of stories. It is an organization that is teaching us, all women and girls, that we deserve to aim higher. We deserve to want to fill the House and the Senate and the White House, and we need to support the women who are paving the way for us right now. The female mind is chemically wired differently than the male mind, and that is not something to be ashamed of or something that should hold us back. We must embrace our womanhood, in whichever form it presents itself within us, and use it to our advantage. We do not have to learn to “be one of the boys” in order to succeed. Women are criticized in the media for their fashion choices, their emotions, and parts of their bodies that they have no control over. Hopefully, these realities will change with time. But in the meantime, it is organizations like Power in Place that will combat the media and the anti-feminist rhetoric that makes us question ourselves. 

That young girl is going to be the President of the United States. And we don’t know who she is yet, but we have to believe that any girl we meet could be her. 5 percent of CEOs is not a big enough number. None of the numbers are big enough. And it is my very personal hope that Power in Place, and organizations and movements like it, will give women and young girls the motivation and the option to strive for more.

References

[1] Warner, Judith, Nora Ellmann, and Diana Boesch. "The Women's Leadership Gap."  Center for American Progress. Last modified November 20, 2018. Accessed July 24, 2020. https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/women/reports/2018/11/20/461273/womens-leadership-gap-2/#:~:text=Women%20are%20just%205%20percent,of%206%20percent%20in%202017.&text=Women%20are%20only%207%20percent,in%20the%20Fortune%20100%20companies.


more+me.jpg
 

Eliza King Freedman is a rising sophomore at Middlebury College. She intends to major in International Politics and Economics with a minor in Architectural Studies. In addition to Power in Place, she also works for a horse therapy organization that specializes in the rehabilitation of veterans. She is most passionate about the study of nonproliferation and prison reform.