Utah's political caucuses took place this week: last Tuesday for Democrats
and last Thursday for Republicans. If you have never been to a caucus, it's great to come to increase your part in self government. If you have
attended before, come to lend your strength. These two nights are what
it's all about -- the vote before the vote. Opponents of the
neighborhood voice say there is little participation in caucuses. Prove
them wrong.
A major talking point of Count My Vote was the
decreased political participation of women. This has been a state and
national concern--a long-standing irritant, with charges that the
Founders were sexists in not granting women the right to vote. It is, in
fact, politically correct to make that accusation, but the facts don't
agree.
The 19th Amendment to the Constitution gave women the vote
(suffrage) in 1919. Unfortunately, it also took from the states their
constitutional right to set voting policies, which increased voracious
federal control. The states were moving forward in this area, as they
should. Western states had given women the vote decades before: Wyoming
in 1869, and Utah officially in1896.
If we judge the past by the
present, we mistakenly overlook cultural differences and can brand
women's earlier non-voting status as discrimination. Not so. In early
America's world of intact families, most women, centered on the home,
were politically uninvolved by choice. The male, as head of household,
voted for the family. Women's entry into commercial life was decades
away, and the flood of single parent families, supported by big
government "daddy" and its welfare checks, did not explode until Lyndon
B. Johnson's 1968 Great Society. Both led, inevitably, to suffrage for
women.
While early American women played a limited role outside
the home, the impression that they were unequal (and thus kept from
voting by discrimination) is challenged by Frenchman Alexis de
Toqueville's fascinating description of America and its women in the
early 1800s. He related that American men esteemed their female
counterparts and "constantly display an entire confidence in the
understanding of a wife...her mind is just as fitted as that of a man to
discover the plain truth and her heart as firm to embrace it."
De
Toqueville's important writings give a consistently invaluable picture
of colonial America. He shows the equal worth given to both genders and
compares this with the European movement to "make men and women into
beings not only equal, but alike," to give both the same functions,
rights and duties, which he said would leave both "degraded." He
disclaims our modern charge of discrimination against women when he
says: "The Americans do not think that men and women have either the
duty or the right to perform the same offices, but they...consider
them...of equal value...(and) believe the understanding of the one to be
as sound as that of the other."
His explanation of American
families in the 1800s clarifies their voting policies: "every
association must have a head in order to accomplish its object and that
the natural head (of the family)... is man." He continued: "I never
observed that the women of America consider conjugal (marriage)
authority as a ...usurpation of their rights nor ...thought themselves
degraded by submitting to it. It appeared...they attach a sort of pride
to the voluntary surrender of their own will...it is not the
practice...to clamor for the rights of women."
The right to vote
was not an issue among most early American women. It was in this spirit
that the constitutional right to vote was confined to males; not to
exclude women, but place them in a voting team.
De Toqueville
concluded: "If I were asked...to what the singular prosperity and
growing strength of... (Americans) ought mainly to be attributed, I
should reply, to the superiority of their women."
In today's
world, we prize the insights, participation, and votes of women and men
of all ages. We need all of us to participate is self-government...even after the Caucuses. Join
us this week at the caucuses and after to continue the creation of influence from the grassroots. Utah and every state needs your voice.
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