Hillary Clinton did not quite promise gender parity in her cabinet, but speaking to Rachel Maddow at MSNBC’s town hall Monday night, she came very close.
Asked if she would follow Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau’s vow, since consummated, that half his cabinet would be female, Clinton replied, “Well, I am going to have a cabinet that looks like America, and 50 percent of America is women, right?”
Clinton never got more definitive. Just as Maddow followed up, “So that’s a yes?” an audience member interrupted to change the subject to women in detention.
Two weeks ago, when Cosmopolitan posed the same question, Clinton was similarly supportive of the goal while careful not to commit to a quota: “That is certainly my goal. A very diverse Cabinet representing the talents and experience of the entire country. And since we are a 50-50 country, I would aim to have a 50-50 Cabinet.”
If Clinton meets her aim, it would far outpace the record so far, helping the U.S. catch up in another measure of gender equality in which it lags behind the world. According to the Center for American Women and Politics, the Barack Obama and Bill Clinton administrations have roughly comparable track records in appointing women to “cabinet or cabinet-level positions,” with Obama appointing 10 women over the course of his term and Clinton appointing 9.
Obama was criticized at the outset of his second term for filling Clinton and Hilda Solis’ positions as secretaries of state and labor with men. “Until you’ve seen what my overall team looks like, it’s premature to assume that somehow we’re going backwards. We’re not going backwards, we’re going forward,” he reassured reporters in January 2013.
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So far, “going forward” has meant basically keeping the previous Democratic administration’s status quo. At the peak of gender parity in the Obama administration, when the most female cabinet members were serving at the same time, women numbered 35 percent of those high-level positions. Bill Clinton’s high-water mark was 41 percent. George W. Bush’s administration never got above 24 percent, and his father’s representation of women in the cabinet stalled at 18 percent, identical to Reagan’s two terms.
Notwithstanding Franklin D. Roosevelt’s historic appointment of Frances Perkins as secretary of labor, progress in the cabinet stalled for decades. A total of three women served in the cabinet in the next eight presidential terms combined, from Truman through Nixon. (To be fair to the presidents of yore, the number of cabinet-level positions has grown over time.)
Outside of the United States, Justin Trudeau did not invent cabinet gender quotas, which have often been the most effective in ensuring the representation of women. Norwegian prime minister Gro Harlem Brundtland appointed a near-50-50 cabinet in 1986. In 2006, Chile’s first female president, Michelle Bachelet, declared her cabinet would be half female, and made it to 48 percent. A year later, Spain also instituted a gender quota for elected positions, and thanks to a strong women’s movement and presidential support, cabinet positions neared parity.








