Tuesday night’s debate certainly met expectations for being a more spirited battle. Both candidates fought hard, and there were many memorable moments, but the line that seems most memorable today is Mitt Romney’s “binders full of women.”
The line has lit the internet on fire, perhaps, in part, because it’s so absurd that it’s hard not to mock, something that can only exist in a world where women are objects or commodities that you can almost literally put into a binder. It’s that absurdity that led more than 250,000 people to “Like” a new Facebook page called “Binders Full of Women” and helped to inspire images like this one:
And this one:
The line was part of an answer on pay equity for women. Here the key part of what Romney said:
[W]e took a concerted effort to go out and find women who had backgrounds that could be qualified to become members of our cabinet.
I went to a number of women’s groups and said, “Can you help us find folks,” and they brought us whole binders full of women.
I was proud of the fact that after I staffed my Cabinet and my senior staff, that the University of New York in Albany did a survey of all 50 states, and concluded that mine had more women in senior leadership positions than any other state in America.
There are a couple problems with this answer. The first, is that it’s not true. It was debunked before Romney had left the Hofstra University campus last night by David Bernstein. Romney did not conceive of and solicit the “binders of women” he referenced. They were put together before he was elected and brought to him by ” a bipartisan group of women in Massachusetts [who] formed MassGAP to address the problem of few women in senior leadership positions in state government.”
It is possible that Romney genuinely wanted more women in his leadership and wanted the binders before he knew they existed, but it seems more likely that he saw this as a solution to an “optics” problem. It doesn’t look good if you don’t have many women working for you, just as it doesn’t look good to “have illegals working for you” when you’re “running for office, for Pete’s sake!”









