Early women in politics
Barriers to Women’s Leadership
The fight for suffrage
Women Break Barriers
Modern Milestones
100

These U.S territories allowed women to vote in general elections as early as 1870.

Wyoming and Utah

100

This type of barrier refers to cultural expectations and stereotypes about gender roles.

social norms

100

The year the Nineteenth Amendment was passed.

1920

100

This movement in the 1960s helped more women run for office.

The feminist movement

100

She became the first female Speaker of the House in 2007.

Nancy Pelosi.

200

This 1920 constitutional amendment granted women the right to vote in the U.S.

the 19th Amendment

200

Women often receive less of this essential campaign resource, limiting their ability to run.

funding

200

How long the suffrage movement lasted

72 years

200

What was the National Women’s Political Caucus created to do?

Increase women’s participation in politics

200

She became the first woman to win a major party’s presidential nomination

Hillary R. Clinton

300

Many early female Congress members entered politics through this pathway, replacing deceased husbands.

widows succession. 

300

The UN Women article states that political parties often lack these, which support women candidates.

internal party support structures (or mentorship systems)

300

Two common strategies suffragists used to campaign for voting rights.

Marches, speeches, petitions, fundraising, lobbying.

300

This was the first woman on a major party presidential ticket

Geraldine Ferraro

300

The Women’s March of 2017 was a response to...

Donald Trump’s inauguration and the 2016 election results

400

She was the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.

Hattie Caraway

400

This “double standard” means women are judged more harshly for traits like ambition or assertiveness.

gender bias

400

describe Widows succession.

When a woman takes office after her husband dies. often starting their own career.

400

This major event in 1991 brought attention to sexual harassment in politics.

Anita Hill’s testimony during Clarence Thomas’s Supreme Court hearings.

400

The main reason representation is still unequal even today

Women hold far fewer seats than men

500

This senator delivered a famous speech condemning McCarthyism—showing early female leadership in national politics.

Margaret Chase Smith.

500

This phrase describes how institutions like electoral systems are built in ways that structurally privilege men.

institutional barriers

500

This major internal divide slowed the suffrage movement after the Civil War

They split over whether to support the 15th Amendment, which gave Black men the vote but not women

500

The reason 1992 was called “The Year of the Woman”

A record number of women ran and won seats in Congress.

500

This political trend is known as the “political gender gap”

Where women are more likely to support liberal candidates and the Democratic Party, while men are more likely to support conservative candidates and the Republican Party. (based on research)

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