Republican women—hear them roar
WASHINGTON As the Republican Party continues its pilgrimage through the desert, its leaders may be missing the oasis for the vale of tears.
The answer to the party’s woes isn’t a revamped Web site (GOP.com) offering—wowser!—really cool social networking platforms.
The answer won’t be found in the sudden realization that 83 percent of young people 18 to 24 have online profiles—or other late-breaking revelations that merely reinforce the perception of the GOP as woefully behind the curve.
The answer is—drum roll, please—women.
If the GOP is really serious about expanding the party, it’s time for the men to hush and let the pros take over. As the saying goes: If you need something done, hire a busy woman. Or, as the White House Project puts it: “Add women, change everything.”
In the past few months, several conservative women have emerged as candidates and critics to challenge the notion that the GOP is the party of men. They’re also putting to rest any thought that Sarah Palin is the female face of the party.
The McCain campaign had the right idea; it just picked the wrong woman.
Among the newer comers are two mega-businesswomen and two famous daughters, representing younger generations with divergent ideas. Although these aren’t the only Republican women rising, they offer a glimpse at what could become a surge of hormonal correction on the conservative side.
First up in this new league of their own are two celebrity entrepreneurs. Meg Whitman, former CEO of eBay, is running for governor of California. And Carly Fiorina, former Hewlett-Packard CEO, plans to challenge California Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer. Neither woman has any political experience beyond advising and stumping for Sen. John McCain during his last presidential run, but that would seem a bonus to an incumbent-weary nation.
Fiorina, the first woman to run a Fortune 20 company, has lost some of her early luster with Republican voters, according to a recent Field Poll. And Democrats have criticized her as “one of the 20 worst CEOs in the country,” a bold charge from the party that propelled a community organizer with zero executive experience to the White House.
Fiorina’s lower numbers are likely a reflection of her reduced visibility recently while undergoing breast cancer treatments. By contrast, her Republican opponent has been stumping to the tune of more than 160 political events since last November. A close adviser says Fiorina, who is “definitely running,” is on the mend and expects to be locked and loaded in a couple of weeks.
Billionaire Whitman is running a tight race against two opponents for the Republican nomination, spending much of her own money along the way. If she wins—and then defeats Democrat Jerry Brown (big ifs)—she would become one of only four Republican women governors.
This deficit in high office is both a taint on the GOP and a reflection of the broader assumption that Republicans are monolithically against women’s rights. Specifically, the party’s pro-life platform alienates pro-choice women, as well as moderates, who otherwise might find common cause with conservative principles.
Women such as pro-choice Whitman and “personally” pro-life Fiorina could help change that impression, while also raising other issues women care about. Fiorina caused a slight ripple in the Republican zeitgeist during McCain’s campaign when she criticized insurance companies for covering Viagra and not birth control.
Meanwhile, another Meg (McCain) and Liz Cheney, daughter of the former vice president, have emerged as strong voices in a party with too few sopranos.
It isn’t quite fair to group McCain with Cheney, given their respective resumes—one a 24-year-old celebrity blogger whose fame is (thus far) inherited and the other, Cheney, 43, a former deputy assistant secretary of state. But both are relatively fresh voices with instant name recognition. And each appeals to a different, perhaps untapped, demographic.
Cheney, recently dubbed a “red-state rock star,” just launched a new Web site, KeepAmericaSafe.com, where she and others plan to critique foreign policy issues. And the socially liberal McCain, though she may not please the party elders, appeals to younger voters who otherwise wouldn’t consider lifting the flap on the old man’s tent.
Four women: a pro-life hawk; a pro-choice, pro-gay rights libertarian; two entrepreneurs, one pro-choice and one pro-life. This doesn’t sound like your daddy’s Republican Party, but it could be your daughter’s—if the men wise up.
Kathleen Parker is a columnist for the Orlando Sentinel. Her e-mail address is kathleenparker@washpost.com.

Oct 15, 2009 at 11:23 a.m.
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Say Pro it is even older than Horus
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwzDFvqfc...
Oct 15, 2009 at 10:55 a.m.
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Dont worry 916WI......Obama will save the day...if not...just blame Bush...
Oct 15, 2009 at 8:39 a.m.
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"Kept women"???? Are the Democrats on this board seriously that clueless???? You have women that are running billion dollar companies--you seriously think Whitman and Fiorina called their husbands every time a multi million dollar deal was being discussed in the boardroom to have them sign off on their recommendation? Too funny!!!! Although you would expect a viewpoint such as this from the liberals in this discussion group--some of them think Medicare is a successful business model--despite the fact that it is drowning in $500 billion in waste and fraud........:)
Oct 15, 2009 at 8:25 a.m.
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Right mpalm I agree - I worship Horus who had the same story as your Jesus just a couple of thousand years before - virgin birth, miricles, savior, even some of the same nicknames. They don't even teach about him in schools no wonder its gone to crap right?
Oct 15, 2009 at 8:05 a.m.
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Funny, as I read the posts here. Republican women are "kept" women....LOL....now that there is funny. I am neither a republican or democrat. I am for the Constitution, now if we could just get politicians to understand that and possibly read it. Like Palin or not, she stood for what she believed, just as Hillary Clinton has. The bashing needs to stop...its getting old. All I know is I look at this country, its becoming a bigger and bigger joke everyday, can't fly flags in certain areas, God is being taken out of everywhere. Wake up!!
Oct 14, 2009 at 7:51 p.m.
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prounion......some folks just don't get humor. Great line!
Oct 14, 2009 at 11:06 a.m.
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math and rich guy: You two are quite hilarious. You make assertions that are totally off the richter scale of believability.
Republican women are "kept women"? Sounds like you're having a hard time making your points, so an ad hominem attack is the way to go.
"Republican women are like Gay republicans. Why would either join a party that is so clearly against them". Based on what exactly? And why don't you ask them, instead of making ridiculous assertions on an online blog?
"Republicans only care about money unless it is being spent on a useless war". Two assertions, neither can possibly be substantiated. Are you referring to the "useless" war in Iraq that was supported by the Democrats, and is now being lead by the Democrats who control both the Congress and the White House?
Based on Mr. Obama's track record so far, I think it would be far more credible to say "Democrats only care about money". He's certainly spent his share on travel, appearances, and kobi beef.
No, the truth is that both of the big money parties work primarily for their supporters, not for those of us who pay the bills. Don't be so naive.
Oct 14, 2009 at 10:15 a.m.
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justsaynotomath, good points. Most Republican women I know are kept women. Debate with one and it's like debating with their husband.
Oct 14, 2009 at 9:51 a.m.
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McCain is an idiot for picking Palin. He lost because he was out of touch with the public, too close to BUSH, and the biggest reason was Obama ran against him. Republican women are like Gay republicans. Why would either join a party that is so clearly against them. Republican women just go with whatever their husband's tell them to do. Republicans only care about money unless it is being spent on a useless war. Then they don't care how much we spend.
Oct 14, 2009 at 9:47 a.m.
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"If the GOP is really serious about expanding the party, it’s time for the men to hush and let the pros take over. As the saying goes: If you need something done, hire a busy woman. Or, as the White House Project puts it: “Add women, change everything.”"
Sexist drivel. Women are no more "pro", no more "busy", and no more goal-driven than men.
Why is Parker so divisive?
And btw, the saying is NOT "If you need something done, hire a busy woman". The saying is "If you need to get something done, ask a busy PERSON".
Can we ever get sexism (and racism) out of this society? It is truly tiresome.
Oct 14, 2009 at 9:02 a.m.
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prounion Palin was an Idiot that is why McCain didn't get elected
Oct 14, 2009 at 8:17 a.m.
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It continues to be true that women are their own worst enemy when they continue to support the GOP and its misogynist policies and agendas.
Oct 14, 2009 at 8:15 a.m.
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More Bashing of Palin - the greatest leader/thinker the Republicans have - dang this liberal media and their fear of the great Palin.
Oct 14, 2009 at 8:07 a.m.
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Why would Parker even mention Palin. It discredited the entire article. Not a good strategy.
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