Monday, December 30, 2013

American Women: Past, Present, and Future


The face of women in America has witnessed a dramatic transformation over the last five decades. It has been an ongoing fight for equality that exploded with the 1960’s arrival of the Women’s Liberation Movement (WLM) and the Feminist Movement (FM). These movements were a response to cultural, societal, and legal barriers that discriminated against women when the government and society failed to be responsive in addressing these social and economic inequities. Disenfranchised and frustrated, women rose up in protest as they began the long struggle for women’s equality and social justice issues.
  At the center of the women’s movement was the reluctant face of leadership in Gloria Steinem whose tireless enduring advocacy and activism helped champion the cause of women’s equality both domestically and globally. Equally important is the profound impact of the novel The Feminine Mystique written by Betty Freidan. This novel ignited and emboldened the fight for women’s equality at a national level.  It is critical to understand the legal and cultural norms of  women living in the 1960’s, how the women’s movement started, what the women’s movement accomplished, and what the battles of unfinished business are in attaining greater gender equality for American women. Understanding the historical perspective of the 1960’s American culture, women’s reproductive rights, violence against women, and employment opportunities are necessary to appreciate the dramatic transformation of women’s everyday lives created by the Women’s Liberation Movement.

The Historical Perspective

 The 1960’s was a period of unrest for America. The Civil Rights Movement was in full force with protests and conflict filling the political landscape. America was also in the throes of the military draft and the unpopular Vietnam War with its protests growing in intensity. The women’s movement was, and continues to be, a symptom of the failure of our culture and government to recognize or to be responsive to women’s issues. This was the beginning of the “invention of women as a class” (Hepola) and their fight against discrimination, oppression, and stereotyping as well as redefining their female sexual identities (Hepola). There were few, if any, laws when the women’s movement started that addressed gender discrimination (Menand).
The women’s movement began as a grassroots movement that encompassed loosely formed local support groups and those that developed into well-structured national organizations, with many that are still active today. Women were banning together to communicate their frustrations and reject their economic and social inequality. The women’s movement was fluid, with fluctuating alliances transforming into new coalitions while addressing a multitude of women’s issues.  New ideas and strategies were shared between different women‘s groups. This willingness to communicate and interconnect between groups enhanced the cohesiveness of messaging and coordination of numerous moving parts (Whittier).
In the 1960’s, the USA was experiencing a wave of women entering the workforce, and two thirds of all new jobs were being filled by them. (The 1960s-70’s American Feminist Movement). Although this was a major increase of women in the workplace, employment opportunities were limited by gender, not qualifications. There were separate pages in the classified advertisements with one section for men, and one for women.  Women were relegated to the supporting roles of housewives, mothers, teachers, secretaries, nurses, and waitresses (The 1960s-70s). In some states, women could not get a job without the expressed consent of their husbands (Alterman). Many women were unable to attend business lunches even if they held the same position as their male counterparts. In many states, women were excluded from jury duty and were unable to hold political office. They were openly paid less than a man with the same job titles (Rosen).   
Women represented only 6% of doctors, 3% of lawyers, and only 1% of engineers (Miller). Female entrance into educational programs traditionally identified with men, was met with significant resistance. At the collegiate level, education was regarded by many women as a tool to find a husband who could provide them with an upper class lifestyle. This was viewed as a necessity because their professional aspirations were limited. 
 There were regional inconsistencies in regards to how women were treated if traveling alone. A woman traveling without a male escort could be met with cultural sanctions, rejection, as well as denied entry or service. There were bars, hotels, and restaurants that refused to serve women. A woman unescorted, could be perceived as a prostitute or be branded with questionable morality (Hinkley).
Discrimination abounded. Housing and access to credit, based solely on being a woman, could be denied. Divorce could be difficult or impossible, and a woman may not have had rights to her husband’s property or earnings. A woman had to prove “wrongdoing” (The 1960s-70s) to obtain a divorce and this may not have included physical abuse in some states. A husband could declare the right to control any assets belonging to his wife (Mcguire).  American society imposed the image of the self-worth of a woman to be valued less than a man; as her self-worth was tied to that of a man.
In the 1960’s abortion was illegal, advertising for birth control was illegal; and the Pill, reliable condoms, and the IUD did not exist. American women had little control over their reproductive rights. Underground abortion clinics provided illegal abortions. The use of dirty non-sterile procedures could cost a woman her life (Sawhney). The possibility of death from infection or severe blood loss was a real threat. Many devices were used by women to induce abortion, including coat hangers. Domestic violence was not even coined in the 1960’s. There were no legal protections from a brutal husband, free to beat his wife as if she were his property.   There was no legal action for the raping of a wife, because marriage was a license for sex on demand. Women’s shelters and rape crisis centers were essentially nonexistent in the 1960’s (“’Date’ Rape”). 

The Feminine Mystique
The cultural and political environment was ripe for change as the frustrations and limitations for women created a ground swell of discontent. Women found their voice as they began writing about their discontent. The Feminine Mystique, by Betty Friedan published in 1963, ignited controversy and provided the women’s movement with their calling card (Mcguire). The Feminine Mystique was both controversial and provocative. It reached a starved audience of women and became a Best Seller. It sold millions while reaching into the homes and communities of women across the nation and the world. It was a powder keg. Although it was flawed by its narrow focus, primarily on educated white woman, it was contagious to women of every class and every race. The book identified a societal ailment that was pervasive in American culture, but it lacked an identifying name (Mcguire and Menand). However, it started a historical movement. Once women recognized their common symptoms of socioeconomic inequalities, they began to mobilize to demand change.
Women were not just fighting for their rights and freedoms against a resistant male population; they were also meeting opposition from conservative women. It is fair to say that there was a percentage of the female population that wanted to maintain the freedom to choose traditional housewife and mother roles. The Feminist Movement at times, alienated these women. However, they soon came to understand that they needed to represent freedom of choice for all women, whatever the outcome may be. Part of the resistance to The Feminine Mystique was the hostility felt by women who chose to be a housewife by equating it to a “concentration camp” (Schuessler). There were other books written prior to The Feminine Mystique, but they lacked the same impact for an attentive and hungry audience (Menand). The Feminine Mystique and the socioeconomic culture for women in the 1960’s were explosive combinations that detonated the modern Women’s Liberation Movement.
Stephanie Coontz’s novel, A Strange Stirring was written as an analysis of The Feminine Mystique. She noted that just prior to the release of The Feminine Mystique; a Saturday Evening Post article was written glorifying the housewife homemaker as a respectable submissive role. This, they reported, represented the happy satisfied majority of American women and encouraged all women to aspire to this blissful perfection. “Old maids”, divorced women, women without children, and working mothers were representative of the “extreme” outsiders when discussing American women (Stirring Up). The article wished to dispel dissatisfaction among this group of women and paint the rosy happy picture of American perfection and idealism. They endorsed the ideology that "being subordinate to men is a part of being feminine” (Stirring Up). Life centered on men and keeping them satisfied. Happy homemakers were reinforced through our culture, media and advertisements. 

Gloria Steinem
Gloria Steinem’s work for women’s equality has continued throughout the decades, and even at the age of seventy seven she continues to work towards women’s equality. Her argument that we are only half way there is very compelling.
Gloria Steinem was magna cum laude graduate of government studies at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts.  Steinem wrote a controversial expose’ on Playboy bunnies and bared the realities of the sexually exploited workers. Steinem had difficulty finding significant political journalist assignments because as a woman, she was not taken seriously. The doors of opportunity began opening for her when she became a founding editor of New York Magazine in 1968 when the WLM was in its infancy. Her coverage of political and social issues led her to investigate and report on an abortion hearing. At the same time women were exposing the underground abortion system and the injustice of our lack of reproductive rights and self-determination. This experience detonated her own feminist philosophy and propelled her deep into the heart of the women’s movement (Gloria Steinem and Hass).
Gloria Steinem has achieved far reaching success in publishing her message to champion women’s equality. She co-founded Ms. Magazine in 1971 and is well published in other domestic and foreign magazines.  She is a part of history in scholastic text books and has written her own bestselling books that continue to be in circulation (Gloria Steinem and Biography).  She is a co-founder of the Women’s Action Alliance, the National Women’s Political Caucus, the Women’s Media Center, and other organizations geared towards eradicating social injustices for women.  Steinem has received a variety of awards for her writing and documentaries addressing women’s inequality issues (Gloria Steinem).
Gloria Steinem has been relentless in increasing awareness on women’s issues. She shares information resources, participates in activities, forums, and lobbies for legislation that directly impacts women. She has an uncanny ability to take difficult ideas and create a digestible popular message (Hass). Steinem is always engaged in the women’s equality conversation and participates in speaking engagements on the women’s inequity issues that have not been resolved. Steinem is characterized as having “relentless focus, soothing tenacity and a lack of an ego” (Hass).
When you participate in ‘Take your daughter to work day’ you can thank Gloria Steinem. Rebecca Traister, author of Big Girls Don’t Cry remarks “She was a figurehead chosen by the media for complicated reasons. She was young and white and pretty, and she looked great on magazine covers” (Hepola). Steinem has resisted the image that she alone was the face of the women’s movement. She has expressed her satisfaction with the media for broadening their scope to include the vast variety of activist leaders, to identify with the fight for equality and social justice on women’s issues. The growing complexity of the women’s movement creates a room full of leaders with no one single voice. “Only a diverse group can symbolize a movement,” (Hepola) she said. As for whether she feels there can or will be another Gloria Steinem, she replied, “I don’t think there should have been a first one” (Hepola).

The Changing Face of American Women: Reproductive Rights
Reproductive rights were revolutionized by the birth of the Pill. The research for the Pill was largely funded by wealthy heir Katherine McCormick who together with American Birth Control League founder Margaret Sanger and Seale research scientist Gregory Pincus produced the first birth control pill approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1960 (“The Birth of the Pill”). Access to the Pill revolutionized career opportunities for women with “80% of women using birth control by the end of the 1960’s” (Walsh and Daniels). The Pill was not without the consequence of high dose hormonal side effects when it first was approved by the FDA. Male physicians were initially dismissive of the symptoms of hormonal overdose because the complainants were of course women (“The Birth of the Pill”).
By 1965 the old Comstock Laws that were meant to control women’s reproductive rights were challenged in the Supreme Court case of Griswold V. Connecticut. The Supreme Court ruled that “the private use of contraceptives was a constitutional right.” The Comstock laws were created by the conservative Christians to prohibit a woman’s access to birth control and birth control information (“The Birth of the Pill”).
The Pill represented significant freedom in career choice options for women. Women could now pursue careers that required higher degree requirements without worrying about an unexpected pregnancy interfering with long term professional goals. The morning after pill or “Plan B” was designated an over the counter medication and made available to girls of any age in 2013 (Belluck).  Access to the Pill is not just about sexual freedom; it is an economic enhancer with one study demonstrating 8% higher incomes for those women having access to the Pill (“Contraceptive Use”). Gloria Steinem’s comment on access to reliable birth control, “does not confine us to define our worth or ability to succeed by our reproductive anatomy” (Gloria Steinem and Biography).
A groundbreaking achievement in reproductive rights for women was the Supreme Court ruling on Roe V. Wade that legalized abortions in the US in 1973. No longer would women have to go to underground facilities and risk their health to obtain an abortion. Today, at the state level, there have been significant laws passed since Roe V. Wade to limit access to a legal abortion. In 2011, ninety three new Laws were created to inhibit access to contraception and abortion and another forty two laws in 2012 were enacted (“Laws Affecting Reproductive Health”).
In recent years, the anti-abortion coalition supported by the conservative Christians and the Republican Party have made great strides infringing on women’s reproductive rights and they show no sign of abating. At the national level, Republicans have passed countless laws limiting abortions in the US including passage of Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act in 2003. They have introduced “Personhood Amendments” that declare the fertilized zygote still in the fallopian tube, to be a person with rights equal to that of the mother. To stem the anti-abortion violence against abortion clinics, the 1994 U.S. Supreme Court in NOW v. Scheidler unanimously upheld the right to provide abortion services without fear of violence against the abortion clinic or its providers (“Highlight’s From NOW”). This has not deterred conservative extremists, as they have continued to picket clinics and harass women seeking medical care. In some of the most extreme cases they have bombed clinics and murdered healthcare providers performing abortion services. They work tirelessly to defund the Planned Parenthood organization where abortion services represent 3% of their total services offered.
The conservative Christians consistently oppose birth control access as well as sexual education (“The Bible Belt Miseducation”). They are protesting the Affordable Health Care Act for its provision of birth control products for female employees. Although they want to deny access to birth control, they are unwilling to fund needed programs to assist impoverished women and children. This in itself is a dichotomy because it perpetuates the cycle of oppression and poverty due to the economic consequence of an unwanted pregnancy.

Changing Cultural Norms and Creating Equality
            Many cultural changes are being realized as a response to the women’s movement. As women advance in the workforce, the antiquated idea about ‘who brings home the bacon’ is being replaced with ideas of partnership between couples. The idea of the stay at home father as the homemaker has been normalized by movies, TV shows and American life realities. Now younger couples may choose the caretaker based on multiple dynamic factors such as the cost of child care, incomes, benefits, and advancement potential. Great changes have occurred in our countries divorce laws enabling women the option of divorce based on ‘irreconcilable differences’ or ‘no fault’ divorces. While the divorce rate increased sharply from 1970 to 1975 as ‘no-fault’ divorce laws spread across the United States, the divorce rate has leveled off to about 40% all marriages (“Celebrating Women”).
The Miss America Pageant protest of 1968 was one of the first nationally covered protests of the women’s movement. It was organized by a more radical wing of the women’s movement called the New York Radical Women. Their roots and passions originated from their involvement in the Civil Rights movement where females were prohibited from significant positions within the hierarchy of power solely because they were women. They were protesting the unrealistic symbolism of female standards, their sexual objectification, and the racism portrayed in the Miss America Pageant by the shear lack of any black contestants (“American Experience”). The event was a success in garnering national media attention, but there was some residual negative backlash from the messaging that pitted women against women and imposed conformity to ideals rather than championing freedom of choice and opportunity for women (Hanish).
In response to lack of access to many bars, restaurants, and other public accommodations, the National Organization of Women(NOW) proclaimed "Public Accommodations Week" in 1969 (“Highlight’s From NOW”). They protested the “men only” establishments with “sit-in, picketing, demonstrations, press conferences, legislative pressures and law suits (Hinkley). The tenacity to keep the pressure on these establishments resulted in the equal access that women enjoy today.
The response to the relentless outcry of protest from the WLM has also realized a series of legal and cultural changes that have begun the process of addressing women’s inequality in America. The Equal Pay Act (EPA) passed Congress in 1963 “prohibiting sex-based wage discrimination”(EEOC) to resolve the wage gap between a man and a woman who was being paid less for working essentially the same job at the same company. The struggle for equal pay for equal work has narrowed the wage gap from 59% in 1963 to approximately 80.9% in 2013, but the problem still persists (EEOC).
The amount of lawsuits, landmark court hearings and Fair Pay Acts that have been put up for a vote before Congress are too numerous to note. A recent significant piece of legislation signed into law, was the 2009 Lilly Ledbetter Act. This act reestablishes a woman’s right for just compensation in the form of retroactive pay and equal pay when a pay discrimination case has been proven in a court of law (“Lilly Ledbetter”). There continues to be state to state variances in the wage gap. In Washington DC women earn 90% of what men earn at comparable occupations and in Wyoming women earn 64% at comparable occupations. The wage gap is also shown to worsen with age (“The Simple Truth”).
Many citizens believe The Civil Rights Act of 1964 as a black only movement against discrimination but everyone, including women, got on board the Civil Rights train to equality. The law prohibits a broad collection of discrimination based on sex, race, religion, and ethnicity in every facet of employment opportunities, housing, benefits, wages, education, and use of public spaces and services (EEOC). After the passage of Civil Rights bill and the 1970 Equal Rights Act (ERA), the National Organization of Women (NOW), aggressively lobbied for the passage of the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972. While the Civil Rights Law and the ERA prohibited discrimination, they lacked the enforcement capacity to ensure that that laws would be followed (EEOC). The organization NOW stepped up the political pressure by seeking public hearings and conducting further protests to demand enforcement of the existing laws (“Highlight’s From Now”). 

Enhancing Employment Opportunities
Minimal childcare resources inspired the women’s movement to lobby heavily for the 1970 Comprehensive Childcare Act.  This act would have provided for a national childcare program to improve economic opportunities for women (“Highlight’s From Now”).  The act was vetoed by President Richard Nixon, who called it the "Sovietization of American children” (Spangler). In Nixon’s speech explaining his rejection, he emphasized the potential negative effects on the integrity of the American family in order to pander to the conservative Christians who helped get him elected (Spangler and Cohen). There was no foresight in the rejection of this law. Because of the changing culture of America, with single mothers and two working parent families, the most our country has done to accommodate childcare costs is via deductions in our tax codes and marginally through our welfare systems (Cohen).
The women’s movement lobbied for and Congress passed the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978. This law prohibited discrimination against pregnant women from being hired or working (“Celebrating Women”).  The passage of the Family Medical Leave Act of 1993 was heralded as a great moment for working families and women. It allowed parents to take up to 12 weeks of leave after the birth or adoption of a child without fear of losing their job. It also covers employee illness or care for an immediate family member (“Dept. of Labor”). The major fault in this law is that in most cases it is unpaid leave and it covers less than 50% of US employers (Cohen). The 1971 Supreme Court ruling of Phillips v. Martin Marietta Corp. prohibited corporations from refusing to “hire women with preschool children unless they also refused to hire men with preschool children” (“Celebrating Women”).
Women have made great strides in employment opportunities, however, many continue to be obstructed by the “glass ceiling” when it comes to executive advancements. There have been no physical barriers prohibiting women from advancing into positions they are qualified for, but because they are women, they are denied the promotion, and thus the term “glass ceiling” was coined (“Feminist Majority”). Some executive opportunities have moved beyond the “glass ceiling” to a great degree but the persistent low numbers of women in executive positions is causing renewed analysis. In a recent Forbes’s article, while acknowledging that “bias and misogyny” still exists in the workplace, writer Margie Warrell explores the notion of a “self-imposed glass cage” due to lack of confidence and external priorities such a family responsibilities (Warrell).
The number of females representing CEO’s of Fortune 500 companies has risen to only 4.4% (Miller). A recent study reveals that companies that have gender diversified board of directors, outperform male only board companies by 26 percent over a six year period and directly contribute to the long term success of the company (Covert). A CBS News reporter citied a Pew Research Center report, “Women are now the main breadwinners in 40 percent of U.S. households – compared with just 11 percent back in 1960” (Koslov).  
Women are building in political influence, but hold only 20 seats in the 100 United States Senate and hold 78 of the 435 seats in the House of Representatives. In statewide elected offices women fair only slightly better holding 23% of executive office and 24% of legislative office (“CWAP”). Women in positions of high political power have been slow to evolve. Nancy Pelosi became the first woman Speaker of the House in 2007. There were only two cabinet positions filled by a woman between 1933 and 1979. In all of US history, only 45 cabinet positions were held by women. Today there are 7 current Cabinet positions headed by women (“List of female”).
 In 1981 Sandra Day O'Connor became the first woman Supreme Court Justice. She was appointed by President Ronald Reagan. Today, there are three sitting female Supreme Court judges (Sacks). Political representation increases power to influence legislation that directly affects women and their opportunities. In a November 2013 episode of the Today Show, Ann Curry did a story on women in the CIA. She noted that in 1995, women’s groups sued the CIA for gender discrimination. Because of this law suit, in the CIA fifty percent agents positions are filled by women and five of the eight top positions are occupied by women. The CIA chief stated that women are a valuable asset because they tend to be more intuitive than men.

Violence Against Women
The WLM took the pervasive wanton violence against women and the cultural apathy towards it head on. However, it has been a huge cultural and legal mountain to climb. In 1973 NOW began the process of establishing Rape Crisis Centers across the nation. This not only increased public awareness, but offered supportive services where none had existed. They campaigned to redefine rape “as an act of violence” (“Highlight’s of NOW”).
Following a UN resolution on violence against women in 1993, The US passed its own Violence Against Women Act in 1994 (VAWA).  The Violence Against Women’s Act provides funding for rape kit testing, rape training for law enforcement, establishes interstate reciprocity in the enforcement of restraining orders that protects victims, prevents a rape victim’s sexual past from being used at trial, and provides stronger penalties for serial rapists.  There has been a significant drop in domestic violence. It is down 67% since 1994 and there is a 35% drop in deaths resulting from domestic violence (“VAWA”). There is always push back from conservatives and in 1995 (R) Newt Gingrich, then Speaker of the House, moved to withhold funding for the Violence Against Women’s Act (“Highlight’s of NOW”). Again, in 2013 there were four separate votes on renewal of the VAWA with Republicans voting against it three times. They were opposed to including women who were Native American Indians, legal immigrants and lesbians, but it was ultimately passed because of media coverage and public pressure (Cohen). 
Today, there is increased awareness and reporting of rape, but there are still significant numbers that go unreported (“VAWA”). Despite increased public awareness; ‘rape culture’ remains pervasive throughout our society.  What is ‘rape culture’ in America? It is an environment where rape and sexual violence towards women is ignored, excused or even amplified by popular culture and media outlets (“Rape Culture”). We can see this demonstrated in the recent best seller Fifty Shades of Grey where the female protagonist is sexually objectified and dominated by the male protagonist. It creates a sociocultural norm erotizing male dominance that “disregards a woman’s rights and safety” (“Rape Culture”) and perpetuates the cycle of fear used to psychologically restrain women.
In the state of Missouri in 2012, a 14 year old girl was raped by a high school football star and was video recorded by a male friend. The charges were dropped by the prosecutor, until the national and media spotlight brought attention to the small town and the injustice in the system. The young girl and her family were forced to relocate and their home was burned down. Since the media spotlight was turned on, a special prosecutor has been assigned to investigate. Public outcry both nationally and globally have produced protests of injustice served for the 14 year old (Eligon). In Alabama, Austin Clem was found guilty of raping a female teenager and was sentenced to serve no jail time, only probation.

The Push Back Against the Women’s Movement
Conservative Christians and Republicans have developed an inseparable partnership and continue to scratch back reproductive rights for women and continue to create barriers to opportunity and freedoms. They have always maintained that the women’s movement would “undermine the integrity of the traditional family values” (“The 1960s-70s”).  A conservative Christian recently wrote “Shifting from the role of mother and housewife to another identity not found in Christ” is the wrong solution that will receive its ultimate verdict from Christ (Hong). Despite Hong’s concerns over potential spiritual ruin over making the wrong choice, she acknowledges that she and modern women of today have received direct benefits from the barriers that were removed by the women’s movement (Hong). Religious forces continue to work against women and their struggle for freedom and equality.
Women in America were initially radicalized because every new movement moves to the extreme before it centers. Women were pushed against the wall and they reacted. The power to effect cultural change can be gained from assuming a crisis mode. Today, women’s groups have left behind the hostilities of the “male chauvinistic pig” (Didion) and have moved towards a collaborative effort with the male side of the equality equation (London). Men are after all; husbands, fathers, brothers, and sons.
The women who fought the big battles continue to make their voices heard. Many are mothers and grandmothers who grew up in the midst of the women’s movement. Today, some women take the great accomplishments achieved by the women’s movement for granted and many young women have become complacent. They believe, and wrongly assume that all of the battles have been won and that women are on an equal playing field with men. Women have come far, but not far enough in equality. In fact, women are losing ground by forces aggressively working against them. 
Greater representation of women in judiciary and legislative offices is necessary to ensure women’s equality. Women’s equality is a matter concern for both them and their families.   It will be up to the millennials, both men and women, to create the third wave of activists to realize and secure the full potential of American society. According to a recent World Economic Forum’s report, the USA ranks 23rd in the world by women’s equality measures (Sauter). As a country with freedom and rights as the stated essence of American culture, it can and should do better. 

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Getting to Know Connecticut

Overview and Demographics Connecticut
         Connecticut (CT) is one of the original colonies that was settled in the 1600’s. Its governmental structure and state Constitution are reflective of the culture of its citizens at the time of its foundation. We originated from radical Calvinists, yeoman agriculturalists and Puritans (Woodard). The outcome of these settlers creates the dominant regional culture that prizes “education, intellectual achievement, communal empowerment, and broad citizen participation in politics and government.” CT is “more comfortable with government regulation and public-sector social projects.” In addition CT puts “great emphasis on perfecting earthly civilization through social engineering, denial of self for the common good, and assimilation of outsiders” (Woodard). These views represent the dominant regional culture that exists today. They are reinforced over time which compels me to ponder what my mother has always said “people are attracted to people like themselves.”
           According the US Census Bureau, CT has a 2012 estimated population of 3,590,347 which is a 0.5% increase from 2010. CT’s age demographics are 19 to 64 years 57%, 5-18 years 22.1%, 65 years or older 14.8%, and 0-5 years 5.4%. CT has a majority white population representing approximately 70% of the total population. The remaining population is Latinos 4%, Blacks 11%, Asians 4%, and, “other” for the remaining 1%. The CT female population is slightly higher than the national percentages with females representing 51% and males 49% of the population (“US Department”).
            CT is a densely populated state with both urban areas and a large suburban population. CT has approximately 738 people per square mile. CT residents are highly educated with 88% graduating from high school and 38% earning a bachelor’s degree or higher. These high levels of an educated population surpass national statistics.  We are the wealthiest state in the nation with a per capita median household income of over $37,000, median household income of $65,700 and a homeownership rate of 68.9%. Our median home value is over $293,000 (“US Department”). Our poverty rate is 9.5% and our unemployment rate is currently 8.1% (“Connecticut Labor”). CT pays the highest per capita tax in the nation, however this number is influenced by the amount of wealth that resides in the southwestern portion of the state. Total taxation puts CT approximately in the middle of the nation in taxation.
State Government
            Our state Constitution was redrafted in 1965 to address the growing complexity and dynamics in our state government. There have been 30 amendments since that time (“Constitutional”). Like the federal government, CT is divided into the executive, legislative and the judicial offices. The executive branch includes Governor Daniel Malloy (D), Lieutenant Governor Nancy Wyman (D), Secretary of State Denise Merrill (D), State Treasurer Denise Nappier (D), Comptroller Kevin Limbo (D) and Attorney General George Jepson (D). These elected positions that have a 4 year term, no term limits and are elected in the same election cycle (“Constitution” and “Office”).
            Our state constitution establishes the structure of the legislative office known as the General Assembly. It allocates 30-50 state senators with residential requirements within their districts currently holding a total of 36 state senate seats. It also allocates 125-225 representative seats, again with residency requirements within their districts currently holding a total of 151 representative seats. Both state senators and representatives have a 2 year term with no term limits. It is a bicameral legislature which means that both chambers need to propose legislation to move forward in the legislative process. An amendment to our constitution in 1980 established the minimum age of 18 to run for elected office. Any amendments to the state’s constitution require the passage of a joint resolution with ¾ majorities in each chamber. It then needs to win the majority of a popular vote in the next election cycle to be enacted (“Constitution”).
            The General Assembly (GA) is in session February to May on even years, and in odd years January until June while they work on the budget. The GA meets every Wednesday, when working on the budget, but meets more often if needed to meet state deadlines. The GA is a part-time commitment with “A” committees meeting every Monday-Wednesday-Friday and “B” committees meeting every Tuesday-Thursday. The majority of the GA meetings are open to the public. All committees have their own staffs that support all committee members (“This is”). 
           In our judiciary, our constitution only allows probate judges to be elected by voters. Under Article 5 Section 2 in our constitution, the governor has the power to nominate state Supreme, Appellate and Superior Court judges. They serve 8 year terms and can be impeached. The governor also has the power to nominate lower court judges who serve 4 year terms (“Constitution”). 
           The major players in CT politics are Lieutenant Governor Nancy Wyman who acts as president of the senate, President Pro Tempore Donald Williams Jr. (D) who is elected by state senators, Majority Leader Martin Looney (D) who is elected by the majority party senators, Minority Leader John McKinney (R) who is elected by the minority party senators, House Speaker Christopher Donovan (D) who is elected by state representatives, Majority Leader J.Brendan Sharkey (D) who is elected by the majority house party and Minority Leader Lawrence Cafero (R) who is elected by the minority house party. 
            The most powerful position is held by Governor Daniel Malloy. His powers are too many to include, but the most significant ones are; Chief Legislator setting the legislative agenda and Chief Executive to manage the business of the state. These powers are not intended to minimize his power in his capacity to nominate judges, his veto power, the role of Commander in Chief of our National Guard or the power to appoint key leadership positions within the government. He does not have the power to pardon as they do in the majority of states (“Center and Governor”).
            Governor Malloy was elected in 2010 and is the first Democratic to occupy the governor’s office in the last 20 years. CT is a state where democrats have dominated the two chambers of the legislative branch and it has been considered a secure “blue” state in federal elections with both Senators and all five Representatives representing members of the Democratic Party. As well, at the state level the majorities of both chambers are held by Democrats (“CBIA”).
Current Events and Important Issues
             CT has realized a steady and slow decline of manufacturing jobs since the 1990’s which is consistent with the national manufacturing picture (“Connecticut Labor”), but has stabilized at around 162, 000 manufacturing jobs (Baumen and Phaneuf). This is in part due to technological advancements that require less human capital as well as the shipment of jobs overseas. Job numbers alone do not represent the overall health of manufacturing in CT. The US is growing in manufacturing factories as is CT (Campos). CT manufacturing is now being dominated by high tech firms with smaller buildings with an annual growth rate of 6% adding some 290 new firms each year. There is a failure rate of 7.5% of these new start-up companies. CT provides a highly trained and skilled workforce that is very attractive to manufacturing (Baumen).
             CT recently passed their two year budget increasing spending by 10% (Phaneuf). There are those who have concern about the risk of an overextension of our financial assets. It was rejected by all Republicans in both chambers if the General Assembly.  It preserved aide to CT localities, designated needed monies to our state’s pension funds, and made critical investments into education, economic development and research and development. These are considered by an overwhelming majority of economists the essentials to economic growth. Republicans were focused on the state’s debt and expressed concerns about the state’s low economic health rating (Applebome). 
            There are varying indexes that rank CT as business friendly. The newly created CBIA Manufacturing Competitiveness Index ranks CT at 30th in the nation (Phaneuf) and others may rank CT 6th in the nation (Baumen). Potential explanations for the disparity in rankings may be; they serve individual interests, a wish to create a glossy picture to attract new businesses or use of different components in their measurement tools. I am not sure how to shake out the reliability of that specific information. It motivated me to conduct a brief interview of a few chief operating officer friends of mine as well as a former senate majority leader to get their opinions on the attractiveness for businesses to CT. All of them held not only positive, but high favorable ratings for CT’s business environment. During the informal interview, the former Republican majority leader also affirmed my conclusion that the governor’s office is very powerful. 
            The Sandy Hook Massacre has put gun violence squarely on the national legislative map and CT passed some of the most sweeping and strictest regulations in the nation in 2013 (Wilke). Over 60% of CT citizens favor gun control legislation due to our cultural norms of “cooperative citizenship” (Woodard) strong institutions and value in law and order. Although our nation has a high propensity for violence demonstrated by global studies, CT has some of the lowest death due to violence rates in the nation with 4 deaths per 100,000 (Woodard). While attending a Connecticut Against Gun Violence (CAGV) event, I learned that approximately 70% of illegal guns used in violent crimes come from Virginia which has very lax gun regulations. I compare it to someone polluting our water source by upstream dumping of toxic wastes.
             Overall, Connecticut is moving forward through difficult economic times that started developing before the 2008 crash, but were certainly exacerbated by it. We had no job growth for the 16 years under republican governors and have only added 41,000 jobs since the 2008 crash. Approximately 10,000 government jobs have been lost. Like all local and state governments, big deals have to be made to keep or attract business. Most recent is the 71 million dollar grant to Cigna to expand its workforce and establish their headquarters here in CT. My overall view of Malloy's performance  thus far is excellent and I will support his re-election bid in 2014.