The political progress women have made — and what's next | Cecile Richards

53,515 views ・ 2019-02-22

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Nearly 100 years ago,
0
12661
2711
00:15
almost today,
1
15396
1430
00:16
most women in the United States finally won the right to vote.
2
16850
3356
00:20
Now, it would take decades more for women of color to earn that right,
3
20862
5640
00:26
and we've come a long way since,
4
26526
1700
00:28
but I would argue not nearly far enough.
5
28250
3171
00:32
I think what women want today,
6
32077
1526
00:33
not just only in the United States but around the globe,
7
33627
3047
00:36
is to no longer be an afterthought.
8
36698
2302
00:40
We don't want to continue to try to, like, look at the next 100 years
9
40001
3668
00:43
and be granted, grudgingly, small legal rights and accommodations.
10
43693
4163
00:48
We simply want true and full equality.
11
48629
2848
00:52
I think that women are tired of retrofitting ourselves
12
52490
2682
00:55
into institutions and governments that were built by men, for men,
13
55196
4620
00:59
and we'd rather reshape the future on our own terms.
14
59840
4546
01:05
I believe --
15
65138
1150
01:06
(Applause)
16
66312
3304
01:09
I believe what we need is a women's political revolution for full equality
17
69640
4492
01:14
across race, across class, across gender identity,
18
74156
4406
01:18
across sexual orientation,
19
78586
1544
01:20
and yes, across political labels,
20
80154
2345
01:22
because I believe what binds us together as women
21
82523
3276
01:25
is so much more profound than what keeps up apart.
22
85823
3481
01:29
And so I've given some thought
23
89711
1466
01:31
about how to build this women's political revolution
24
91201
2496
01:33
and that's what I want to talk to you about today.
25
93721
2566
01:36
(Cheers)
26
96311
2163
01:38
(Applause)
27
98494
2075
01:40
The good news is that one thing that hasn't changed in the last century
28
100593
4014
01:44
is women's resilience
29
104631
1564
01:46
and our commitment to build a better life not only for ourselves,
30
106219
3246
01:49
but for generations to come,
31
109489
2037
01:51
because I can't think of a single woman
32
111550
2144
01:53
who wants her daughter
33
113718
1398
01:55
to have fewer rights or opportunities than she's had.
34
115140
3500
01:59
So we know we all stand on the shoulders of the women who came before us,
35
119531
4901
02:04
and as for myself,
36
124456
1151
02:05
I come from a long line of tough Texas women.
37
125631
2911
02:08
(Cheers)
38
128566
1771
02:10
My grandparents lived outside of Waco, Texas,
39
130727
2809
02:13
in the country.
40
133560
1478
02:15
And when my grandmother got pregnant,
41
135062
2331
02:17
of course she was not going to go to the hospital to deliver,
42
137417
2963
02:20
she was going to have that baby at home.
43
140404
2161
02:22
But when she went into labor,
44
142589
1428
02:24
she called the neighbor woman over to cook dinner for my grandfather,
45
144041
3842
02:27
because ...
46
147907
1403
02:29
I mean, it was unthinkable that he was going to make supper for himself.
47
149334
3395
02:32
(Laughter)
48
152753
1754
02:34
Been there.
49
154531
2611
02:37
(Laughter)
50
157166
3114
02:40
The neighbor had no experience with killing a chicken,
51
160304
2572
02:42
and that was what was planned for dinner that night.
52
162900
2899
02:45
And so as the story goes,
53
165823
2293
02:48
my grandmother, in the birthing bed, in labor,
54
168140
3419
02:51
hoists herself up on one elbow and wrings that chicken's neck, right?
55
171583
4348
02:55
And that is how my mother came into this world.
56
175955
2257
02:58
(Laughter)
57
178236
1474
02:59
(Applause)
58
179734
3850
03:03
But the amazing thing is,
59
183608
1882
03:05
even though my mother's own grandmother could not vote in Texas,
60
185514
3250
03:08
because under Texas law,
61
188788
2054
03:10
"idiots, imbeciles, the insane and women"
62
190866
4750
03:15
were prevented the franchise --
63
195640
2205
03:17
just two generations later,
64
197869
1831
03:19
my mother, Ann Richards, was elected the first woman governor in her own right
65
199724
4384
03:24
in the state of Texas.
66
204132
1205
03:25
(Applause and cheers)
67
205361
6956
03:32
But you see, when Mom was coming up in Texas,
68
212341
3476
03:35
there weren't a lot of opportunities for women,
69
215841
2372
03:38
and frankly, she spent her entire life trying to change that.
70
218237
3485
03:42
She used to like to say,
71
222341
1460
03:43
"As women, if you just give us a chance, we can perform.
72
223825
3856
03:47
After all, Ginger Rogers did everything Fred Astaire did,
73
227705
3896
03:51
but she did it backwards and in high heels."
74
231625
2340
03:53
Right?
75
233989
1343
03:55
And honestly, that's kind of what women have been doing for this last century:
76
235356
3906
03:59
despite having very, very little political power,
77
239286
3178
04:02
we have made enormous progress.
78
242488
2436
04:04
So today in the United States,
79
244948
1436
04:06
100 years after getting the right to vote,
80
246408
2028
04:08
women are almost half the workforce.
81
248460
1820
04:10
And in 40 percent of families with children,
82
250641
2913
04:13
women are the major breadwinners.
83
253578
1965
04:16
Economists even estimate
84
256218
1296
04:17
that if every single paid working woman took just one day off of work,
85
257538
4624
04:22
it would cost the United States 21 billion dollars
86
262186
3390
04:25
in gross domestic product.
87
265600
1504
04:28
Now, largely because of Title IX, which required educational equity,
88
268139
4686
04:32
women are actually now half the college students in the United States.
89
272849
3373
04:36
We're half the medical students, we're half the law students --
90
276246
2977
04:39
Exactly.
91
279247
1151
04:40
(Applause)
92
280422
1151
04:41
And a fact I absolutely love:
93
281597
2350
04:43
One of the most recent classes of graduating NASA astronauts was ...
94
283971
4233
04:48
What?
95
288228
1151
04:49
For the first time, 50 percent women.
96
289403
1799
04:51
(Applause and cheers)
97
291226
3353
04:54
The point is that women are really changing industries,
98
294603
3000
04:57
they're changing business from the inside out.
99
297627
2925
05:01
But when it comes to government, it's another story,
100
301209
3282
05:04
and I actually think a picture is worth 1000 words.
101
304515
2875
05:07
This is a photograph from 2017 at the White House
102
307933
3334
05:11
when congressional leaders were called over to put the final details
103
311291
3873
05:15
into the health-care reform bill that was to go to Congress.
104
315188
3071
05:18
Now, one of the results of this meeting
105
318283
2462
05:20
was that they got rid of maternity benefits,
106
320769
2925
05:23
which may not be that surprising,
107
323718
1623
05:25
since no one at that table actually would need maternity benefits.
108
325365
3340
05:29
And unfortunately, that's what we've learned the hard way
109
329241
2699
05:31
in the US for women.
110
331964
1257
05:33
If we're not at the table, we're on the menu, right?
111
333245
3560
05:36
And we're simply not at enough tables,
112
336829
5722
05:42
because even though women are the vast majority of voters
113
342575
2717
05:45
in the United States,
114
345316
1151
05:46
we fall far behind the rest of the world in political representation.
115
346491
3354
05:50
Recent research is that when they ranked all the countries,
116
350591
3992
05:54
the United States is 104th in women's representation in office.
117
354607
4546
05:59
104th ...
118
359177
2825
06:02
Right behind Indonesia.
119
362026
1823
06:04
So is it any big surprise, then,
120
364836
2252
06:07
considering who's making decisions,
121
367112
1829
06:08
we're the only developed country with no paid family leave?
122
368965
2913
06:12
And despite all the research and improvements we've made
123
372711
2795
06:15
in medical care --
124
375530
1437
06:16
and this is really horrifying to me --
125
376991
2119
06:19
the United States now leads the developed world in maternal mortality rates.
126
379134
4588
06:24
Now, when it comes to equal pay, we're not doing a whole lot better.
127
384697
3244
06:27
Women now, on average, in the United States,
128
387965
2112
06:30
still only make 80 cents to the dollar that a man makes.
129
390101
3031
06:33
Though if you're an African American woman,
130
393156
2043
06:35
it's 63 cents to the dollar.
131
395223
2302
06:37
And if you're Latina, it's 54 cents to the dollar.
132
397549
3777
06:41
It's an outrage.
133
401350
1223
06:42
Now, women in the UK, the United Kingdom,
134
402949
2332
06:45
just came up with something I thought was rather ingenious,
135
405305
2807
06:48
in order to illustrate the impact of the pay gap.
136
408136
2492
06:51
So, starting November 10 and going through the end of the year,
137
411001
3916
06:54
they simply put an out-of-office memo on their email
138
414941
2761
06:57
to indicate all the weeks they were working without pay.
139
417726
3366
07:01
Right?
140
421116
1151
07:02
I think it's an idea that actually could catch on.
141
422291
2831
07:05
But imagine if women actually had political power.
142
425885
3264
07:09
Imagine if we were at the table, making decisions.
143
429569
4045
07:14
Imagine if we had our own women's political party
144
434537
2742
07:17
that instead of putting our issues to the side as distractions,
145
437303
3125
07:20
made them the top priority.
146
440452
2228
07:23
Well, we know --
147
443947
1298
07:25
research shows that when women are in office,
148
445269
2109
07:27
they actually act differently than men.
149
447402
2707
07:30
They collaborate more with their colleagues,
150
450546
2261
07:32
they work across party lines,
151
452831
2265
07:35
and women are much more likely to support legislation
152
455120
2687
07:37
that improves access to health care, education, civil rights.
153
457831
4229
07:42
And what we've seen in our research in the United States Congress
154
462839
3077
07:45
is that women sponsor more legislation
155
465940
2168
07:48
and they cosponsor more legislation.
156
468132
1795
07:49
So all the evidence is that when women actually have the chance to serve,
157
469951
3754
07:53
they make a huge difference and they get the job done.
158
473729
3023
07:57
So how would it look in the United States if different people were making decisions?
159
477155
4088
08:02
Well, I firmly believe if half of Congress could get pregnant,
160
482230
3538
08:05
we would finally quit fighting about birth control
161
485792
2428
08:08
and Planned Parenthood.
162
488244
1185
08:09
(Applause and cheers)
163
489453
1146
08:10
That would be over.
164
490623
1151
08:11
(Applause)
165
491798
5072
08:16
I also really believe that finally,
166
496894
2398
08:19
businesses might quit treating pregnancy as a nuisance,
167
499316
4897
08:24
and rather understand it as a primary medical issue
168
504237
3114
08:27
for millions of American workers.
169
507375
2143
08:30
And I think if more women were in office,
170
510573
2556
08:33
our government would actually prioritize keeping families together
171
513153
4302
08:37
rather than pulling them apart.
172
517479
1786
08:39
(Applause)
173
519289
3783
08:43
But perhaps most importantly,
174
523096
3224
08:46
I think all of these issues would no longer be seen as "women's issues."
175
526344
3610
08:50
They would just be seen as basic issues of fairness and equality
176
530396
3502
08:53
that everybody can get behind.
177
533922
2524
08:58
So I think the question is,
178
538153
1371
08:59
what would it take, actually, to build this women's political revolution?
179
539548
4283
09:04
The good news is, actually, it's already started.
180
544335
3331
09:08
Because women around the globe are demanding workplaces,
181
548397
3055
09:11
they're demanding educational institutions,
182
551476
3401
09:14
they're demanding governments
183
554901
1500
09:16
where sexism and sexual harassment and sexual assault are neither accepted
184
556425
4917
09:21
nor tolerated.
185
561366
1459
09:22
Women around the world, as we know,
186
562849
1748
09:24
are raising their hands and saying, "Me Too,"
187
564621
3127
09:27
and it's a movement that's made so much more powerful
188
567772
2647
09:30
by the fact that women are standing together across industries,
189
570443
3308
09:33
from domestic workers to celebrities in Hollywood.
190
573775
3968
09:38
Women are marching, we're sitting in,
191
578417
3113
09:41
we're speaking up.
192
581554
1290
09:42
Women are challenging the status quo,
193
582868
2443
09:45
we're busting old taboos
194
585335
1907
09:47
and yes, we are proudly making trouble.
195
587266
2653
09:50
So, women in Saudi Arabia are driving for the very first time.
196
590266
4469
09:54
(Applause and cheers)
197
594759
2445
09:57
Women in Iraq are standing in solidarity with survivors of human trafficking.
198
597228
4673
10:02
And women from El Salvador to Ireland are fighting for reproductive rights.
199
602320
4713
10:07
And women in Myanmar are standing up for human rights.
200
607479
3635
10:11
In short, I think the most profound leadership in the world
201
611805
3663
10:15
isn't coming from halls of government.
202
615492
1822
10:17
It's coming from women at the grassroots all across the globe.
203
617338
3510
10:20
(Applause)
204
620872
3593
10:24
And here in the United States, women are on fire.
205
624489
4662
10:29
So a recent Kaiser poll reported
206
629766
2751
10:32
that since our last presidential election in 2016,
207
632541
4096
10:36
one in five Americans have either marched or taken part in a protest,
208
636661
4021
10:40
and the number one issue has been women's rights.
209
640706
2728
10:43
Women are starting new organizations,
210
643950
2126
10:46
they are volunteering on campaigns,
211
646100
2715
10:48
and they're taking on every issue
212
648839
2020
10:50
from gun-safety reform to public education.
213
650883
3715
10:55
And women are running for office in record numbers,
214
655323
3047
10:58
and they are winning.
215
658394
1489
10:59
So -- (Laughs)
216
659907
1188
11:01
(Applause)
217
661119
1331
11:02
Women like Lucy McBath from Georgia.
218
662474
4001
11:06
(Applause and cheers)
219
666499
3408
11:10
Lucy lost her son to gun violence,
220
670455
4285
11:14
and it was because of her experience with the criminal justice system
221
674764
3945
11:18
that she realized just how broken it is,
222
678733
2241
11:20
and she decided to do something about that.
223
680998
2773
11:23
So she ran for office,
224
683795
1648
11:25
and this January, she's going to Congress.
225
685467
2547
11:28
OK? Or --
226
688038
1981
11:30
(Applause)
227
690043
1386
11:31
Angie Craig from Minnesota.
228
691453
2413
11:33
(Applause and cheers)
229
693890
1101
11:35
So her congressman had made such hateful comments about LGBTQ people
230
695015
5953
11:40
that she decided to challenge him.
231
700992
2192
11:43
And you know what? She did, and she won,
232
703505
2482
11:46
and when she goes to Congress in January,
233
706011
1953
11:47
she'll be the first lesbian mother serving in the House of Representatives.
234
707988
3525
11:51
(Applause and cheers)
235
711537
1785
11:53
Or --
236
713346
1171
11:54
(Applause)
237
714541
1536
11:56
Or Lauren Underwood from Illinois.
238
716101
2769
11:59
She's a registered nurse,
239
719423
1685
12:01
and she sees every day the impact that lack of health care access has
240
721132
4501
12:05
on the community where she lives,
241
725657
2177
12:07
and so she decided to run.
242
727858
1895
12:09
She took on six men in her primary, she beat them all,
243
729777
3073
12:12
she won the general election,
244
732874
1383
12:14
and when she goes to Congress in January,
245
734281
1953
12:16
she's going to be the first African-American woman ever
246
736258
2578
12:18
to serve her district in Washington, D.C.
247
738860
1995
12:20
(Applause and cheers)
248
740879
3130
12:24
So women are recognizing --
249
744033
3222
12:27
this is our moment.
250
747279
1420
12:28
Don't wait for permission,
251
748723
1239
12:29
don't wait for your turn.
252
749986
1843
12:32
As the late, great Shirley Chisholm said --
253
752859
3529
12:36
Shirley Chisholm, the first African-American woman ever
254
756412
2572
12:39
to go to Congress
255
759008
1268
12:40
and the first woman to run for president in the Democratic party --
256
760300
3723
12:44
but Shirley Chisholm said,
257
764047
2443
12:46
"If there's no room for you at the table, just pull up a folding chair."
258
766514
3501
12:50
And that's what women are doing, all across the country.
259
770039
4460
12:55
I believe women are now the most important and powerful political force
260
775664
4089
12:59
in the world,
261
779777
1549
13:01
but how do we make sure that this is not just a moment?
262
781350
3081
13:04
What we need is actually a global movement for women's full equality
263
784927
5432
13:10
that is intersectional and it's intergenerational,
264
790383
2661
13:13
where no one gets left behind.
265
793068
1733
13:15
And so I have a few ideas about how we could do that.
266
795117
2866
13:18
Number one: it's not enough to resist.
267
798838
2216
13:21
It's not enough to say what we're against.
268
801078
2092
13:23
It's time to be loud and proud about what we are for,
269
803194
3273
13:26
because being for full equality is a mainstream value
270
806491
3174
13:29
and something that we can get behind.
271
809689
2003
13:31
Because actually, men support equal pay for women.
272
811716
3129
13:34
Millennials, they support gender equality.
273
814869
2729
13:37
And businesses are increasingly adopting family-friendly policies,
274
817622
4400
13:42
not just because it's the right thing to do,
275
822046
2107
13:44
but because it's good for their workers.
276
824177
1905
13:46
It's good for their business.
277
826106
1498
13:48
Number two:
278
828555
1699
13:50
We have to remember, in the words of Fannie Lou Hamer,
279
830278
3463
13:53
that "nobody's free 'til everybody's free."
280
833765
3520
13:57
So as I mentioned earlier,
281
837665
1623
13:59
women of color in this country didn't even get the right to vote
282
839312
3506
14:02
until much further along than the rest of us.
283
842842
2923
14:06
But since they did, they are the most reliable voters,
284
846257
2955
14:09
and women of color are the most reliable voters for candidates
285
849236
2922
14:12
who support women's rights,
286
852182
1323
14:13
and we need to follow their lead --
287
853529
1742
14:15
(Applause and cheers)
288
855295
5247
14:20
Because their issues are our issues.
289
860566
2479
14:23
And as white women, we have to do more,
290
863414
2788
14:26
because racism and sexism and homophobia,
291
866226
3119
14:29
these are issues that affect all of us.
292
869369
2383
14:32
Number three: we've got to vote in every single election.
293
872551
3307
14:35
Every election.
294
875882
1151
14:37
And we've got to make it easier for folks to vote,
295
877057
2805
14:39
and we've got to make sure that every single vote is counted, OK?
296
879886
3408
14:43
(Applause and cheers)
297
883318
2848
14:46
Because the barriers that exist to voting in the United States,
298
886190
5580
14:51
they fall disproportionately on women --
299
891794
2581
14:54
women of color, women with low incomes,
300
894399
2323
14:56
women who are working and trying to raise a family.
301
896746
2884
15:00
So we need to make it easier for everyone to vote,
302
900069
3160
15:03
and we can start by making Election Day a federal holiday
303
903253
3445
15:06
in the United States of America.
304
906722
1545
15:08
(Applause and cheers)
305
908291
5170
15:13
Number four: don't wait for instructions.
306
913485
2701
15:16
If you see a problem that needs fixing,
307
916210
2383
15:18
I think you're the one to do it, OK?
308
918617
2983
15:21
So start a new organization, run for office.
309
921624
4071
15:25
Or maybe it's as simple as standing up on the job in support of yourself
310
925719
4610
15:30
or your coworkers.
311
930353
1154
15:31
This is up to all of us.
312
931531
1801
15:33
And number five: invest in women, all right?
313
933654
4477
15:38
(Applause)
314
938155
1148
15:39
Invest in women as candidates, as changemakers, as leaders.
315
939327
3648
15:42
Just as an example,
316
942999
1180
15:44
in this last election cycle in the United States,
317
944203
2894
15:47
women donated 100 million dollars more to candidates and campaigns
318
947121
4457
15:51
than they had just two years ago,
319
951602
1868
15:53
and a record number of women won.
320
953494
2372
15:55
So just think about that.
321
955890
1243
15:57
(Applause and cheers)
322
957157
1680
15:58
So look, sometimes I think that the challenges we face,
323
958861
5081
16:03
they seem overwhelming
324
963966
1349
16:05
and they seem like they almost can never be solved,
325
965339
3646
16:09
but I think the problems that seem the most intractable
326
969009
3133
16:12
are the ones that are most important to work on.
327
972166
2270
16:15
And just because it hasn't been figured out yet doesn't mean you won't.
328
975420
3818
16:19
After all, if women's work were easy,
329
979675
2157
16:21
someone else would have already been doing it, right?
330
981856
2486
16:24
(Laughter)
331
984366
1078
16:25
But women around the globe, they're on the move,
332
985468
3739
16:29
and they are taking strengths and inspiration from each other.
333
989231
3550
16:32
They are doing things they never could have imagined.
334
992805
2975
16:35
So if we could just take the progress we have made
335
995804
2498
16:38
in joining the workforce,
336
998326
1606
16:39
in joining business,
337
999956
1475
16:41
in joining the educational system,
338
1001455
2049
16:43
and actually channel that into building true political power,
339
1003528
3726
16:47
we will reshape this century,
340
1007278
2259
16:49
because one of us can be ignored,
341
1009561
2132
16:51
two of us can be dismissed,
342
1011717
1786
16:53
but together, we're a movement,
343
1013527
2110
16:55
and we're unstoppable.
344
1015661
1244
16:57
Thank you.
345
1017355
1208
16:58
(Applause and cheers)
346
1018587
1786
17:00
Thank you.
347
1020397
1158
17:01
(Applause)
348
1021579
1301
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7